Team Homan lead Joanne Courtney throws against Team Scheidegger during Draw 17 of the 2021 Canadian Olympic curling trials in Saskatoon, Friday, November 26, 2021. Joanne Courtney's first major assignment as a curling television broadcaster involved regular overnight work from a studio booth some 10,000 kilometres away from the action. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Liam Richards
Joanne Courtney’s first major assignment as a curling television broadcaster involved regular overnight work from a studio booth some 10,000 kilometres away from the action.
She’ll be rinkside for her current gig at the Canadian women’s curling championship.
Courtney, who won a world title in 2017 as a second with skip Rachel Homan, has joined TSN’s broadcast team for the Feb. 17-26 national playdowns in Kamloops, B.C.
“I’m most looking forward to taking in all the action,” Courtney said. “The field this year is outstanding. I think it puts curling in the spotlight. I can’t wait to see how the story unfolds.
“It’s such an honour and a privilege to sit in the booth and to help present the sport of curling to Canada.”
Courtney joins a TSN crew that includes play-by-play commentators Vic Rauter and Bryan Mudryk along with analysts Cathy Gauthier and Russ Howard. Courtney is tabbed for Scotties coverage this year and the network will look to have her contribute to additional events next season, a TSN spokesman said in an email.
Courtney announced a year ago that she would be stepping away from competitive curling.
The 33-year-old Edmonton nurse has dabbled in broadcasting at provincial events but she really made her mark on the microphone by joining the CBC for its curling coverage of the Winter Olympics last year.
Courtney had to flip her body clock to call three draws a day remotely off a screen in Toronto, thanks to the 13-hour time difference from Beijing. Once the action was complete, she’d do live hits in the morning.
“I loved it all,” she told The Canadian Press in a recent interview. “It was obviously tough conditions but it was so much fun. That visceral feeling and that adrenalin that you get from watching and just kind of diving into the game with the players, it was the best.”
Courtney’s goal was to smoothly deliver thoughts and analysis while also highlighting intricacies of the game when possible.
“The part that was really fun is just that visceral reaction watching sport,” she said. “And for both teams, seeing who makes the big shots. Stuff that makes the hair on your arms stand up.
“That resonates still from a different vantage point and that’s why I love it so much. I still get to enjoy the game as much as I did when I got to play and still kind of ride that roller-coaster with the athletes.”
The Scotties is essentially back to normal this season at the Sandman Centre. Attendance limits and significant COVID-19 protocols were in place last year in Thunder Bay, Ont.
“I’m looking forward to being in the venue and seeing what the energy is like and being a bit more in the event and feeling more a part of it,” she said. “That was definitely a challenge my last time around but it will be a bit different this time.”
Three-time defending champion Kerri Einarson headlines the 18-team field.
“It’s the marathon that is the Scotties,” Courtney said. “You just dive in and that’s all you think about. You eat, sleep and breathe curling for a couple weeks. It’s going to be great.”
The Scotties winner will represent Canada at the March 18-26 world women’s curling championship in Sandviken, Sweden.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 17, 2023.
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