Curling controversy just turned a gentleman’s sport into something else entirely. You’re watching players touch stones after releasing them, caught on video by fans in the stands, and officials are issuing statements instead of penalties. The rule is clear: once you release the stone, you can’t touch it again. The violation is visible. The enforcement is missing.
Here’s what happened: a fan shot video from the crowd showing fingers touching stones after release because the World Curling Association doesn’t have a camera positioned on the hog line. They fixed this years ago by putting a light on the stone that turns red when it crosses illegally, but that doesn’t catch post-release touches. Bob Addison’s solution: if you break the rule, you lose your next throw. If it was your last stone of the end, you lose first shot next end. Simple penalty for a simple violation. Instead, the association looked horrible with inconsistent statements while accusations of cheating led to near fist fights on the ice. One player told another to shut up. The response: “Don’t worry, I’ve got the video for you.”
The phrase “if you ain’t cheating, you ain’t trying” became less joke and more operating principle. When a gentleman’s sport stops burning violated stones, it stops being gentlemanly.
Topics: curling controversy Olympics, touching stone after release, gentleman’s sport rules, World Curling Association, Olympic penalties
GUEST: Bob Addison | @riobobbo
Originally aired on2026-02-17

