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Quarter-final finish for Team Galusha in Ontario

Team Galusha hit the pay window again during their latest stop down south.
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Team Galusha, consisting of, from left, Jo-Ann Rizzo, Kerry Galusha, acting coach Kevin Koe, Sarah Koltun and Margot Flemming were all smiles during the HearingLife Tour Challenge in Grande Prairie, Alta., late last month. Galusha and company were in Ontario for the North Grenville Fall Curling Classic last weekend and ended up as a quarter-finalist. Photo courtesy of Team Galusha

Team Galusha hit the pay window again during their latest stop down south.

But, internally, there was a belief that the final result should have been a lot different.

Fresh off their semifinal showing at the HearingLife Tour Challenge in Grande Prairie, Alta., the weekend before, Kerry Galusha and her rink of Jo-Ann Rizzo, Sarah Koltun and Margot Flemming were on the ice in Kemptville, Ont., for the North Grenville Fall Curling Classic this past weekend and managed to reach the quarter-finals. Thats as far as they got as they dropped a 4-3 decision to Danielle Inglis of Ontario.

Its an event that Galusha won in 2018 when it was known as the Royal LePage Fall Womens Classic.

The ladies began the triple-knockout event in the A bracket on Oct. 27, where they took on Christine McMakin of North Dakota in their opening contest. A 9-2 win put them into the next round against Laurie St. Georges of Quebec and that, too, was a tick in the win column, 5-3.

Galusha said the ladies were firing on all cylinders in the early going.

Laurie is one of the top teams from Quebec shes usually at the Scotties, she said. We knew it would be a tough field, but we played really well in the early going.

Their next game was against Sarah Anderson of Minnesota and a win would put them through to the playoffs, but a 6-5 loss saw them drop down to the B bracket.

That game could have gone either way, but Sarah was really good, said Galusha. They had the hammer coming home and she made a nice shot to win it.

Because they advanced as far as they did in the A bracket, that meant the ladies wouldnt have to go through the entire B bracket to move on. They took on Emily Deschenes of Ottawa on Saturday with a playoff spot going to the winner and Galusha would get the win, 8-5, to book her teams place in the final eight.

If we lost, it would have been a three-game day, but we had the evening to rest, said Galusha.

Disappointment

The quarter-final was one which Galusha described as disappointing Inglis opened with the hammer and scored a single, which was answered in the second end to tie it up at 1-1. The third end was blanked before Inglis scored another single in the fourth to go back out in front. Galusha got that back in the fifth, but Inglis scored another single in the sixth, and then stole a single in the seventh to take a 4-2 lead. Galusha had the hammer coming home, but could only get one to spell the end.

Galusha said the win was there to be had.

Were disappointed with that one, she said. We would have won if we had played better, but it was a game where hammer (last rock) didnt matter. Both skips were bailing their teams out every time and there werent any multiple-point chances for either team, which is strange because our games are usually a lot higher-scoring. We just werent super sharp and we didnt make the right shots when we needed to.

Its another $2,000 in the teams bank account for reaching the final eight, but Galusha felt as if the chance to win it all again was there for the taking.

I feel like we were better than we were when we won in 2018, she said. Getting to the quarter-final isnt too shabby, but I think we could have gotten to the final.

Galusha and company now have a couple of weeks off before hitting the road again to Red Deer, Alta., for the Prism Flow Red Deer Curling Classic beginning on Nov. 18. That event is one of the bigger spiels on the tour with a $35,000 purse up for grabs. Kevin Koe, Galushas older brother, will be part of the mens draw, but he wont be coaching the Galusha crew as he did in Grande Prairie.

Yes, Koe stepped in that week in place of Shona Barbour, the teams regular head coach, as she wasnt able to make it to that event.

And it wasnt simply big brother helping out little sister either, said Galusha.

We were hanging out at the PointsBet event in New Brunswick (in September) and we asked him if he could work with us in Grande Prairie if the schedules didnt conflict, she said. He told us to write up an official proposal with what we wanted to focus on, what we needed to improve, and so we made up a list and sent it to him.

Koe sat in on games when he wasnt practising or playing, and Galusha said her brother was full of useful knowledge.

He was giving us tips and comments we had never heard before, she said. We werent sure how it would go, but he was really knowledgeable and it was really good having him work with us and ask his opinion on things.

When it comes time to head to Red Deer, the entire team will be there, including Barbour and Megan Koehler, the teams fifth.

Well cycle Megan into the line-up and that will give us a break, said Galusha. Im looking forward to it its going to be a tough one. The field is similar to the one we had in Edmonton (in September).



About the Author: James McCarthy

I'm the managing editor with 窪蹋勛圖厙 and have been so since 2022.
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