CURLING CLUB
CHECK OUT THE VIDEO BELOW
FOR A 2-MINUTE GUIDE TO CURLING,
COURTESY OF WORLD CURLING TV.
It's a comprehensive (and lighthearted) guide to the sport of Curling. How it's played, scored, won, and why curlers yell so much!
This video was produced by Curling Canada with support from the World Curling Federation's Development Assistant Programme.
WHAT IS THIS GAME OF ROCKS AND BROOMS ALL ABOUT?
Curling is a sport in which two teams of four players each slide 40-pound granite rocks (also called stones) down a sheet of ice toward a target at the other end. Each team tries to get more of its stones closer to the center of the target than the other team. Read on for a complete breakdown of curling’s basic elements.
THROWING ROCKS
Each player on the team throws two stones in each end (an end is similar to an inning in baseball). Each team throws 8 stones in an end. The players alternate throwing with the player on the other team who plays the same position they do.
CURLING ROCKS
When you throw a rock down the ice, depending on its rotation -- which is applied intentionally -- it will curl, or bend, one way or another. How much (or little) a rock curls or bends, depends largely on the conditions of the playing surface.
SWEEPING ROCKS
Sweeping makes a rock curl less and travel farther. The lead, second, and third all take turns sweeping the rocks. The skip, who is like the team’s quarterback, is the only one who doesn’t regularly sweep stones.
KEEPING SCORE
Once all 16 rocks have been thrown down the narrowsheet of ice, the score for that end is counted based on the final positions of the stones in the house, (the group of circles on the ice that looks like a bull’s eye). Only one team can score in an end. A team scores one point for every rock that it has closer to the center of the house than the other team.
STRATEGY
Generally, the skip determines a rink’s strategy. During the game, the skip stands at one end of the sheet and tells his or her other three players where they should place their shots. A team’s strategy doesn’t always go according to plan! And that’s part of what makes curling so much fun. No two games are alike; the unpredictability is always appealing.