Curling Club holds 2015 bonspiel

NORFOLK — The Norfolk Curling Club held its annual bonspiel over the weekend of Dec. 4 to 6, featuring competition from 20 curling clubs hailing from all over the eastern United States and Canada.

The event has taken place every year since the club’s inception 60 years ago, according to Jonathan Barbagallo, a member of the club, and gives Norfolk curling enthusiasts a chance to measure their skills against other curlers from around the area as well as relax with others who share their passion.

“We stay in touch,” said Barbagallo. “Even nationwide, curling is a relatively small community.”

Bonspiel is the name for a curling tournament that has a standard set of features and rules, according to Barbagallo.

“It’s going to be very similar no matter what club you go to,” Barbagallo said.

Games are played through a triple-elimination bracket, Barbagallo said, giving every team and participant a chance to get out on the ice for a good amount of time. Games ran from Thursday night through Sunday morning, starting early on Friday and Saturday and running as late as 9 p.m. 

“It used to be you’d just throw the stone as hard as you could,” said Ted Stone, president of the Norfolk club. “Now it’s sophisticated — they call it chess on ice.”

Stone described both the mental and physical precision the sport requires, whether it is measuring the abilities and tendencies of opponents when playing a match or the meticulous aim and touch required for a team to bring a stone down the ice.

Stone also described the camaraderie of the curling community that transcends geographic barriers.

“The people who play this game — everywhere you go you see your buddies,” he said. “Guys I haven’t seen in a year, I’ve only met seven or eight times, they come in here and we’re already hugging each other.”

Despite their friendship, curlers still take their games very seriously. The bonspiel saw some very stiff competition, Stone said, especially from the Canadian teams.

“We’ve got some really amazing curlers in the building today,” said Stone.

Despite the somewhat grueling schedule, curlers and their families had plenty of chances to relax at the club. After playing matches or attending to other duties, Stone said he looked forward to just spending time with family and friends.

Norfolk fielded three teams for the bonspiel, one of which was runner-up for the overall championship. A Philadelphia-based team came in first overall.  

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