Cigarette dangling from his lips, he threw his fateful
stone; the sweepers give it an early bang with their corn brooms, but the stone
suddenly sits back and they are called off quickly; contact is made, but the
shooter rolls slowly out towards the eight-foot; and further out; and further
out - helped on its way by some furious sweeping from the American third, Frank
Aasand. Finally, it comes to rest, close
to lying second, but was it?
Slowly, Dave Romano, the Canadian third moves to look at
his skip’s stone. In his heart of
hearts, he must have been worried, but he takes a long hard look despite his
opposite number’s celebrations. Skip
LaBonte, taking his cue from Aasand’s leaps of joy, started his own macabre victor’s
dance. The camera cuts to the American
front end, who are running down the ice in celebration just as LaBonte begins
his tumble. Don Chevrier pauses
mid-sentence as the Americans continue their celebrations, because the
unthinkable has happened; LaBonte has slipped and kicked the Canadian stone
before Romano has had a chance to either concede or call for a measure.
There is confusion in the commentary box. With the benefit of hindsight, of course, there
should have been none. The stone had not
been measured and Canada had not conceded the game. Eventually the stones are cleared and the
extra end is played. Meleshuk plays a
nice come around a centre guard, though he sits at the back of the one foot. LaBonte’s attempted draw to face it –
predictably in the circumstances – was high, wide and not so very
handsome. The Canadians go home as
undefeated World Champions. The USA, who
in their own minds were World Champions for about 7 seconds were left to lick
their wounds and think about what might have been.
In the great scheme of things, it wasn’t so much a stone
of destiny as a salutary lesson to all curlers everywhere. Neither team made it back to the World
Championships but what, at first, was destined to be a footnote in the history
of our great sport began to develop wings and gradually, people began to talk
about the “curse of LaBonte”. It is a
fact that Canada did not win a World Curling Championship for the rest of that
decade. Given their dominance in world
curling hitherto, it was astonishing!
Then we go the Olympic semi-finals in Japan in 1998. The GBR ladies are up against Sandra
Schmirler who, until this point in the competition had really dominated. The semi-final was against GBR, skipped by
Kirsty Hay, with the Loudon sisters and Jackie Lockhart; no mugs and, truth to
tell, they really made the Canadians work hard for their victory, so much so
that with Schmirler’s last stone in the extra end, she was facing two GBR
stones – albeit with the full eight foot to draw to. As it crossed the hogline, it’s fair to say
that, to use a lovely old Scottish phrase, “it was fully there”! There was backing, but the line was high and
let’s just say that Edith Loudon got her brush to it and had a good sweep,
before it stopped – agonisingly beating the GBR stone by inches. From the semi-final to the bronze medal
play-off game – and that is surely the worst one of all to lose; sadly, that is
exactly what happened for GBR against the Swedes.
Fast forward a few more years to the Olympic Games in
Pinerolo; exactly the same stage in the competition, though this time the GBR
men – David Murdoch, Ewan Macdonald, Warwick Smith and Euan Byers are tied at
3-3 coming into the tenth end of a tight, nervy tussle against Markku Uusilpaavalniemi’s
Finnish champions. The Finns hold the
crucial last stone. GBR is lying at 9.00
fully in the four foot and corner frozen against a Finnish stone. David, with his last stone, plays the perfect
shot to about 6.30 at the front of the four foot covering the one foot and
forcing Markku to the cold out-turn draw to the button. The GBR boys must have felt quietly confident. U15 had to bite the button, whilst coming
tight to the guard just laid by Murdoch.
But there was nothing they could do except watch as the stone came
perfectly to rest on the button with barely a sweep by the front end.
Heartache twice!
But then you have Rhona Martin’s stone of destiny; enough
said! A month later, Jackie Lockhart’s
nerveless hit on a straight piece of ice against Colleen Jones’ Canadian team
to win the World Championship. David
Murdoch’s “stone of retribution” – the raised double take out against his pals,
Thomas Ulsrud’s Norwegian team in the Sochi Olympics.
You win some; you lose some.
But spare a thought for Labonte and his mates; that’s a
lifetime of heartache right there.