This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (February 2012) |
The Ford Hot Shots was the annual skills competition preceding both the Scotties Tournament of Hearts and the Tim Hortons Brier, Canada's women's and men's national curling championships respectively.[1] The competition has not been held since 2018.
History
editWhen Ford became a sponsor of the World Curling Championships in 1995, it also began a tradition of a skills competition preceding Canada's national championships.[2]
The change in competition format for the 2018 Tournament of Hearts and 2018 Brier led to a change in format for the Hot Shots. Fifteen teams would compete instead of individual curlers, with the winning team being awarded a cheque for $15,000 and one of four Hot Shots spectators winning the two-year lease on the Ford vehicle.[3][4] The three finalist spectators would each receive $500 to donate to the charities of their choice.[5]
Disciplines
editThere were six disciplines that each competitor (for 2018, each team) had to do:[6]
- The "hit and stay" (they must hit a rock on the button and not roll out)
- The "draw to the button" (they must throw the rock as close as possible to the centre of the rings)
- The "draw through the port" (the must throw the rock as close as possible to the centre of the rings, but go between two guard rocks in the process.
- The "raise" (they must bump a guard rock into the rings as close as possible to the centre)
- The "hit and roll" (they must hit a rock at the edge of the rings and roll as close as possible to the centre of the rings)
- The "double" (they must remove two rocks with one stone, and end up as close as possible to the centre of the rings)
Since 2017, the event included five new disciplines:[2]
- The "Hackner double", replicating Al Hackner's famous double takeout at the 1985 Labatt Brier.
- The "Schmirler shot", replicating Sandra Schmirler's in-off at the 1997 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials to send her team to the 1998 Winter Olympics.
- A "straight raise to the button"
- A "drag-effect double takeout"
- An "around the horn triple takeout for two".
Scoring
editFor each shot, where the shooter rock came to rest determined how many points were earned. A rock that ended up on the button received 5 points. A rock that ended up in the 4 foot ring got 4 points. 8 foot ring, 3; 12 foot for 2; and one point if a "shot has been to have provided some sort of positive result."[7]
Prizes
editUntil 2018, the winner of the Hot Shots received a 2-year lease on a Ford vehicle. First and Second runners-up received cash ($2000 and $1000 respectively). In 2009, the women's winner received a lease on a 2009 Ford Flex SEL FWD and the men's winner received a lease on a 2009 Ford F-150 XLT 4x4. In 2013 the lease vehicle was a Ford Fusion SE.[1]
Winning women's vehicles:[8]
- 1995: Ford Contour GL
- 1996: Mercury Mystique
- 1997: Ford Contour
- 1998: Mercury Mystique LS
- 1999: Mercury Mystique LS
- 2000: Ford Taurus SE
- 2001: Ford Taurus SE
- 2002: Ford Focus SE Wagon
- 2003: Ford Focus ZX5
- 2004: Ford Escape XLT FWD
- 2005: Ford Freestyle SEL
- 2006: Ford Explorer XLT
- 2007: Ford Edge
- 2008: Ford Fusion SEL V6
- 2009: Ford Flex SEL FWD
- 2010: Ford Taurus SEL FWD
- 2011: Ford Edge FW
- 2012: Ford Focus Titanium
- 2013: Ford Fusion SE 2.0L
- 2014: Ford Fusion SE 2.0L AWD
- 2015: Ford F-150 XLT
- 2016: Ford Edge Sport EcoBoost
- 2017: Ford Escape SE
- 2018: Ford Escape SE
Winners
editYear | Women | Men |
---|---|---|
1995 | Kay Montgomery | Ed Werenich |
1996 | Gerri Cooke | Rick Perron |
1997 | Sherry Fraser | Mike Coulter |
1998 | Allison Franey | Greg McAulay |
1999 | Marcy Balderston | Steve Gould |
2000 | Kelley Law | Don Bartlett |
2001 | Kelley Law | Jeff Lacey |
2002 | Kristy Lewis | Pat Ryan |
2003 | Suzanne Gaudet | Marc LeCocq |
2004 | Andrea Lawes | Randy Ferbey |
2005 | Jenn Hanna | Mark Nichols |
2006 | Colleen Jones | Steve Gould |
2007 | Kelli Turpin | John Morris |
2008 | Jill Officer | Steve Laycock |
2009 | Cheryl Bernard | Craig Savill |
2010 | Amber Holland | Glenn Howard |
2011 | Jennifer Jones | Richard Hart |
2012 | Kerry Galusha | Wayne Middaugh |
2013 | Rachel Homan | Marc Kennedy |
2014 | Heather Strong | Kirk Muyres |
2015 | Heather Strong | Colin Hodgson |
2016 | Jennifer Jones | Brad Gushue |
2017 | Rachel Homan | Brad Jacobs |
2018 | Manitoba (Team Jennifer Jones)[3] | Northern Ontario (Team Brad Jacobs)[5] |
References
edit- ^ a b "Marc Kennedy wins Ford Hot Shots competition". Canadian Curling Association. March 2, 2013. Retrieved March 2, 2013.
- ^ a b "New skills unveiled for 23rd annual Ford Hot Shots competition". Curling Canada. February 16, 2017. Retrieved March 3, 2018.
- ^ a b Granger, Grant (January 27, 2018). "Perfect fit at Ford Hot Shots for winning Penticton fan". Curling Canada. Retrieved July 1, 2018.
- ^ "New-look Ford Hot Shots format puts fans in driver's seat". Curling Canada. January 3, 2018. Retrieved January 8, 2022.
- ^ a b Granger, Grant (March 2, 2018). "Northern Ontario makes fan's day with Ford Hot Shots triumph". Curling Canada. Retrieved March 3, 2018.
- ^ "Brad Gushue wins Ford Hot Shots competition". Curling Canada. March 5, 2016. Retrieved January 8, 2022.
- ^ http://cloudfront6.curling.ca/w2/files/2014/05/2013-2014_Ford_Season_of_Champions_Fact_Book.pdf [bare URL PDF]
- ^ 2017 Scotties Media Guide: Overall Records
- ExtraEnd Magazine, 2009-10 edition, pg 20-21