Tuesday, February 21, 2023

Ayr @ 50

 The Ayr @ 50 celebrations were held at the ice rink on 19th February. 

The day started with three sessions of curling, teams playing six end matches. All sections of the club were represented from Little Rockers to Seniors. The games were all played in a friendly atmosphere with a hint of rivalry. 

The Fullarton Team of Mara and Jim, myself and our super sub Pat Galloway were up against Beresford Ladies and as always seems to be the way with us this year, also up against a wall……we were on Rink 1!

We lost a two in the first end but soon got the measure of the ice and our opponents. We took the next five ends and came out with a 7-2 victory. It was a close match, played in good humour and obviously nice to get the win. 

With tables laid splendidly, 138 curlers and guests, including ACC Past Presidents, ACC Past RCCC Presidents, ACC Past RCCC Presidents - Ladies Branch, ACC gold and silver Olympians, World Champions, Senior World Champions, senior and junior European medalists, National Champions (PHEW!) all sat down to be welcomed by ACC President Ken Ireland. 

Ken announced that the ice money from the days curling, somewhere around £1200 would be donated to the My Name’5 Doddie Foundation.

After a splendid meal from Lorrie and his team, there were speeches from Liz Goldie and ACC Past President John Collins. Then came  the prizes for the day’s matches. One for the winner of each session, based on winning margins of points then ends and an overall prize of The Highlander Trophy to the best score overall.

Session One - Irvine Ladies

Session Two - SYMINGTON - who with the highest overall score of all sections, were also winners of the Highlander Trophy.

Session Three - FULLARTON …..yes you read it right!

No one looked more surprised than the four of us, mainly as we’d been on the same Session as Scott Andrew’s team and they had put up a huge score. However in the end their winning margin was the same as ours but we took more ends. A fabulous surprise! 

Through the evening the silent auction had been on going and when the clock struck 9:25 the auction closed. 

All the lots went for more than the starting prices and in total £1348 was raised and will go towards the ACC Development Group. 

With that it was a toast to Ayr Curling Club, then cloaks and carriages. A splendid night not to be forgotten by all who were there. 

Thursday, February 16, 2023

The Magnificent Six

This week it was Team B v Team C and with only three on each side, the magnificent six took to the ice.

Team C lost the toss and got the match underway. The ice was sticky in patches with stones seeming to slow down then regain speed, making it difficult for everyone to judge their weight. It looked like Jim's team had adapted best and found themselves lying four with Mara's last stone to come. It made its way into the house but not enough to make a difference and a surprising four went on the board for the Red stones.

You can't win a game in the first end and Mara knew there was plenty of time to rectify the score line. So the B Team were pleasantly surprised to be lying five when Jim took to the hack for his final stone. There was a tiny gap through which stone could slide and reduce the score. That was Plan A.

We all know that Plan A doesn't always come off and neither did Jim's but with a tap and roll off an outlying yellow, a swift curl towards a scoring stone in the eight foot, shifting it sufficiently to keep Jim's stone moving, by some inexplicable trigonometry the last stone ended touching the button for a single.

There is a saying in golf "not how but how many". The C Team had no idea how (Katie's excellent sweeping perhaps?) and it's fair to say everyone looked surprised to say the least but a One went on the scorecard.

Still early days. 

Mara built a strong and secure head in the third, there was little Jim could do to penetrate it. Two choices, go for a difficult scoring shot and risk losing more than a single, or accept the situation. Accepting the latter seemed like the sensible choice. Third end, 5-1, that's ok.

Similarly in the fourth, both teams had stones in the house and scoring but it was Mara with the upper hand. Once again Jim had to go for last stone glory, this time for a potential two. His stone fell short and another single went to the Yellow team, now it's 2-5 at the halfway mark.

With the ice still catching out players, never quite sure how much draw there would be when straying from the centre line, the fifth end was following the pattern of three and four. Now it was Mara with an opportunity to steal the end. Almost but not quite. Another single. Team C restore their four point lead.

In fact ends six and seven followed the same pattern, well guarded, well positioned heads, requiring accurate stones and the ice still not always being kind. Mara took them both with singles. Suddenly going into the last end The C Team were only ahead by two but had only taken one end in five. 

Straight out the hack David and Jim P were on the money for the B Team. Stones were nicely positioned in the head and proving difficult to move. Some close but no cigar red stones did not change the situation. Mara played two fabulous stones, guarding her scoring stones and narrowing the gap to reach them. Now Team B were lying two. With last stone Jim was left with no choice. He had to move some yellow stones and at the very least reduce the damage to a single.

Played with good weight and good line, all was shaping up nicely for the tap, tap he needed. As the stone entered the house it curled too much to the left, caught a yellow stone at the wrong angle, spun across the house, removing another yellow but also a vital red! Two stones were scoring and they were yellow!

Mara's patience, tenacity and experience had won through. You can't win a game in the first end but you can't lose it either. In a game of eight ends anything can happen. So with the match peeled at 6-6 the six players shook hands on what had been an enthralling game.

Thursday, February 9, 2023

Red Stones Get The Measure

 Teams A and B met on the ice this week in the fourth game of the League.

The A Team, playing with red stones got off to a flying start in the first end, setting up a potentially painful score with only the Skips to deliver. Bill, stepping in for Margaret, had done all he could to stop Mara from being on the receiving end and even Mara was thinking things looked bleak. 

It may be a cliché but also a truism. Its not over until the last stone is delivered. Mara went for a gap, needing to draw, tap her own stone and move the reds further out. Frantic sweeping to get the stone close enough, it slid in, did everything it had to do and the Red Team looked on in disbelief. Team B were lying five against and in the end they took a two!

It was only the first end..........

Back down the other end Bill was not taking this lightly and the attack was on in the second end. Another head was building well. Nicely placed guards were protecting his stones and try as they could Mara's team were not getting the breaks on the ice and couldn't get passed the guards. Lying three and with the hammer, Bill chose to throw short and take the score.

The third end was a very tight affair. several stones trapped in and around the two foot made it hard for both Skips to make any headway. With the B Team certainly scoring a single, a measure was called by the A Team's third.....................at this point I'll hold my hands up and say I should have received a yellow card for time wasting..............having called the measure, then taking a second look at the stones, it was going to be two to Yellow. However we went through the process and my poor call was found out. :-(

Ever onward and with consistently good Lead stones from Ben, Bill again got the better of things and took another three in the fourth end. Big scores from both sides but still a close game at the halfway mark with only two shots in it.

There was some scrappy shots in the next two ends, not really helping either Skip to take control of the head. Close calls but the A Team took two singles. In the seventh, more good guards making it hard for stones to draw around and into the house. Mara taking a single and with a few minutes before the bell, onto the eighth. Mara needed three to Peel. Bill had last stone.

Guards went up and some other stones fell short making the front of house a bit congested. Both Thirds played accurate shots to move those stones that were in the house out towards the margins. however there was still a chance for the B Team to find a draw into the house, or the A Team to further protect their slender single stone.

Team B's last stone came up a bit short and clipped a guard. At that, Bill shook hands with Mara to bring a close match to a conclusion. Chances could have been taken, some were and in the end the A Team came out victors 9-5.

That closes the gap in the League on points but Team B are still ahead on Ends and Shots. All to play for!