Let’s talk about the Puck Pontiff fanning the flames of fear…giving local news snoops the cold shoulder…Gobuty and Shenkarow never went into hiding…Jen’s farewell…a Buffalo Boy in green…and guess who’s coming home?

Mike McEwen in the green of Saskatchewan.

Top o’ the morning to you, Mark Chipman.

Well, that was a special kind of nice of Gary Bettman to take time away from his irksome and tireless Save the Coyotes crusade and touch down in Good Ol’ Hometown to stomp out the brush fire you started.

I mean, I call you the Puck Pontiff, Mark, but we both know that Bettman is the real Puck Pontiff, him being commissioner of the National Hockey League and all, so anytime he braves the snow and the cold for a drop-in at 300 Portage Ave. is cause to polish the fancy silverware and break out the fine China.

Nothing’s too good for House Guest Gary, right Mark?

It wasn’t always that way, of course.

I don’t have to remind you that Commish Gary was fitted for a black hat when the Winnipeg Jets were whisked away in 1996. Even though it wasn’t his fault that no one in Good Ol’ Hometown was prepared to bankroll Jets 1.0 back then, or that the Canadian loonie was worth about 10 cents U.S., he was the bad guy in the eyes of a PO’d public. The rabble reckoned that he allowed the franchise to defect from Our Frozen Tundra to the Arizona desert with little, if any, resistance.

Thus the villainous commish was persona non grata until 2011, when you and your money-bags partner, the 3rd Baron Thomson of Fleet, cut a cheque for $170 million and gave a withering Atlanta Thrashers franchise a new home and a fresh start on the potholed streets of downtown Winnipeg.

I wouldn’t say all has been forgiven and forgotten, Mark, but I will suggest fewer among the rabble are sticking pins in Gary Bettman dolls these days.

Which brings me back to Commish Gary’s whistlestop in Good Ol’ Hometown last Tuesday.

The man engaged in a verbal parry-and-thrust with a gathering of news snoops, and among his bon mots was this: “I’m kind of mystified at the tension that seems to have developed here.” And this: “I’m not sure why people are now speculating that somehow (the Jets) not going to be here.”

Hands up anyone fooled by that “what, me worry?” side show.

I don’t think Commish Gary is a dumb man, Mark. He just sometimes plays dumb. Like, he isn’t remotely “mystified” about anything re the Winnipeg franchise. He knows the burg’s history vis-a-vis the NHL. He knows season ticket sales have sagged. He knows the Little Hockey House On The Prairie has about 2,000 unoccupied chairs most nights (87 per cent capacity to date). And he most certainly knows precisely who’s responsible for stoking folks’ fear of Jets 2.0 morphing into the Salt Lake City Saints or the Houston Apollo.

It’s you, Mark. Yes, you.

The flapping of gums re the vibrancy and viability of the Winnipeg market wouldn’t exist today if not for your sound bites.

It began last April with the Forever Winnipeg marketing campaign that you signed off on, Mark. Reminding the rabble that the original Jets skipped town for Arizona in 1996 isn’t a sales pitch. It’s a buy-tickets-or-else threat. It was daft. Also regrettable.

Then, in late October, you had a sit-down with Darren Dreger, who asked point-blank if thousands of empty seats this season have given rise to the risk of you putting up a For Sale sign and pulling up stakes. This is what you told the TSN insider: “No. I say not on our watch.”

Many believed you, myself included. Silly moi.

I mean, I ought to know better, Mark. After all this time (69 years watching, covering and writing about hockey), I should be able to recognize the barking of a carny. Yet you hoodwinked me with some slick blah, blah, blah about your Jets’ forever shelf life in Good Ol’ Hometown.

But, hey, why wouldn’t I swallow your spiel whole, like the great biblical fish inhaling Jonah? After all, you own half of downtown Pegtown and the 3rd Baron has more coin than the Royal Canadian Mint out there on Lagimodiere Boulevard. So sure, with your good name and the deepest pockets in Canada, any notion that the Jets can’t make a go of it at 300 Portage Ave. is pure piffle.

But wait. Less that two weeks ago, you engaged in a verbal to-and-fro with yet another jock journo from the Republic of Tranna—Chris Johnston of The Athletic—and this is what you had to say about empty seats and the shelf life of your Jets 2.0: “This place we find ourselves in right now, it’s not going to work over the long haul. It just isn’t.”

Yikes.

No, Mark, you didn’t literally tell the rabble that the NHL will flee Good Ol’ Hometown yet again. You were speaking your truth. Trouble is, your truth in February wasn’t your truth in October. And that’s what I don’t get. How can you assure the rabble that there’s no threat of the hockey club leaving (“Not on our watch.”) and then, just four months later, “it’s not going to work over the long haul.”

What I heard was “buy tickets or else.” I mean, I don’t know about you, but if someone tells me they’ve got a gun I’m inclined to think they plan to use it.

None among us knows what was said behind closed doors during Commish Gary’s drop-in last week, Mark, but I submit he’d have been wise to advise, or instruct you, to stop playing ping-pong with people’s emotions. It’s disgraceful.

Also disgraceful is Puck Pontiff Chipman’s relationship with local jock journos. On the rare occasion when he believes he has a sound bite worthy of our consumption, he runs to a reporter from the Republic of Tranna rather than one or more of the girls and boys on the Jets beat. Once he’s provided the outrider from The ROT the full-meal deal, he might (might!) hand one of his pets at the Drab Slab a table scrap. I don’t know who penetrated the Puck Pontiff’s ultra-thin layer of skin (I have my suspicions), but Chipman is being petty and petulant.

Bettman had places to be and people to see, so his “what me worry?” to-and-fro with news snoops was limited to 15 minutes. But get this—his close encounter with the local media didn’t turn him into a block of salt! Gasp! Take note, Mark Chipman.

I don’t recall either Michael Gobuty or Barry Shenkarow running and hiding from those of us with notepads and recording devices during their time as stewards of Jets 1.0. It didn’t matter if it was the NHL or World Hockey Association, Michael and Barry were usually a phone call away. And, hey, they even returned calls. What a concept.

Do many among the rabble give a damn that the Puck Pontiff isn’t warm and fuzzy with local news snoops? Probably not. Does his cold shoulder make a reporter’s or a columnist’s job more difficult? A reporter perhaps, a columnist absolutely not. So what’s he trying to prove, other than he can be petty and petulant?

Still missing in action at the Drab Slab is a regular sports columnist, but if they’re ever inclined to fill the position I recommend they give Jeff Hamilton a shot at the gig. Jeff appears to be the only guy in the toy department at 1355 Mountain Ave. who’s willing to deliver opinion, sometimes with snark, and a case in point would be his recent piece on Toronto Argos loose-cannon quarterback Chad Kelly. This was his most-biting line: “There’s little evidence to suggest CFL commissioner Randy Ambrosie understands the league’s violence against women policy.” Atta boy, Jeff.

I once saw Kelly on an American podcast, and he came across as a full-of-himself, my-stuff-don’t-stink frat boy, so I’m not surprised that a female, now-former Argos coach has sued him for being an oinker.

The Jennifer Jones farewell at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts last Sunday was a curling Kodak moment, even if the legend finished the night on the short end of the scoreboard vs. Rachel Homan. My main question was this: Why the hell did Jennifer allow coach Glenn Howard to talk her into making a second-choice shot at the end? Howard made it sound like drawing the lid with all sorts of gunk blocking the way is as simple as sorting socks and, frankly, I was astonished that Jennifer bowed to his wishes.

I don’t know about you, but my mind’s eye will always see Mike McEwen with the Manitoba Buffalo on his back, so I’m not keen on him wearing Saskatchewan green at the Brier. I mean, Kermit the Frog is green. St. Paddy’s Day is green. Envy is green. But Manitoba’s great Pebble People shouldn’t be seen in green. It’s as wrong as Pope Francis wearing a pair of MC Hammer pants while saying mass. Yes, I realize that curling’s new-age rules have expunged long-held geographic imperatives, but I don’t have to like it when a four-time ‘Toba champion from Brandon/Winnipeg is representing the folks on The Flattest of Lands.

Speaking of change, when did the Brier Patch become the Original 16 Patch? Did I miss the memo?

Michael Jordan says he could score 100 points in today’s NBA: “It’s less physical, and the rules have changed, obviously. Based on these rules, if I had to play with my style of play, I’m pretty sure I would have fouled out, or I would have been at the free throw line pretty often, and I could have scored 100 points.” I call BS on that. His Royal Airness is 61 years old. He couldn’t score more than 80 or 90 points in a game today.

My first impressions of the current season of The Voice: I’ve yet to hear an exceptional voice, and rookie judges Dan + Shay seem to think the show is about them rather than the singers.

And, finally, I’m coming home. Not that anyone cares, but that’s the plan after a quarter century on the Left Flank of our vast country. I just need to find suitable lodgings in a suitable area of Good Ol’ Hometown (I’ve discovered it’s not the easiest thing to do via the internet), and I’ll be back. Hey, maybe I can get there in time for the Stanley Cup parade. The Jets are going to win the Stanley Cup aren’t they?

About the Curling Capital of the World…B.J. brings home the Brier bacon with Kevin Koe…a top 10 without Jeff Stoughton????…how much did those voters have to drink?…and happy birthday to CJOB

Monday morning coming down in 3, 2, 1…and no forests were harmed in the production of this essay

So, I’m reading a piece on women’s curling the other day and I learned that Edmonton is (apparently) the “Curling Capital of the World.”

This was quite a startling revelation for me.

Don Duguid

I mean, my first sports editor, Jack Matheson, informed me at the front end of the 1970s that Good Ol’ Hometown was the curling capital of Canada, if not the entire planet. I believed him because…well, Matty said it, so it had to be true. And, sure enough, a number of years later the Digit, Don Duguid, doubled down and confirmed that River City is the very heartbeat of all things pebble.

It’s the centre of it all,” the two-time world champeen assured me during a chin-wag at his main hangout, the Mother Club (The Granite), which sits on the banks of the murky Assiniboine River, a splish and a splash across the way from Osborne Village in Winnipeg.

Yet, now, along comes Terry Jones to tell us that both Matty and the legendary Dugie were full of phooey.

Moosie Turnbull

Jones writes that recent Scotties Tournament of Hearts winners Sarah Wilkes, Dana Ferguson and Rachel Brown of Edmonton are the “latest champions from the Curling Capital of the World.” He’s even writing a book about Northern Alberta supremacy: World Capital of Curling, an ode to E-Town’s most celebrated Pebble People.

Well, doesn’t that just put my knickers in a twist.

Being one of the Buffalo People, you see, I subscribe to the Gospel According to Matty, Dugie and Moosie Turnbull, which states, without equivocation, that Manitoba is curling’s Mecca.

Thus I feel obliged to inform Jones that he is as wrong as Milan Lucic skating beside Connor McDavid.

Large

Before we go any further, I suppose I should introduce you to Jonesy. He’s a big-fun sports scribe of large girth and an equally large presence in E-Town. Hence the nickname Large. A good guy who began documenting the trials and tribulations of Edmonton jocks and jockettes before PM Justin’s poppa Pierre was the resident at 24 Sussex Drive in Bytown, Jonesy has heard and seen some things during his 50-plus years on the beat for both Edmonton rags, the Journal and Sun. Enough, in fact, to earn him membership in a handful of hallowed jock halls, including the Canadian Curling Hall of Fame. The lad’s got cred. Large cred (pun intended).

What he doesn’t have, however, is evidence to support his notion.

While it’s true that E-Town’s male Pebble People have been doing boffo business this century, the cold, hard fact is that they’ve been playing catchup to the Buffalo Boys for longer than Jonesy has been scribbling sports. And they still have some catching up to do. As for E-Town vs. our Buffalo Girls, ditto. It’s all catch us if you can. Check it out:

Brier champions: Winnipeg 25, Edmonton 18.
Scotties champions: Winnipeg 12, Edmonton 4.
World champions: (men) Winnipeg 6, Edmonton 7; (women) Winnipeg 3, Alberta 0.
Olympic champions: Winnipeg 2, Edmonton 1.
Totals: Buffalo People 48, Edmonton 30.

So here’s the deal: Scotland is the cradle of curling, but Good Ol’ Hometown is the Curling Capital of the World.

The notion that it’s Edmonton—sorry, Jonesy, that’s nothing but a (large) bunch of buffalo chips.

The self-proclaimed title “Curling Capital of the World” rings rather hollow when one considers that Edmonton and Northern Alberta have yet to produce a world women’s champion. The best they’ve managed is bronze, by Heather Nedohin and Cathy King.

I suppose it’s only fair to point out that the folks in E-Town turn out to watch curling in unparalleled numbers. They hold the record for highest head count at the Brier, the men’s world championship and the Roar of the Rings Olympic Trials. I’d be impressed, except that just tells me they got tired of watching the Oilers lose and decided to give curling a try.

2019 Brier champs: Kevin Koe, B.J. Neufeld, Colton Flasch, Ben Hebert.

Congrats to one of the Buffalo Boys, B.J. Neufeld, who slid third stones for Kevin Koe’s winning Alberta outfit at the Canadian men’s curling championship in Brandon. B.J. spent 11 years butting his head against a wall with Mike McEwen and pals playing out of the Fort Rouge Club in Good Ol’ Hometown, so it was boffo to see him get the job done. B.J.’s pop, Chris, was a member of Vic Peters’ Brier-winning team in 1992.

It’s interesting to note that none of the lads who won the Tankard on Sunday honed his craft on Alberta pebble. Koe is from Yellowknife, Neufeld from Winnipeg, Colton Flasch from Biggar, Sask., and Hebert from Regina. They all eventually found their way to the Glencoe Club in Calgary.

Jeff Stoughton

This just in: The 31 TSN “experts” who chose the 10 greatest male curlers of all time have lost their freaking marbles.

Either that or they just spent an entire week in the Brier Patch at Westoba Place in Brandon, doing non-stop elbow pumps.

I mean, good gawd. You’d have to be mind-numbingly pie-eyed to actually believe Dave Nedohin or John Morris were better curlers than Jeff Stoughton. You can include Wayne Middaugh and Marc Kennedy, as well. What will they tell us next? That Mr. Ed the talking horse had better giddyup than Secretariat?

Hey, no knock against Nedohin, a good Buffalo Boy. But no way does he come out of Manitoba 11 times like Stoughton. And he won two of his Brier titles when 18 of the top teams in the country were MIA, boycotting the event to earn a larger slice of the financial pie for curlers. As for Morris, he couldn’t cut it as a skip. Nuff said about him. Middaugh? Don’t even get me started. Kennedy? Good grief.

Fact is, giants of the game like the Howard boys, Russ and Glenn, and Brad Gushue wouldn’t have worn the Buffalo at the Brier 11 times had they been based in Manitoba.

I guess Stoughton and all those other Manitobans won 27 Briers by accident.

Kevin Koe

Just as astonishing as the Stoughton omission, Kevin Koe was absent from the top 10. Yes, I realize the 31 “experts” did their voting prior to his Brier championship run in Brandon on Sunday, but he’d already done enough to get the nod over some of the men I’ve mentioned. (Seriously, John Morris?) Now Koe has four Brier titles, with four different teams. A top-10 list without Koe or Stoughton? They might want to crumple that up, toss it in the trash bin and try again. And stop drinking!

For the record, here’s TSN’s top 10 greatest male curlers: 1. Kevin Martin; 2. Glenn Howard; 3. Randy Ferbey; 4. Russ Howard; 5. John Morris; 6. Ernie Richardson; 7. Wayne Middaugh; 8. Marc Kennedy; 9. Brad Gushue; 10. Dave Nedohin.

And here are the guilty parties, all 31 of the “experts” (they should be easy to pick out in a crowd—they’ll have the red faces):

TSN: Vic Rauter, Cheryl Bernard, Bryan Mudryk, Bob Weeks, Kevin Pratt, Scott Higgins.
B.C.: Elaine Dagg-Jackson.
Alberta: Warren Hansen, Con Griwkowsky, Renee Sonnenberg, Terry Jones.
Saskatchewan: Devin Heroux, Stefanie Lawton.
Manitoba: Jill Thurston, Ted Wyman.
Ontario: Greg Strong, Mike Harris, George Karrys, Kevin Palmer, Mary Chilvers, Lorie Eddy.
Quebec: Guy Hemmings, Marie-France Larouche.
Nova Scotia: Mark Dacey, Mary Mattatall.
New Brunswick: Heidi Hanlon.
Prince Edward Island: Nancy Cameron.
Newfoundland and Labrador: Cathy Cunningham, Geoff Cunningham.
Territories: Kerry Galusha.
Ad Hoc: Al Cameron.

And, finally, happy 73rd birthday to CJOB in Good Ol’ Hometown. They went on air on this day in 1946, just in time to broadcast the Winnipeg Blue Bombers’ last Grey Cup victory. Just kidding, of course. Worked at ‘OB for a brief time, with Friar, Knuckles and Kelly Moore. Terrific people.

About the McKenzie Brothers (Bob, Doug and Scott)…shootouts bite…a session with a shrink…Uncle Sam’s beer league curlers…poking fun at Canada…Tessa, Tessa, Tessa…gold-medal writing from Bruce Arthur…and other Olympic stuff on my mind

I cannot survive in a 140- or 280-character world, so here are more tweets that grew up to be too big for Twitter…

Bob, Doug and long-lost brother Scott—the McKenzie Brothers.

Scott Moir—beauty, eh?

Who knew a fancy skater (and an ice dancer at that) could be such a party animal? Who knew there was a third McKenzie Brother?

Moir’s beer-fuelled antics during the women’s hockey gold-medal match between Canada and the United States at the Olympic Games of Snow and Ice Sports were straight out of the SCTV playbook. It was Bob and Doug McKenzie do PyeongChang. It couldn’t have been more Canadian if it was a Mountie eating back bacon while reading a Pierre Berton book and listening to a Gordon Lightfoot album.

Coo-roo-coo-coo-coo-coo-coo-coo!

Shootouts suck! Sound like a batch of sour grapes? Probably. But it isn’t. The Americans were worthy winners of the women’s gold hockey trinket in South Korea. They were the superior side through 80 minutes of actual hockey and, had the championship match continued to a second period of sudden-victory overtime rather than the shootout, surely Uncle Sam’s girls would have prevailed. It seemed to me that the Canadians had begun to run on fumes. Thus, the 3-2 U.S. victory was a just result. The Games methodology, however, is greatly flawed. The shootout never was, never will be a good idea. Next time, what do you say we ask the Canadian and U.S. women if they’d rather continue playing hockey until someone scores a goal? Let’s leave the shootouts to soccer.

Joceleyne Larocque, third from left.

If I’m Jocelyne Larocque, I’m not apologizing for a damn thing. I mean, it’s not like she did something stupid. You know, like get drunk, steal a Hummer, race around PyeongChang like Danica Patrick on uppers, then spend some quality time at a cop shop. Do something stupid like that (hello Willie Raine, Dave and Maja Duncan), you apologize and hope you get a judge who goes easy on drunk drivers. But do what Larocque did and…meh. So she removed a silver trinket that had been wrapped around her neck by some Olympic Games mucky-muck at a most awkward moment—during the lengthy parting-gifts ceremony post-match. Big flipping deal. Larocque was PO’d. The loss to the Americans was a fresh, open wound, and silver wasn’t a suitable salve. So she held it in her left hand. And for that the Canadian rearguard receives an online scolding from Miss Manners wannabes on both sides of the great divide? That’s why she offered a mea culpa? As if. Raw emotion is the very reason I buy into the Olympic Games. Sometimes that means tears of joy. Sometimes it’s tears of sorrow. In Larocque’s case, it meant an angst-of-the-moment act of defiance. I don’t see the problem. Stop piling on.

Lucy Van Pelt

Should we book a session with Dr. Phil? Or maybe Charlie Brown’s shrink, Lucy Van Pelt. Either way, I’m thinking some of us might need to vent. I mean, our hockey women had to settle for silver. Our hockey men had the gall to lose to Germany at a most inopportune time. Our women’s and men’s curling teams? Bupkus.

I swear, this is the biggest downer since Nickelback landed the halftime gig at the 99th Grey Cup game.

But let’s save the shrink fees and accept that hockey and curling haven’t been Canada’s personal play things for much of the 21st century? Consider what has transpired since 2000:

Hockey

World championship titles—Canada 10, Rest of World 21
Olympic titles—Canada 7, Rest of World 3
Total—Canada 17, Rest of World 24.

Curling World championship titles—Canada 17, Rest of World 19
Olympic titles—Canada 5, Rest of World 6
Total—Canada 22, Rest of World 25.

British coach Glenn Howard.

Ya, sure, this is still Planet Puckhead. We’re very good at hockey. The best. Our women and men aren’t supposed to lose. When they do, we lower our psyche to half staff and share a group hug that stretches from Tofino to St. John’s. We don’t commit to as much navel gazing when our curlers slip on a banana peel, yet we do give some pause whenever our Pebble People don’t occupy the top step of the podium.

But let’s spare ourselves a National Day of Teeth Gnashing.

I’m singing the backup vocals for Glenn Howard when he suggests we all just chill after what transpired in South Korea.

Settle down folks,” said Howard, a Canadian and world champion curler who coached Eve Muirhead’s Great Britain team that ushered our Rachel Homan outfit out of playoff contention. “Canadians have to understand that these teams outside of Canada are really good.”

Been that way for a long time.

Rachel Homan

Most stinging (and over the top) criticism of our women curlers came from Paul Wiecek. The Winnipeg Free Press sports columnist aimed his poison arrows not only at Homan and her gal pals from Ottawa, but also at “that most worthless species in all of sports, the curling coach.” He explained: “As far as I’m concerned, the Homan team’s problems here begin with their coach, Adam Kingsbury, an academic with zero curling background who the Homan team has nonetheless ascribed a Koreshian-like influence in recent years. Homan has been putting the ‘less’ in ‘joyless’ since she was curling juniors and Kingsbury has just made that worse from my vantage point, turning these women into walking robots. If they were having any fun competing at an event they had devoted their lives towards, I saw no evidence of it. And if you’re not having fun playing a sport for which the monetary reward is somewhere between nothing and next to nothing, then what’s the point?” That’s cruel and mean in spirit.

America’s gold-medal curlers: Tyler George, John Landsteiner, John Shuster and Matt Hamilton.

Nothing says Monday night beer league curling like the four men who struck gold for Uncle Sam in South Korea.

Seriously. How much did they spend on their outfits? A buck fifty at a thrift shop? Third Tyler George wears eight-year-old sneakers. They’re full of holes. And U.S. second Matt Hamilton doesn’t use a belt to hold up his trousers. That’s Secretariat’s old girth strap. But, hey, if a guy of Hamilton’s dimensions can win an Olympic Games gold medal I wouldn’t rule out an Ed Werenich comeback.

All of which made them easy to like.

These Yankee doodle dandies are a throwback to the 1970s. I kept waiting for one of ’em to break out a pack of smokes and light up. On the ice.

Their back story is brilliant. A few years ago, USA Curling wanted them in their program like Donald Trump wants to tick off the NRA. But now John Shuster, George, Hamilton and lead John Landsteiner are Olympic champions. We’re apt to see them chatting with one of the gab guys on late-night TV, and there’s probably marketing possibilities. Who knows, they might make enough cash on the side to get rid of their slo-pitch uniforms and purchase actual curling duds.

Headline writers south of the 49th parallel are having great sport at our expense. A New York Times headline reads: “Canada’s Curling Is Crumbling! Or Something Like That.” The accompanying article suggests our double donut on PyeongChang pebble “would be comparable to the United States men’s and women’s basketball teams failing to win a medal at the Summer Olympics.”

Other samples of American cheek:

Washington Post (after the U.S. beat us in both men’s curling and women’s hockey on the same day): “For six glorious hours, the United States owned Canada like a Tim Hortons franchisee.”

Wall Street Journal: “Canadian Grief: Curling and Hockey Losses are ‘Terrible, Terrible, Terrible’.”

MarketWatch: “Hug a Canadian, urges German Foreign Office after dramatic ice-hockey upset.”

Quick! Someone get a match! Let’s burn down the White House again!

Whiteboard Willie Desjardins

As predicted, jock journalists were quick to apply a coat of tar and feathers to head coach Whiteboard Willie Desjardins in the wake of Canada’s mournful, 4-3 semifinal shinny loss to Germany.

Bruce Arthur of the Toronto Star opined the “coaching was a mess.”

Dave Feschuk, also a Star scribe, wrote: “What went wrong? Maybe it was Desjardins’ infectious nervousness, or his odd overreliance on his bottom-six grinders, playing the old-time Saskatchewan stereotype to a tee. Even in a 4-on-4 situation needing desperately to score, Desjardins tossed out (Eric) O’Dell and Maxim Lapierre, his skill-challenged energy guys.”

Not to be out-nastied, Steve Simmons of Postmedia Tranna added: “Desjardins had much to answer for. He didn’t change lines. He didn’t change styles. He didn’t adjust to the Germans’ trapping ways. He didn’t shorten his bench when he needed to. He continued to use ineffective players. The coach, Willie Desjardins, froze.”

And what did the natterbugs of negativity have to say about Desjardins after Canada’s bounce-back, 6-4 win over the Czech Republic in the bronze-medal match? Crickets. Nothing but the sound of crickets. Mooks.

(That unfortunate loss to the Germans doesn’t seem like such a stunner today does it? Not after they took Russia to OT in the title match.)

Tessa Virtue

I’m not sure what it is about Tessa Virtue, but I cannot turn my eyes away from her when she’s on TV. It doesn’t matter if she’s skating, marching into the stadium or standing on the podium, holding a stuffed toy in one of her dainty hands. I am hypnotized. And it’s been that way for years.

She is a spellbinding temptress, sexy, sensual and seductive. As playful as a kitten and as smoky as a femme fatale, she is Snow White with come-hither tease and erotic athleticism. As she floats about the ice, her lissome body bending, twisting and twirling to the whims of her dance partner, Scott Moir, I wonder what world she has disappeared into. Her smile tells us it must be a pleasing place, full of passion and Zen-like serenity.

Others skate as well as Virtue. Perhaps better. But no one else has her ‘it’ factor.

She and Moir will leave South Korea with two gold medals, adding to a collection of Winter Games trinkets that now numbers five, more than any other fancy skaters in history. Alas, we might never see the Canadian couple skate together again, after 20 years. But what a beautiful trip they took us on.

Matthew Scianitti of TSN shares a lovely to-and-fro he enjoyed with Virtue, scant seconds after she had arrived in the mixed area following her gold-medal skate with Scott Moir in the ice dance last Wednesday.

Virtue (to assembled news scavengers): “How are you guys?”

Scianitti: “You mean us?”

Virtue: “Ya.”

Scianitti: “Dude, you just skated in front of the world and won a gold medal. Doesn’t matter how we are.”

Virtue: “Yes it does. The Olympics are tough on everyone.”

Can you say classy, kids? Totally.

Going from a beauty to a beast, it’s about Mike Milbury. The NBC gab guy’s filter between his grey matter and tongue was on the fritz during a Russia-U.S. men’s hockey game. Discussing Russkie rearguard Slava Voynov, he said: “This guy was a special player, and an unfortunate incident left the Los Angeles Kings without a great defenceman.” So, that’s what we’re calling wife-beating these days? An “unfortunate incident.” Voynov was sentenced to nine months in the brig for beating the hell out of his wife, and he served two months before slithering back to his hole in Russia. He shouldn’t have been allowed to participate in South Korea any more than Milbury should be allowed near a microphone.

Kirstie Alley

Actor Kirstie Alley took a bit of a pummelling on social media after she tweeted that curling is “boring.” I don’t understand the great hue and cry. Fact is, she’s right. I love curling, but I acknowledge that it sometimes can push the needle high on the bore-o-metre. Then, again, so can baseball, football, hockey and hoops. Oh, and most any movie/TV show that Kirstie Alley has ever appeared in.

I never covered an Olympics. Had no desire to. So I have to wonder: When did news scavengers in South Korea find time to sleep? Did they sleep? I mean, new stuff seemed to pop up on the Internet every half hour. It was non-stop scribbling. Thus, I harbor considerable admiration for everyone who went through that grind. Tough gig. And they’re still cranking out the good stuff. Best of last week was delivered by…

Gold medal: Bruce Arthur for the truly Canadian story that is Brigette Lacquette, the first Indigenous player on the Canadian women’s hockey team.

Silver medal: Arthur again, for his piece defending Jocelyne Larocque’s behaviour during the women’s hockey medal ceremony.

Bronze medal: Arthur one more time, for his piece on Canada’s Pride House and the LGBT scene at the Winter Games.

Had there been any doubt, Arthur’s work in South Korea confirms his position as this country’s top sports columnist. Nobody’s close to him.