Playing before empty seats disappointing for hometown rink competing at Scotties
To prepare for this year’s Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Krista McCarville and her rink from Thunder Bay, Ont., spent time with a sports psychologist learning how to cope with the excitement and pressure of playing for the Canadian women’s curling championship in front of a hometown crowd.
Instead, because of concerns created by the Omicron variant, the stands at the Fort Williams Gardens will be empty when McCarville’s Northen Ontario team steps on the ice for its first game Friday night against Chelsey Carey’s Wild Card 2 rink from Regina.
“It’s something you can feel when your hometown crowd is cheering so much,” said McCarville, the 2016 Scotties silver medallist who is making her ninth championship appearance. “It could be a little bit of an advantage when you have all the fans on your side and cheering for you.
“Then all of a sudden, you’re in your hometown and you can’t have any (fans). It’s super disappointing. But once we step on the ice it doesn’t matter what city we are in. We focus and zone into our game.”