Brad Gushue Saves Bronze




Player's Own Voice show

Summary: Brad Gushue held 40 pounds of granite in one hand, and in the other, the distinct possibility that Canada would leave Beijing without a single curling medal for the first time since the sport was introduced to the Olympic games in 1998. As it happens, the granite hung lighter in the balance. The skip of the Canadian team delivered a shot that locked up a Bronze medal,  exactly 16 years after his golden performance in Turin. For Gushue,  this Bronze is almost more a source of pride than the 2006 Championship.  He tells Anastasia that there are some weeks you have it and some weeks you don't. Everything clicked in Turin, and very little was working for the team here in Beijing.  "That's why it can't always be about just winning.  It has to be about the experience, about the journey, about the challenges you overcome. And we overcame a lot this week to get to where we are right now." Gushue is a thoughtful athlete- and with the deliberate tempo of curling, that is not always a good thing. Some sports, your fast reactions will carry the day. On the curling sheets, there's plenty of time for an active mind to worry its way into jams. But students of the game could see it happening in Beijing:  Gushue harnessed his years of mindfulness work, parked the unhelpful considerations, and made the most difficult situations look manageable.