CORTINA D’AMPEZZO – In a sport known for gentlemanly play and esteemed conduct, the unusual scene of on-ice tension at the Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium was downright jarring for some and lapped up by others.
Toss in a few F-bombs during a testy exchange and you have the perfect storm for a Roaring Game brouhaha that has generated international attention.
“I think it was the boys being boys,” said Canadian women’s team coach Heather Nedohin. “It’s a battle.”
As players cleared rocks after the ninth end of a Canada-Sweden game on Friday night, Sweden’s Oskar Eriksson shared that he felt some Canadian players were touching the stone a second time after releasing the handle during the game.
Canadian vice Marc Kennedy bristled at the accusation and lobbed a profanity-laced retort Eriksson’s way. The tense scene — picked up for broadcast via player microphones — made for buzzy Olympic story fodder around the world.
“Cheating allegations rock Canada-Sweden curling match in profane Olympic scene: ‘You can f — k off,” a New York Post headline blared.
“‘I told him where to stick it’: Cheating claims fly in Canada v Sweden Winter Olympics curling clash,” the Guardian’s web headline read.
The New York Times, BBC, Fox Sports and several other outlets — throughout Canada and around the world — picked up the story.
“They say it in hockey a hundred million times,” said Nedohin. “We say it once and we’re in an uproar. Like, I have to giggle.”
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The Canadian team, which includes Kennedy, skip Brad Jacobs, second Brett Gallant and lead Ben Hebert, went on to win the game 8-6. Switzerland’s Yannick Schwaller defeated Jacobs 9-5 on Saturday afternoon to leave Canada with a 3-1 record.
“We’re fully supportive of Team Jacobs,” said Curling Canada chief executive officer Nolan Thiessen. “I stand behind those guys. They always play with a lot of integrity and they would never knowingly do anything that was offside from the rules.”
World Curling issued a rule violations clarification later in the day.
It said that during forward motion, touching the granite of the stone was not allowed and “infractions would result in the stone being removed from play,” per rule R. 5 (d).
The organization also said that starting Saturday afternoon, two officials would move between all four sheets and observe deliveries.
World Curling also issued a verbal warning to Canadian team officials regarding the language used in the game. A future violation could result in a player suspension.
Sweden’s side, skipped by Niklas Edin, improved to 1-3 with a win Saturday against China’s Xiaoming Xu.
Video-assisted review is not used in curling, a sport where players usually iron out on-ice issues on their own. At the Olympics, an umpire is stationed at the end of the sheet and can be consulted as required.
If a stone is touched after the hog line, sensors will light on the rock and it will be pulled from play.
“The issue of second touches of the stone, specifically the granite, during the delivery was brought to the umpire’s attention,” World Curling communications chief Chris Hamilton said in an email.
“Officials spoke with both teams and set game umpires at the hog line to monitor deliveries for three ends, which is the official protocol following this type of complaint. There were no hog-line violations or retouches of the stone during that observation period.”
An interview request with World Curling’s chief umpire was declined.
Curlers occasionally utter the odd swear word in competition, which can make it to air since a delay is not used on curling broadcasts. However, profanity-laced exchanges are rare.
“It is crazy that they have to be mic’d during the game,” Canadian women’s hockey player Natalie Spooner said in Milan. “It’s competition and people get heated.”
Nedohin famously uttered a different profanity while competing at the Canadian women’s playdowns in 2012. After it became a talking point, she would occasionally utter the word “Sugarballs” — a slight alteration from the original — when frustrated on the ice.
“Hallelujah, we’re getting attention for curling,” Nedohin said of the latest controversy. “Really. Like if that’s what it takes to create a buzz, like a nail on granite that’s doing nothing — perfect. We got attention.”
A Swedish team official said the federation was planning to make a statement later Saturday.
Play continues until the final day of the Games on Feb. 22.
With files from Canadian Press sports reporter Donna Spencer.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 14, 2026.
This was downright embarrassing! I’m ashamed this guy is representing Canada. No one should be talking that way in any sport not matter what anyone says to you, true or not.
If the light didn’t come on … they’re good !!
Cheat in Curling ….. ?
Maybe in Sveden …
She’s correct …
There is no such a thing as “BAD” Publicity !
The issue is NOT the profanity for heavens sake. It’s the fact that the Canadian team cheated. They broke the rules and got caught. After this the profanity from the Canadian team started. Its classic bully tactics. We all saw it and today we saw it against Switzerland. Stop cheating and stop cursing people that object to your cheating Canada. It’s that simple. Jeez.
Oh no someone sweared out loud. With all the things going down on this earth, this made headlines. Yeesh.
You two commenters can F–k off
A complete joke. Even if there are no repercussions, it should at least warrant a reprimand.
Apparently protocol is that the officials watch the game for rule breaks AFTER the cheating occurred and the opponent had to point it out. If nothing happened after that well then everything is fine. Imagine that protocol working in any other sport on the planet. What a joke.