Thursday, 19 March 2026

2026 World women’s curling championship: Scores, standings and schedule

Team Kerri Einarson gets another chance to represent Canada at the world women’s curling championship, March 14-22 in Calgary.

The Manitoba skip won her fifth Scotties Tournament of Hearts last month in Mississauga, Ont. Einarson’s best finishes at worlds are a pair of bronze medals in 2022 and 2023.

Thirteen teams will play a round-robin this year to determine the six playoff squads. Here are the standings, schedule and results:

STANDINGS

Team

Wins

Losses

Switzerland (Xenia Schwaller)

7

1

Canada (Kerri Einarson)

7

1

Japan (Satsuki Fujisawa)

6

2

South Korea (Gim Eun-ji)

6

2

Sweden (Isabella Wrana)

6

3

Turkey (Dilşat Yıldız)

5

3

China (Wang Rui)

4

4

Italy (Stefania Constantini)

4

5

Denmark (Madeleine Dupont)

3

6

Scotland (Fay Henderson)

3

6

Norway (Torild Bjornstad)

2

6

Australia (Helen Williams)

1

8

U.S. (Delaney Strouse)

1

8

Top two teams get byes to the semifinals. Teams ranked third through sixth play in qualifying games.

ROUND-ROBIN SCHEDULE

Draw 15: Thursday, March 19, 11 a.m. ET / 9 a.m. MT

Turkey vs. China
Switzerland vs. Norway
Italy 8, Denmark 1
Canada vs. South Korea

Draw 16: Thursday, March 19, 4 p.m. ET / 2 p.m. MT

Scotland vs. Australia
South Korea vs. Sweden
U.S. vs. Switzerland
Japan vs. Denmark

Draw 17: Thursday, March 19, 9 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. MT

Norway vs. Canada
China vs. Japan
Turkey vs. Sweden
Italy vs. Scotland

Draw 18: Friday, March 20, 11 a.m. ET / 9 a.m. MT

Switzerland vs. Italy
Denmark vs. U.S.
China vs. South Korea
Australia vs. Turkey

Draw 19: Friday, March 20, 4 p.m. ET / 2 p.m. MT

Japan vs. U.S.
Canada vs. Australia
Scotland vs. Norway
Sweden vs. Switzerland

Draw 20: Friday, March 20, 9 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. MT

South Korea vs. Denmark
Turkey vs. Italy
China vs. Japan
Norway vs. China

PLAYOFFS

Saturday, March 21, noon ET / 10 a.m. MT

Qualification games

No. 3 vs. No. 6
No. 4 vs. No. 5

Saturday, March 21, 6 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. MT

Semifinals

No. 1 vs. qualification game winner
No. 2 vs. qualification game winner

Sunday, March 22, 11 a.m. ET / 9 a.m. MT

Bronze-medal game

Semifinal losers

Sunday, March 22, 5 p.m. ET / 3 p.m. MT

Final

Semifinal winners

PREVIOUS RESULTS

Draw 1: Saturday, March 14

China 7, Scotland 6
Canada 7, Sweden 5
Turkey 8, Norway 7
Japan 6, Switzerland 3

Draw 2: Saturday, March 14

South Korea 14, Italy 5
Switzerland 6, China 5
Denmark 11, Australia 7
Canada 11, U.S. 3

Draw 3: Sunday, March 15

Sweden 9, Denmark 8
Japan 9, South Korea 5
Scotland 8, U.S. 3
Australia 7, Norway 6

Draw 4: Sunday, March 15

Japan 10, Norway 9
Turkey 5, Scotland 3
Canada 9, China 3
Sweden 9, Italy 4

Draw 5: Sunday, March 15

Turkey 9, U.S. 5
Italy 9, Australia 4
Switzerland 7, South Korea 6
Denmark 8, China 7

Draw 6: Monday, March 16

Switzerland 9, Scotland 5
Norway 9, Sweden 7
U.S. 7, Australia 2

Draw 7: Monday, March 16

South Korea 8, Norway 7
Canada 9, Denmark 6
China 10, Italy 3
Turkey 9, Japan 4

Draw 8: Monday, March 16

Sweden 7, Australia 4
Switzerland 8, Turkey 5
Scotland 11, Denmark 7
South Korea 7, U.S. 5

Draw 9: Tuesday, March 17

Sweden 8, Scotland 6
Japan 7, Australia 2
Canada 9, Italy 6

Draw 10: Tuesday, March 17

South Korea 12, Turkey 7
China 6, U.S. 1
Italy 8, Norway 6
Switzerland 11, Denmark 9

Draw 11: Tuesday, March 17

Switzerland 6, Canada 5
South Korea 12, Australia 3
Sweden 7, U.S. 4
Scotland 4, Japan 3

Draw 12: Wednesday, March 18

Denmark 9, Norway 3
Japan 8, Italy 6
Canada 9, Turkey 3
Sweden 9, China 4

Draw 13: Wednesday, March 18

Italy 6, U.S. 3
Turkey 7, Denmark 6
Scotland 8, South Korea 3
Switzerland 10, Australia 1

Draw 14: Wednesday, March 18

Japan 8, Sweden 2
Canada 7, Scotland 5
China 8, Australia 2
Norway 8, U.S. 2



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Wednesday, 18 March 2026

Rose sinks 15-foot birdie putt to win hole for Los Angeles in semifinals



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Tuesday, 17 March 2026

Blue Jays option Clase to triple-A, Nimmala to minor-league camp

As Opening Day of the 2026 MLB season nears, the Toronto Blue Jays continue to tinker with their roster.

The team announced a series of moves on Monday, which included optioning outfielder Jonatan Clase to triple-A Buffalo.

The 23-year-old — acquired by the Blue Jays from the Seattle Mariners in 2024 — made 112 plate appearances for Toronto last season, slashing .210/.288/.300 for 21 hits, nine RBI and two home runs.

Clase, a native of the Dominican Republic, has had 23 at-bats for the Blue Jays during 2026 spring training, posting a .261 batting average for six hits, four RBI and two stolen bases.

Among the other moves made by Toronto was the team assigning infielder Arjun Nimmala to minor-league camp.

The 20-year-old was selected 20th overall by the Blue Jays in 2023 and has since split most of his time between the Florida Complex League and single-A with the Vancouver Canadians.

Nimmala, the No. 77 prospect on MLB’s top 100 prospect rankings, had 473 at-bats with Vancouver last year and slashed .224/.313/.381 for 106 hits, 61 RBI, 31 homers and 17 stolen bases.

He’s also played in 14 spring training games for the Blue Jays in 2026, batting .261 for six hits, three RBI and two stolen bases.

The Blue Jays open their 2026 regular season on March 27, kicking off a three-game set against the Athletics in Toronto.



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Blue Jays Spring Training



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Canada’s Osorio ‘honoured’ to wear World Cup kit: ‘A lot of pride’



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‘It’s going to be amazing’: Alberta premier Smith excited to host WCOH



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Monday, 16 March 2026

How the Raptors were able to manufacture major home win vs. Pistons



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2026 World women’s curling championship: Scores, standings and schedule

Team Kerri Einarson gets another chance to represent Canada at the world women’s curling championship, March 14-22 in Calgary. The Manitoba...