website statistics
Jump to content
  • Register/Login on Totallympics!

    Sign up to Totallympics to get full access to our website.

     

    Registration is free and allows you to participate in our community. You will then be able to reply to threads and access all pages.

     

    If you encounter any issues in the registration process, please send us a message in the Contact Us page.

     

    We are excited to see you on Totallympics, the home of Olympic Sports!

     

Men's Curling WC World Championship 2025 Road to Milano Cortina 2026


Josh

Recommended Posts

3 minutes ago, Josh said:

Guess what? There’s been yet another instance of :CHN Team Xu cheating, this time in the quarterfinals against :NOR … :facepalm::facepalm:

 

 

 

They didn’t benefit from it (luckily), but it’s the principle of it happening again that frankly has me pissed off at the fact that they not only made it this far, but are one win away from qualifying for the Olympics, the sport on the biggest stage. Curling has no room for cheaters and I hope World Curling does something about it. 

I wonder if you know the rule of curling. It's not cheating, it's accident. Chinese kicked it for sure, but Norwegian are not blind. they have the right to choose accept the present situation as it is or cancel this shot whichever they think benefit them. Apparently Norway noticed this kick and negociate with China with some short time, and they finally chose to accept the present situation as it favored them more rather than restitution.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/28163-mens-curling-wc-world-championship-2025/page/4/#findComment-686230
Share on other sites

Just now, Vic Liu said:

I wonder if you know the rule of curling. It's not cheating, it's accident. Chinese kicked it for sure, but Norwegian are not blind. they have the right to choose accept the present situation as it is or cancel this shot whichever they think benefit them. Apparently Norway noticed this kick and negociate with China with some short time, and they finally chose to accept the present situation as it favored them more rather than restitution.

I think your comment might be clouded in bias. First of all, I don’t appreciate that you’re trying to tell me I don’t know the rules of curling, especially considering I most probably watch it and understand it more than you do, but thanks. I’m a member of a few curling forums/sites and they all generally agree with me. No, the Chinese team knew what they were trying to do on this instance. And even if they weren’t, it’s happened way too many times now to be looked at as an “accident” (that kicked rocked in the Germany game was blatant, and they were still denying it), I’ve noticed it twice already and I’ve probably missed some of the other infractions. Could be because of the favourable outcome, or maybe it was to avoid further arguments. Even if was the first one, choosing to accept the result still doesn’t cancel out China’s cheating. 
 

Maybe the other users who frequently watch curling can share their thoughts down below though, I’d love to get more viewpoints on it. 

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/28163-mens-curling-wc-world-championship-2025/page/4/#findComment-686233
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Josh said:

I think your comment might be clouded in bias. First of all, I don’t appreciate that you’re trying to tell me I don’t know the rules of curling, especially considering I most probably watch it and understand it more than you do, but thanks. I’m a member of a few curling forums/sites and they all generally agree with me. No, the Chinese team knew what they were trying to do on this instance. And even if they weren’t, it’s happened way too many times now to be looked at as an “accident” (that kicked rocked in the Germany game was blatant, and they were still denying it), I’ve noticed it twice already and I’ve probably missed some of the other infractions. Could be because of the favourable outcome, or maybe it was to avoid further arguments. Even if was the first one, choosing to accept the result still doesn’t cancel out China’s cheating. 
 

Maybe the other users who frequently watch curling can share their thoughts down below though, I’d love to get more viewpoints on it. 

Of course I know you know the rules as you initiate this thread. Just because your lecture tone and treating china's opponents idiots and forcibly and passively accept the status quo makes me laughable. 

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/28163-mens-curling-wc-world-championship-2025/page/4/#findComment-686234
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Josh said:

Semifinals

:CAN v. :SCO

:SUI v. :CHN 

 

:CHN qualifies for the Olympics with a win here, otherwise :CZE does. 

:CZE was so close to qualify in last three olympics, i hope that today finally :-)

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/28163-mens-curling-wc-world-championship-2025/page/4/#findComment-686249
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Posts around Totallympics

    • Yes and no.  Flights are pretty frequent, but when you're trying to move tens of thousands of people, it becomes a lot more difficult.
    • Tuesday December 9th, 2025 - Round-Robin Day 2 Schedule (GMT +1)   12:00   Japan vs Poland 16:00   Hungary vs Estonia 20:00   Italy vs Lithuania
    • Monday December 8th, 2025 - Round-Robin Day 1 Results (GMT +1)   12:00   Estonia  3 - 4PSO  Japan 16:00   Poland  4 - 2  Italy 20:00   Lithuania  0 - 4  Hungary     Provisional Standing After Day 1:   1.    3 ----------------- 2.   3 3.   2 4.   1 5.   0 ----------------- 6.   0
    • Play-off round fixtures:   Quarterfinals     vs   /     vs   /     vs   /  @heywoodu      vs   /     13th-16th Place Semifinals    -    -
    • Women´s World Championship 2025 (Brno, Ostrava  )   DAY 3 - 08.12.2025     Group A   -   4-6 -   7-4   Final Standing: 1. CZE 6 2. SUI 4 ............ 3. DEN 2 4. LAT 0     Group B -    1-18 -   15-1   Final Standing: 1. SWE 5 2. FIN 5 ............ 3. SVK 2 4. POL 0     Group C   -   7-5 -   10-0   Final Standing: 1. NOR 6 2. NED 4 --------- 3. JPN 1 4. AUS 1     Group D   -   19-0 -   0-10   Final Standing: 1. GER 6 2. EST 4 -------- 3. USA 2 4. SGP 0
    • Monday December 8th, 2025 - Round-Robin Day 2 Results (GMT +1)   12:30   Austria  4 - 2  France 16:00   Norway  OT3 - 2  Ukraine 19:30   Kazakhstan  PSO5 - 4  Slovenia   Provisional Standing After Day 2:   1.    6 ----------------- 2.   5 3.   3 4.   3 5.   1 ----------------- 6.   0
    • That was known from the start for  and will be planned for.   Sadly just the reality of sports in North America. Canada and the US are both huge, a flight from Vancouver to Halifax or from Seattle to Miami is north of five hours. Every sports league in North America has to deal with this kind of travel logistics on the regular, so none of this will seem particularly unusual to a North American player.
    • That’s not a long distance, it’s barely a 2h flight and there is no difference in timezone. Easily doable for fans as well.
    • Foil World Cup #2 - Fukuoka  (Men's) and Busan  (Women's)   Results (December 5-7, 2025)     Men's: 1. Ryan Choi Chun Yin 2. Kirill Borodachev  (Russia) 3. Giulio Lombardi 3. Alexander Massialas 5. Filippo Macchi   5. Nick Itkin   5. Rafael Savin   5. Daniil Kerik  (Russia) 9. David Sosnov   9. Yudai Nagano   9. Toshiya Saito   9. Louis Pradel   9. James Bourtis   9. Vladislav Mylnikov  (Russia) 9. Jamie Cook   9. Anas Anane     Men's Team: 1. Italy  (Filippi - Foconi - Macchi - Marini) 2. France  (Anane - Pauty - Savin - Bibard) 3. Japan  (Iimura - Matsuyama - Nagano - Saito) 4. United States  (Massialas - Itkin - Meinhardt - Olivares) 5. Hungary  (Balint - Dosa - Szemes - Toth) 6. Egypt  (Hamza - Haffour - Tolba - Hendawy) 7. South Korea  (Cheol-woo - Gyeong-mu - Kwang-hyun - Jeong-hyun) 8. Canada  (Budovskyi - Wong - Yu - Xinhao)   Women's: 1. Martina Batini 2. Yuka Ueno 3. Lauren Scruggs 3. Martina Favaretto 5. Eleanor Harvey   5. Anna Cristino   5. Komaki Kikuchi   5. Zander Rhodes 9. Lee Kiefer   9. Flora Pasztor   9. Carolina Stutchbury   9. Maria Marino   9. Katerina Lung   9. Irene Bertini   9. Minami Kano   9. Maia Weintraub   Women's Team: 1. Italy  (Errigo - Favaretto - Batini - Cristino) 2. United States  (Kiefer - Liu - Scruggs - Stutchbury) 3. Japan  (Tsuji - Ueno - Azuma - Kikuchi) 4. South Korea  (Ho-yeon - Ji-hee - So-eun - Byeo-li) 5. Germany  (Kleibrink - Morandi - Holland-Cunz - Hoefler) 6. Spain  (Diaz - Castro - Marino - Tucker) 7. Hungary  (Pasztor - Papp - Kondricz - Wolf) 8. China  (Yingying - Enqi - Yue - Yuting)   Men's Results   Women's Results   NEXT: World Cup #3 in Paris  (Men's) and Hong Kong  (Women's) (January 9-11, 2026)
×
×
  • Create New...