Olympic curling: US men notch win; women struggle

USA men's curling
Teammates John Landsteiner, John Shuster and Jared Zezel of the USA compete in the Curling Men's Round Robin match between USA and Denmark during the Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics at Ice Cube Curling Center on Feb. 12, 2014 in Sochi, Russia.
Quinn Rooney/Getty Images

Norway and China remained unbeaten and the U.S. finally picked up a win Wednesday in men's curling at the Sochi OIympics.

Wearing flat caps, knee-length knickers and dark blue soccer socks, the stylish Norwegians beat Germany 8-5 for a third consecutive victory.

"It was knickerbockers vs. lederhosen today," Norway curler Christoffer Svae said. "And the knickerbockers won."

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China defeated Switzerland 5-4 for its third win without a loss. Sweden, also 3-0, had a bye in the morning session at the Ice Cube Curling Center.

The U.S. men and women were a combined 0-5 after two days' play, but John Shuster's team ended the losing streak by beating Denmark 9-5, with five of its points coming from steals.

"Getting a win was huge both for our team and for the state of curling as far as our country goes," Shuster said.

Shuster said the arrival of his wife Sarah and 9-month-old son Luke in Sochi on Tuesday sparked an improvement in his performance, after disappointing losses to Norway and China.

"I got a text message from my wife last night that helped me get in a much better mindset," he said. "She just told me to remember to enjoy this and be a curler, because you are out here doing something that you have fun doing.

"It really changed my complete being."

There are four games in the evening session, including Canada vs. Russia and Denmark vs. Sweden. The Canadians (1-2) have made an underwhelming start to the defense of their title.

Norway caused a stir in the Vancouver Games in 2010 by donning diamond-printed pants for their matches instead of the usual black curling trousers that most teams wear.

In Sochi, the Norwegians have gone a step further and unleashed their new, bold range of clothing on the Germans.

The cap -- known as a sixpence -- is Norwegian-patterned with different colors and different shapes. The socks are exactly the same type worn by Norway's soccer players. The pattern on the knickers was sharp red-and-blue teeth.

Norway, the 2010 silver medalist, has now beaten the U.S., Russia and Germany -- "probably the three weakest teams of the tournament," according to Svae.

"We play Sweden tomorrow," he added. "We'll get a first real test."

The U.S. slipped behind 3-0 after the first end but responded with a deuce and then stole points in the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 8th ends, keeping the Danes scoreless until the 9th.

"Hopefully this turns the tables," Shuster said, "and we can get it rolling in the other direction."

U.S. WOMEN NEAR ELIMINATION

USA women's curling
Jessica Schultz of USA in action during the Curling Round Robin match between USA and China during day five of the Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics at Ice Cube Curling Center on Feb. 12, 2014 in Sochi, Russia.
Clive Mason/Getty Images

As one of the most aggressive curlers around, Eve Muirhead lives and dies by her high-risk strategy.

The British skip perhaps was too ambitious for her own good Wednesday.

With the clock running down and her team behind 8-6 to Canada at the women's Olympic tournament, Muirhead could have played an easy draw to the button with her last stone to take a tense game to an extra end at 8-8.

Instead, she gambled on removing three tightly bunched Canadian rocks to pick up three points for the win. The move backfired, and Canada clinched a 9-6 victory to stay unbeaten in three round-robin games.

"It was a gamble but ... that's the skip," Muirhead said. "They get the glory when they make them or the slack if they miss them."

It consigned Britain, one of the favorites for gold, to a second loss in three games and left Canada atop the standings with Switzerland.

At least the world champion Brits still have a decent chance of qualifying.

The same can't be said of the United States.

Erika Brown's rink lost its fourth straight, 7-4 to China, and likely will need to win all five of its remaining round-robin games to stand a chance of reaching the semifinals.

"We are going to stay upbeat whatever happens," Brown said. "We worked really hard to be here. We are doing our best out there and we'll keep fighting."

In other matches in the afternoon session, defending champion Sweden beat Korea 7-4 and host nation Russia lost to Japan 8-4.

China, Japan and Sweden are all 2-1.

As Muirhead pondered what might have been after her game-defining shot went awry, Canada skip Jennifer Jones shuffled down the ice toward a small band of Canadian fans and gave them a round of applause.

It was as much a celebration of relief as happiness.

Jones -- the form skip in Sochi -- played another great game, making 93 percent of her shots, and generally outshining Muirhead.

Still, Britain had the hammer going into the final end and was left with a shot _ albeit a difficult one _ for victory. Muirhead couldn't resist going for it but failed to catch the first Canadian stone at the right angle.

"I probably would have thrown the draw to go to the extra end," Jones said. "It was a tough triple to get everything to spin out, but I guess she makes them a lot."

Muirhead had no regrets.

"We like to call an aggressive game," she said. "I don't go for shots if I don't think they are there, I'm not one of those glory hunters. I thought it was there."

All is not lost for the British. They have played -- and lost -- arguably their two toughest round-robin games against Sweden and now Russia. They should still pick up enough wins to make the top four.

"It would have been nice to get a win against one of them but at the end of the day, we are not down and out," Muirhead said. "We have to make sure we don't drop too many more."

For Canada's women, seeking a first gold medal since the Nagano Olympics in 1998, Sochi just gets better and better. They have crushed China and Sweden, and now they've toppled the world champions.