Curling mixture , also known as coed curling , is a sport of curling when played by men and women together. Some community and school level confusions mixed up, while most of the top-level curls were divided into male and female divisions. The normal mixed team consists of 2 men and 2 women with alternate throwers in the gender. In 2008, the World Curling Federation introduced the Curling Mixed World Championship.
World Mixed Curling Championship is the world's top mixed curly show. The Curling World Championships, and Canada's top tournament known as the Scotties Heart Tournament and Tim Hortons Brier are single-sex events or divided into one sex division.
Video Mixed curling
Ganda campuran
In the mixed doubles, two players, one woman and one man, arrange each team. This idea was developed by Curling Canada Warren Hansen in 2001 to be one of four disciplinary variations for the introduction of the Curling Continental Cup.
The first Double Mixed World Championship took place in 2008. Since its inception, Switzerland has won six of the first ten titles. Russia and Hungary have won their first world title in a mixed doubles championship, and New Zealand, France, Austria and the Czech Republic won their first world curling medal.
The IOC did not approve the event to be included in the 2010 Winter Olympics, but efforts to incorporate mixed doubles at the next winter Olympics were successful, making its Olympic debut at the 2018 Winter Olympics.
Play rules
At the beginning of each end, two stones start playing - one behind 4 feet with the front stone in the center of the house, and a stone of opposing color keeping it in the midline, in the middle between the front of the house and the pig line. Five stones are played per team, with assessments done as usual. One thrower must throw the first and last stone from each end, while the other thrower must throw three of them.
No stone, including those inside the house, can be removed from the game before the fourth stone delivery ends. If there is a violation, the submitted stone must be removed from play, and any replaced stone must be replaced to the original position by the non-infringing team.
Initially, the team members who do not throw should be behind the home hogline until the rock is released. This rule is relaxed in the 2016-2017 season, with non-throwing members allowed to be near the pitcher to start immediate sweeping if necessary.
There is an additional concept, known as the , option that is assigned to one of the teams. Options are given to teams that do not score at the previous end (or are randomly determined at the end of the first), and switch teams in the blank end. The team with the option has an option to choose which of the two stones being played is theirs, with the hammer going to the team with rocks at home.
In the 2015-16 season, a new rule called power game is added, with each team able to exercise in one end per game, only if they have a hammer. Instead of positioning the stone at home in the midline, it is placed into a position that straddles the edges of the eight-foot circle, with the rear edge of the rock touching the tee line. The opponent's guard stone is placed parallel to the stone at home and retasan. Power play can not be used in additional end.
Maps Mixed curling
References
External links
- "Why not Coed Curling". 2006 . Obtained 2006-04-01 . Ã, Blog posting with 24 comments in response, including information about the difference between curling like that played by men and women.
Source of the article : Wikipedia