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Bruce Mouat’s rink were unable to end a 102-year wait for a men’s Winter Olympic curling gold – and vanquish their own disappointment from 2022 – as Canada denied Team GB a fourth gold medal of this year’s Games.
Mouat, Grant Hardie, Hammy McMillan and Bobby Lammie – plus alternate Kyle Waddell – arrived in Cortina as world champions and favourites.
They arrived believing this was their time. But they will leave as silver medallists for the second successive Olympics.
Left bereft by defeat against Sweden in the final in Beijing four years ago, the Scottish quartet have come to dominate their sport since.
The past 10 days in Italy have not been straightforward, though.
They were on the brink of a shock early exit as recently as Thursday and, while they recovered to guarantee a medal, they did not get the one they really wanted as they lost 9-6. It was the second time the Canadians had beaten them in five days.
«I’m a bit in shock. I think we felt like we were the better team. I don’t know what to say,» a tear-choked Mouat told BBC Sport.
GB suffer final heartbreak again
After the epic semi-final win over Switzerland on Thursday, Mouat referred to it as «our gold medal». Presumptuous? Perhaps. But that belief was founded in fact.
His rink have won two World Championships and a couple of European crowns as well as a record 12 Grand Slam titles since the last Games.
Furthermore, they boast an excellent record against the Canadians and beat them in last year’s world semis. Jacobs’ time-served team did win the round-robin meeting earlier in the week but that was a rare reverse.
In that contest, GB led after six ends before slipping to the 9-5 defeat that left them needing favours from other teams.
It was the same this time, a fabulous Mouat double-takeout edging GB 5-4 ahead at that stage after a cagey opening half during which he and 2014 gold-medallist Brad Jacobs traded points.
Canada – who have had a tumultuous time of it themselves here amid cheating claims – drew level after seven, but Britain had the advantage of the hammer in two of the final three ends.
They could not make the most of that though.
Just one in the eighth for GB gave Canada the sniff of an opportunity and that snatched it ruthlessly, capitalising on some slack stones in the ninth to lead 8-6 going into the last.
Mouat had the hammer but he needed two to force an extra end. Could the man considered the best shot-maker in world come up with the goods in the biggest moment?
He couldn’t. And for the second Olympics in a row, the GB rink were left with a medal that they did not want.
«We wanted to win it for each other,» an emotional Hardie told BBC Sport.
«The pain from four years ago was so much that we wanted to give it another go. We gave ourselves a chance but unfortunately we’ve not got there again.»
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How Team GB is leading the way in curling’s arms race
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11 February
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Winter Olympics 2026
6-22 February
Milan-Cortina
Watch two live streams and highlights on BBC iPlayer (UK only), updates on BBC Radio 5 Live and live text commentary and video highlights on the BBC Sport website and app.
Related topics
- Curling
- Winter Sports
- Winter Olympics
















