Olympic, curling and Winter Games
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Every single curling stone in the Winter Olympics is crafted from a special granite found only on Ailsa Craig, a small uninhabited island off the coast of Scotland.
Because things change in the world of Olympic broadcast coverage. They change all the time. Here we are again with your viewing guide for the big enchilada – the men’s and women’s traditional team (or fours) curling competition.
Mark Callan is the head ice technician for curling at the Milan Cortina Olympics. And social media users have dubbed him “the Michael Jackson of curling” for his moonwalk-like shuffle.
Sweden has won gold in mixed doubles curling, besting the United States in the final on Tuesday night in Milano, Italy.
Social media users have dubbed Mark Callan “the Michael Jackson of curling.” That’s after official Olympic accounts pushed out videos of the moonwalk-like shuffle he performs while misting the ice between matches at the Winter Olympics.
It’s that time again: when viewers become entranced by a sport that many do not understand. Here’s an introduction to the Olympic sport of curling. The exact origins of the game are unclear, but curling is widely believed to be one of the world’s oldest team sports,
Aiden Oldenburg wants to make a name for himself at the 2026 Winter Olympics. But right now, the Team USA curling star is going viral for looking like someone else. Oldenburg looks a lot like the gymnast who went viral for being the "Pommel Horse Guy." That was Stephen Nedoroscik, whose specialty for the U.S. was just the pommel horse event.
Curling rocks—as the round, roughly 40-pound stones are called—only come from two places on the planet: a little island in Scotland called Ailsa Craig and the Trefor granite quarry in Wales. To find