Canada Cup | |
Established: | 2003 |
Current Host City: | Leduc, Alberta |
Current Arena: | Sobeys Arena |
Purse: | $265,000 (2019) |
Current Men's Champion: | John Epping |
Current Women's Champion: | Rachel Homan |
Current: | 2019 Canada Cup |
The Canada Cup (branded as the Home Hardware Canada Cup for sponsorship reasons, and also referred to as the Canada Cup of Curling) is a major men's and women's curling championship in Canada. It is organized by Curling Canada and is one of its major events on its "Season of Champions". The event is frequently used as a qualifier for various other events, such as the Canadian Olympic Curling Trials, Pre-Trials and Continental Cup. Since 2013, the Canada Cup is not held during the same curling season as the Winter Olympic Games.
The first event was held in 2003 at the Sport Mart Place in Kamloops, British Columbia, the Cup's home until 2008. During this time the event was sponsored by the Strauss Herb Company. The first event featured a total purse of $220,000, divided equally for the men's and women's events. Subsequent events however have seen smaller purses available.[1]
In 2004, a second tier of competition, the qualification rounds Canada Cup East and Canada Cup West were added.[2] In 2006, this had changed to men's and women's qualification rounds. The qualifying rounds were held every year with the John Shea Insurance Canada Cup Qualifier being held at the Ottawa and Rideau curling clubs in Ottawa, Ontario and the Diversified Transportation Canada Cup Qualifier being held at the Saville Sports Centre in Edmonton, Alberta. The men's and women's qualifiers alternated between the two cities.
On February 18, 2008, the Canadian Curling Association announced that the 2009 finals of the Canada Cup of Curling would be held at the Farrell Agencies Arena in Yorkton, Saskatchewan.
The 2009-10 season was without a Canada Cup, with the event returning in December 2010 rather in the Spring like it had been previously. The Canada Cup qualifiers were abolished for the 2010 event, using a number of smaller bonspiels to feed the event. The 2010 event was held at the Medicine Hat Arena in Medicine Hat, Alberta.[1]
The 2011 event in Cranbrook, British Columbia hosted seven teams of each gender instead of ten. The teams played in a round robin as in previous years, with the top three advancing to the playoff round. The second and third-placed teams played in the semifinal, and the winner faced the first-placed team in the final. The 2012 event used the same format.[1]
At present, there are no longer any qualifying tournaments. Teams qualify based on their World Curling Tour Order of Merit rankings, with one spot reserved for the top-ranking non-qualified team on the Canadian Team Ranking System closer to the event.[3]
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada, Curling Canada stated that the 2020 Canada Cup would likely be postponed to an unspecified date in 2021, citing its role in qualification for trials for the 2022 Winter Olympics.[4] The 2021 event ultimately did not go ahead, and there are no plans to hold the event in the near future.[5] It was replaced on Curling Canada's Season of Champions calendar by the PointsBet Invitational.[6]
Event | Host City | Champion team | Runner-up team | |
---|---|---|---|---|
John Morris, Joe Frans, Craig Savill, Brent Laing | ||||
John Morris, Kevin Koe, Marc Kennedy, Paul Moffatt | ||||
David Nedohin (Fourth), Randy Ferbey (Skip), Scott Pfeifer, Marcel Rocque | ||||
Glenn Howard, Richard Hart, Brent Laing, Craig Savill | ||||
Kevin Martin, John Morris, Marc Kennedy, Ben Hebert | ||||
Kevin Martin, Kevin Park, Marc Kennedy, Ben Hebert | ||||
David Nedohin (Fourth), Randy Ferbey (Skip), Scott Pfeifer, Marcel Rocque | ||||
Kevin Martin, John Morris, Marc Kennedy, Ben Hebert | ||||
Glenn Howard, Wayne Middaugh, Brent Laing, Craig Savill | ||||
Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan[7] | Glenn Howard, Wayne Middaugh, Brent Laing, Craig Savill | |||
Brad Jacobs, Ryan Fry, E. J. Harnden, Ryan Harnden | ||||
Mike McEwen, B. J. Neufeld, Matt Wozniak, Denni Neufeld | ||||
Kevin Koe, B. J. Neufeld, Colton Flasch, Ben Hebert | ||||
2019[8] | Kevin Koe, B. J. Neufeld, Colton Flasch, Ben Hebert | |||
2020 | TBD | Postponed due to COVID-19 |
Event | Host City | Champion team | Runner-up team | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Kelley Law, Georgina Wheatcroft, Julie Skinner, Diane Dezura | ||||
Sherry Anderson, Kim Hodson, Sandra Mulroney, Donna Gignac | ||||
Jan Betker, Sherry Linton, Joan McCusker, Marcia Gudereit | ||||
Jennifer Jones, Cathy Overton-Clapham, Jill Officer, Georgina Wheatcroft | ||||
Cathy King, Lori Armistead, Raylene Rocque, Diane Dealy | ||||
Kelly Scott, Jeanna Schraeder, Sasha Carter, Renee Simons | ||||
Marie-France Larouche, Annie Lemay, Joëlle Sabourin, Véronique Brassard | ||||
Cheryl Bernard, Susan O'Connor, Carolyn Darbyshire, Cori Morris | ||||
Chelsea Carey, Kristy Jenion, Kristen Foster, Lindsay Titheridge | ||||
Kaitlyn Lawes, Kirsten Wall, Jill Officer, Dawn Askin | ||||
Rachel Homan, Emma Miskew, Joanne Courtney, Lisa Weagle | ||||
Val Sweeting, Lori Olson-Johns, Dana Ferguson, Rachelle Brown | ||||
Rachel Homan, Emma Miskew, Joanne Courtney, Lisa Weagle | ||||
Kerri Einarson, Val Sweeting, Shannon Birchard, Briane Meilleur | ||||
Tracy Fleury, Selena Njegovan, Liz Fyfe, Kristin MacCuish | ||||
2020 | TBD | Postponed due to COVID-19 |