The Australian women's curling team is set to compete at the world championships for the first time, facing significant challenges due to limited training facilities in the country. Split between Perth and Melbourne, the players balance demanding day jobs with preparations, often training overseas. They will take on Denmark in their opening match in Calgary on Saturday evening local time.
Australian winter sports achieve a milestone as the women's curling team participates in the world championships, marking their first appearance among 13 qualifying countries. Ranked 24th globally, the team qualified through the Pan Continental competition in October, despite missing qualification for the 2026 Winter Olympics. The athletes face hurdles including geographic separation and the absence of dedicated curling facilities in Australia, where the sport is available in only three capital cities but relies on skating rinks that compromise ice quality.
Melbourne-based nurse Kristen Tsourlenes, who practices her sweeping technique on her bathroom floor, highlighted the sport's obscurity as an initial draw. "You just get out your [curling] broom and go to town," she said. The team has trained in New Zealand, which plans to open its fourth dedicated curling space next month. Upon qualification, Tsourlenes noted, "We took a breath and … we celebrated with some peach bellinis."
Team captain Helen Williams, a Perth-based paediatrician originally from Scotland, brought her passion for the 16th-century sport to Australia after moving in 1998. She recalled early experiences at a now-closed Bendigo rink: "It was fairly rough and ready, I remember. There was actually water dripping from the roof, which, as you can imagine, would give, like, a big mound on the ice." Williams described Scotland's origins: "The lochs were all freezing over [in winter] and there really wasn't much to do. So families would have their own curling stones, and they'd arrive with their kids and their dogs and their brooms. There may have been some whiskey involved."
Curling Australia chair Hamish Lorrain-Smith emphasized the sport's progress: "It's not quite Cool Runnings, we're probably a stage or two ahead of that in terms of our development." He noted the challenge of lacking quality ice, comparing it to Jamaican curlers using Teflon surfaces.
World Curling vice president Kim Forge, based in Yarrawonga, Victoria, described the team as a "small David" against giants like host Canada, which has over a million registered curlers. "Almost all of the women at the world championships … are professional athletes that don't have another job other than professional curler. They are trained and supported by their governments," she said. Forge advocates for a dedicated facility in Canberra, where the ACT government allocated $16.2 million in 2023 for the Tuggeranong Ice Sports Facility, including Australia's first curling sheets. Originally slated for completion last year, the project remains under review due to ongoing negotiations, with no confirmed timeframe or details on curling inclusion available.