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If you’ve gotten tired of watching curling, imagine how the athletes feel

CORTINA D’AMPEZZO (AP) – By the end of the Milan Cortina Olympic Games, there will have been a total of 147 curling matches crammed into 18 days. That’s why Brad Jacobs is looking forward to some rest.

February 20, 2026
20 February 2026

CORTINA D'AMPEZZO (AP) - By the end of the Milan Cortina Olympic Games, there will have been a total of 147 curling matches crammed into 18 days. That's why Brad Jacobs is looking forward to some rest.

But first - he has a few things left on his to-do list.

There's an Olympic semifinal match. Then, if he's lucky, one for the gold. If not, then one for the bronze.

In either case, the Canadian curler is looking at roughly four to six more hours on the ice before he can relax. Curling matches usually run over two hours, and his team has already played nine matches over the last 8 days of the men's round robin. On top of that, the Canadians have had to maintain a competitive mentality while embroiled in a curling controversy so major it prompted World Curling to change - and then change back - the rules midway through the competition.

"It's quite draining," said Jacobs, visibly exhausted Thursday after a loss to Norway. "I think the Olympics is the hardest curling event on the planet ... It can certainly mess with the six inches between your ears if you allow it to."

Athletes coming off the ice - even those far less involved in the controversy than the Canadians - say this Olympics has worn them down, physically and mentally. That reflects a near-constant competition schedule that has led to curling's popular reputation as the Olympic sport that's always on TV.

Curling is the only sport played every single day of the Games.

In Cortina, it began on Feb. 4, a full two days before the opening ceremony.

Each team will have played every other team before the semifinals, which sets it apart from others at the Winter Olympics. Hockey also has a round robin, but it's much shorter and limited to small groups rather than the entire field.

Curling's strenuousness is often overlooked. Curlers need an intense training regimen, dedicated to sustaining them through short bursts of cardiovascular exercise (sweeping) and keeping their legs flexible and strong to support the deep lunge position adopted when hurling the stone.

They must also keep their minds sharp to be precise in targeting and strategic in a game sometimes referred to as "chess on ice."

Then, add in the natural fluctuations of the ice conditions, which have a direct effect on the way stones curl and their speed. Each match, curlers must "read the ice" anew.

Finally, remember that the competition schedule is non-stop.

Taken together, all this means that curlers spend hours between matches meeting with teammates to discuss strategy, working out team conflicts, seeing physiotherapists, refueling and psyching themselves up for the next match.

For Yannick Schwaller, the fun is just beginning.

Right after the Games, his team heads for the Swiss championships, where he says they will play 12 more matches beginning Monday.

"That's going to be tough, but we're not trying to think about that right now," said Schwaller, whose team left the round robin undefeated.

"Of course it's a grind. If we could choose, there would be a different schedule next week."

Out of the men's curling field at the Olympics, Schwaller has spent more time than most on the ice. He's part of a small group of curlers - including Brett Gallant on the Canadian men's team, Italians Amos Mosaner and Stefania Constantini, Cory Thiesse on the U.S. women's team and Brits Bruce Mouat and Jennifer Dodds - who entered this competition having already participated in mixed doubles directly before.

Mixed doubles was "really tough," said Schwaller. His curling partner was his wife, Briar Schwaller-Hürlimann, with whom he had a different division of labor - he swept five rocks every end. Now, with the men's team, he said he sticks to pitching - not sweeping.

Team Canada switched out Ben Hebert for alternate Tyler Tardi in their last round robin game Thursday, hoping to give the star player a rest ahead of semifinals and finals.

It's Tardi's first Olympics. He already knows he'd support a scaled-down competition schedule. He pointed out how in hockey, Olympic teams play three or four games ahead of playoffs.

"I kind of envy that, to be honest," he said.

He's very much looking forward to his honeymoon in the Bahamas as a chance to relax.

Schwaller is training his sights on the May vacation he's planned with his wife, when he'll spend six days focused on wellness at a resort in Germany.

Amos Mosaner, the Italian who won bronze in mixed doubles, looked dejected after his team missed a spot in the semifinals. He said he'll allow himself "one or two weeks off."

"It's not only physically but also mentally you have to recover," he said. "After that, I (will) come back on the ice - and to the gym - and I will start again."

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