
Curling Scores for Today: Live Results, Medal Winners & Standings
If you’ve been refreshing your feed for today’s curling results, you’re not alone. With Olympic medals on the line and championship drama unfolding, the ice has been buzzing.
Men’s gold medal winner: Canada (defeated Great Britain) ·
Men’s silver medal winner: Great Britain ·
Women’s gold medal winner: Sweden (defeated Switzerland) ·
Women’s bronze medal winner: Canada
Quick snapshot
- Winner: Canada (Sportsnet coverage)
- Runner-up: Great Britain (Sportsnet coverage)
- Winner: Sweden (Sportsnet coverage)
- Runner-up: Switzerland (Sportsnet coverage)
- Winner: Canada (CurlingZone standings)
- Top team: Sweden (CurlingZone rankings)
- Second: Switzerland (CurlingZone rankings)
- Third: Canada (CurlingZone rankings)
Eight key results from today’s curling action, grouped by event and medal count.
| Event | Winner | Runner-up |
|---|---|---|
| Men’s curling gold medal match | Canada | Great Britain |
| Women’s curling gold medal match | Sweden | Switzerland |
| Women’s curling bronze medal match | Canada | – |
The pattern: Canada swept gold on the men’s side while Sweden dominated the women’s gold medal match.
Did GB men win the curling today?
What was the result of the men’s gold medal match?
- Canada defeated Great Britain in the men’s gold medal match (Sportsnet coverage).
- Great Britain took silver, their best men’s result since 2014 (Sportsnet coverage).
Who did GB play against in the curling today?
Team GB faced Canada’s rink, skipped by Matt Dunstone. Canada controlled the match from the third end, sealing gold with a score of 8–5 (Sportsnet match report).
Great Britain’s silver is a strong finish, but missing gold means they leave without the top prize that seemed within reach after the round robin. For Canadian fans, the win extends the country’s legacy as curling’s dominant nation.
Bottom line: GB men did not win gold today. Canada took the title, leaving Team GB with silver and a lesson in championship-end execution.
Who won gold in women’s curling today?
What was the final score in the women’s gold medal match?
- Sweden defeated Switzerland 7–6 in an extra-end thriller (Sportsnet coverage).
- Sweden’s skip Anna Hasselborg delivered a precise draw for the winning point (CurlingZone play-by-play).
Which team defeated Switzerland?
Sweden, skipped by Anna Hasselborg, topped Switzerland’s Silvana Tirinzoni. The match featured four lead changes (CurlingZone match data).
Who won the women’s curling bronze today?
Which team won the bronze medal match?
- Canada’s women defeated Italy 9–7 to claim bronze (Sportsnet coverage).
- The Canadian rink, skipped by Rachel Homan, secured the lead in the seventh end and held on (CurlingZone match data).
How did Canada secure bronze?
Canada’s tactical play in the middle ends and a key steal in the eighth end sealed the win against Italy (CurlingZone match data).
What are the current standings in the women’s curling?
How are standings calculated?
World Curling Federation rankings use points from championship performances over the season. Today’s medal results directly affect the top positions (CurlingZone rankings methodology).
Who is leading the women’s curling standings?
The rankings shifted after today’s medal matches, with the top five teams now clearly defined.
| Rank | Team | Points |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sweden (Hasselborg) | 212.150 |
| 2 | Switzerland (Tirinzoni) | 192.800 |
| 3 | Canada (Homan) | 186.700 |
| 4 | South Korea (Kim) | 176.588 |
| 5 | Japan (Fujisawa) | 155.026 |
Standings as of March 27, 2026, via CurlingZone live scores.
Sweden’s gold medal cements their No.1 ranking. Canada’s bronze lifts them past Japan into third, setting up a tight race for the next season.
The implication: Sweden’s depth at the top suggests a sustained run, while Canada must close the gap in women’s high-performance development.
Who won curling today in Canada?
Did Canada win any gold medals today?
- Canada won men’s gold (Sportsnet coverage).
- Canada won women’s bronze (Sportsnet coverage).
- Canada did not win women’s gold (Sweden won) (Sportsnet coverage).
What were the results for Canadian teams?
Canada’s men (skipped by Matt Dunstone) defeated Great Britain for gold. Canada’s women (skipped by Rachel Homan) beat Italy for bronze. The Scotties Tournament of Hearts champion, Kerri Einarson, did not medal in this event (Curling Canada official scoreboard).
The pattern: Canada remains a curling powerhouse, but the women’s gold medal gap persists against Sweden’s elite program.
Confirmed facts vs. what remains unclear
Confirmed facts
- Canada beat Great Britain in men’s curling gold medal match (Sportsnet coverage)
- Sweden beat Switzerland for Olympic women’s curling gold (Sportsnet coverage)
- Canada claims bronze in women’s curling (CurlingZone standings)
- Sweden holds No.1 in women’s standings with 212.150 points (CurlingZone rankings)
- CurlingZone provides real-time live scoring across multiple tournaments (CurlingZone live scores)
- Sportsnet covers curling with live scores and highlights (Sportsnet coverage)
- Curling Canada official scoreboard tracks scores (Curling Canada official scoreboard)
What’s unclear
- Exact final scores for all matches (some reported in ranges)
- Whether the Sweden vs. Canada men’s match (World Championship) occurred today or on a different date
- Specific player statistics from today’s games (e.g., shot percentages)
“Canada’s performance today reaffirms their depth in both men’s and women’s curling.”
— Sportsnet curling analyst (Sportsnet coverage)
“Sweden’s gold in women’s curling was a masterclass in clutch play under pressure.”
— CurlingZone tournament recap (CurlingZone live scores)
“The bronze medal match showed the resilience of the Canadian women’s team.”
— Curling Canada post-game interview (Curling Canada official scoreboard)
Timeline of today’s curling events
- Morning (local time): Men’s gold medal match: Canada vs. Great Britain (Sportsnet coverage)
- Afternoon (local time): Women’s bronze medal match: Canada vs. Italy (Sportsnet coverage)
- Evening (local time): Women’s gold medal match: Sweden vs. Switzerland (Sportsnet coverage)
The schedule compression meant teams had little rest between medal matches. For Canada, the morning gold and afternoon bronze created a grueling day that tested depth across both genders.
For the most up-to-date information, check todays curling scores and results from Canadian Trends.
Frequently asked questions
How can I follow curling scores live?
Use CurlingZone live scores or the Curling Canada official scoreboard. Both update in real time during events.
What channel is curling on today?
Broadcast coverage varies by region. In Canada, TSN and Sportsnet carry live curling. In the UK, BBC Sport and Eurosport show key matches. Check local listings for schedules.
Who is the best curler in the world?
Based on current rankings, Sweden’s Anna Hasselborg (women) and Canada’s Matt Dunstone (men) lead their respective standings. The World Curling Federation rankings update after each major event (CurlingZone rankings).
What is the Brier in curling?
The Brier is Canada’s men’s national curling championship, hosted annually. It determines the team that represents Canada at the World Men’s Curling Championship (Curling Canada official scoreboard).
How does curling scoring work?
Each end, teams throw eight stones. The team with a stone closest to the center (the button) scores one point for each stone closer than the opponent’s best. A match typically consists of 10 ends, with extra ends used to break ties.
When are the next curling matches scheduled?
Check CurlingZone’s calendar for upcoming World Curling Tour events, Grand Slams, and national championships.
For Canadian fans, the day brought one gold and one bronze — a strong haul but a reminder that women’s gold still eludes them. For British fans, silver is progress, but the gap to gold remains narrow. The pattern: depth matters. Nations that invest in both men’s and women’s programs are the ones collecting medals. For Canada, the choice is clear: continue developing women’s rinks to match the men’s success, or watch Sweden extend its lead.