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Cloverdale teen curling at Winter Youth Olympic Games in Norway

Tyler Tardi on Team Canada at event, which starts Friday in Lillehammer
Stratford Ont.Jan 30 2016.Canadian Junior Curling Championship.B.C. skip Tyler Tardi, Curling Canada/ michael burns photo
Cloverdale teen Tyler Tardi in action during Team B.C.'s bronze-medal-winning performance at the recent Canadian Junior Curling Championships in Ontario.

Cloverdale teen Tyler Tardi is in Norway with Team Canada as it begins pursuit of curling gold at the second Winter Youth Olympic Games in Lillehammer.

The Canadian foursome should stand out in the 16-country field, featuring traditional mixed teams (two male, two female), as it will have a female skip.Mary Fay, who skipped Nova Scotia to the women’s gold at the recent Canadian Junior Championships will call the shots and throw skip’s rocks for the Canadians in the competition, for athletes born between Jan. 1, 1998 and Dec. 31, 2001.The 17-year-old Chester, N.S., native will be backed up by her Nova Scotia teammate Karlee Burgess (Brookfield) at second, while Surrey's Tardi and Sterling Middleton (Fort St. John, B.C.) will line up at third and lead respectively.

Tardi skipped Team B.C. to the men’s bronze medal at the Canadian Juniors in Stratford, Ont., last month.

The Canadian team was determined based on applications from all age-eligible players in Canada, with a special focus on participants in the 2015 Canada Winter Games in Prince George, B.C.The determining criteria for selection to Team Canada were curling skill, community leadership and academic achievement.

Helen Radford of Halifax will coach the team in Lillehammer.

Having female skips for mixed teams is not common. In the history of the Canadian mixed championship, only one team with a female skip has claimed gold: Shannon Kleibrink (2006 Olympic bronze-medallist) in 2004.Round-robin competition at the Curling Hall in Lillehammer will kick off on Friday as Canada takes on Estonia at 3:30 a.m. PST. The 16 teams are split into two pools of eight. The top four teams in each pool will qualify for the playoffs, with the quarter-finals and semifinals scheduled for next Tuesday, Feb. 16, and the gold- and bronze-medal games on Wednesday, Feb. 17.Besides Estonia, Canada’s pool includes Brazil, the Czech Republic, Great Britain, South Korea, Norway and Sweden.Once the team competition concludes, the players will be split into mixed doubles teams, with players from different countries matched into new combinations, determined by the athletes’ position within their teams and their nations’ overall position following the traditional team competition. The mixed doubles gold- and bronze-medal games will take place on Feb. 21.At the first Winter Youth Olympics, in 2012 at Innsbruck, Austria, the Canadian team of Thomas Scoffin, Corryn Brown, Derek Oryniak and Emily Grey captured a bronze medal, behind gold-medallist Switzerland and silver-medallist Italy.Live scoring, pictures, team lineups and the event schedule are available at www.worldcurling.org/yog2016Daily highlight packages will be available online at www.cbc.ca/sports/olympics/video. Other video content from Lillehammer will be available at the Games’ YouTube channel, www.youtube.com/user/lillehammer2016, as well as at the Youth Olympics’ YouTube channel, www.youtube.com/user/YouthOlympics.

Now staff

The Canadian team was determined based on applications from all age-eligible players in Canada, with a special focus on participants in the 2015 Canada Winter Games in Prince George, B.C.The determining criteria for selection to Team Canada were curling skill, community leadership and academic achievement.