Curling: United States rock Sweden to win first gold medal
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[February 24, 2018]
By Steve Keating
GANGNEUNG, South Korea (Reuters) - The
United States delivered a gold-medal knockout punch, scoring five in
the eighth end to crush Sweden 10-7 and claim their first ever
Olympic men's curling title on Saturday.
With the score deadlocked at 5-5, United States skip John Shuster
provided some last-rock magic with a pinpoint double take-out for
five that left their Swedish opponents stunned as the Gangneung
Curling Centre erupted into chants of "USA, USA" led by U.S.
President Donald Trump's daughter Ivanka.
The gold was just the second Olympic curling medal won by the U.S.
men, following a bronze at the 2006 Turin Winter Games which Shuster
was also a part of.
Switzerland beat Canada 7-5 on Friday to win the bronze.
"I think during the entire (eighth) end we could feel it building,"
said Shuster. "Their margin for error was incredibly small. I can't
tell you how un-nervous I was."
The victory capped a remarkable comeback for the United States who
sputtered through early preliminary-round play with a 2-4 record
before rattling off three straight wins to make the playoffs where
they beat twice defending Olympic champions Canada in the
semi-finals before seeing off the top-ranked Swedes.
The only real miscue involving the Americans on Saturday came when
officials mistakenly presented them with the women's gold medals but
that error was quickly corrected and switched for the correct ones.
"We've played our best when our backs were up against the wall,"
American second Tyler George. "We took it to another level this
week.
"Usually we're fighting and scrapping to get into the playoffs but
for five days we were the best team in the world and we did it at
the right time."
The result meant more Olympic disappointment for Niklas Edin who had
skipped Sweden to world championship titles in 2013 and 2015 and a
bronze at the Sochi Olympics but could not grab the one medal to
elude him.
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Vice-skip Tyler George of the U.S., second Matt Hamilton of the U.S.
and lead John Landsteiner of the U.S. celebrate after winning the
match. REUTERS/Cathal McNaughton
The contest got off to a tactical start with the Swedes blanking the
first then scoring a pair in the second only to have the U.S. hit
right back with a two on another brilliant last-rock shot from
Shuster.
The U.S. stole a point in the fourth after a measurement to
determine shot stone to take their first lead, 3-2.
The Swedes would not be rattled, answering with two in the fifth as
the seesaw battle continued with the U.S. replying with a pair in
the sixth and Sweden getting one back in the seventh to leave the
teams deadlocked on 5-5 with three ends to play.
After the U.S. scored their five a reeling Sweden chipped two off
the deficit in the ninth but there was too much damage to repair and
the Swedes finally conceded.
"In the eighth end we don't exactly get the rocks where we wanted
them and they put a lot of rocks in the house and we were forced to
go all in," explained Edin.
"That last shot if it curls three centimeters more it's probably
good for them to draw for two or something but when that misses and
they make that double we knew we were going to lose."
(Additional reporting by Elaine Lies; Editing by Clare Fallon)
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