
Bruce Mouat Bounces Back With Dominant Win for Team GB
Just 24 hours after losing an Olympic bronze medal match, curling star Bruce Mouat led Team GB to a commanding 9-4 victory over China in their opening men's tournament game. The comeback performance shows why the world champions remain gold medal favorites in Italy.
Bruce Mouat proved that champions don't stay down for long, delivering a masterful curling performance less than a day after his Olympic heartbreak in Cortina, Italy.
The 31-year-old Scottish curler had stumbled in the mixed doubles bronze medal match with partner Jen Dodds on Tuesday. But by Wednesday, he was back on the ice leading his Team GB men's rink to a dominant 9-4 opening victory over China.
Mouat and his teammates traded points with China through the first two ends before finding their rhythm. A beautifully executed three-point third end broke the game open, giving the British squad a lead they never surrendered.
By halftime, Team GB commanded a 5-2 advantage. The Scots, who have claimed world championship titles in three of the past five years, were just getting started.
Mouat capped the seventh end with a spectacular double take-out followed by a composed final throw that stretched the lead to 8-3. His precision and calm under pressure reminded everyone why bookmakers favor this team for gold.

China managed just one point in the eighth end before GB closed out the ninth, ending the match with a round of handshakes and an end to spare.
Why This Inspires
What makes this victory special isn't just the scoreline. It's watching an athlete absorb disappointment and channel it into excellence within hours.
Olympic competition demands not just physical skill but emotional resilience. Mouat's ability to process his mixed doubles loss and immediately refocus on his team's gold medal quest demonstrates the mental toughness that separates good athletes from great ones.
His teammates rallied around him too, executing their strategy flawlessly and supporting each other through every throw. That's the kind of unity that wins medals.
The road ahead gets tougher on Thursday when Team GB faces Sweden at 13:05 GMT, the very team that beat them in the 2022 final. But if Wednesday's performance is any indication, this British squad is ready to upgrade that silver medal to gold.
Sometimes the best comeback isn't erasing a loss but showing up stronger the next day.
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Based on reporting by BBC Sport
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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