Olympics-Curling-Edin rues Sweden's lack of 'toughness' as title defence crumbles


Milano Cortina 2026 Olympics - Curling - Men's Round Robin Session 8 - Sweden vs Germany - Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium, Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy - February 16, 2026. Niklas Edin of Sweden in action during their match against Germany REUTERS/Jennifer Lorenzini

CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy, Feb ⁠16 (Reuters) - Olympic men's curling champions Sweden are headed for an early exit from the Winter Olympics ⁠after managing just one win in six games, with skip Niklas Edin admitting his team ‌has lacked the fortitude displayed by their hungrier rivals.

The Swedes' title defence all but ended following Monday's 7-3 defeat to Germany, leaving them needing an extraordinary set of circumstances to go their way for them to reach the semi-finals.

"There are a lot of ​young hungry teams out there that are competing more and they're ⁠higher on the world rankings and playing ⁠more tough playoff games," three-times Olympic medallist Edin said.

"Maybe with all of that combined, we don't have kind ⁠of ‌the same toughness... We weren't sharp enough early on. Definitely wanted to finish off stronger in this Olympics, no matter if we are due another one or not, but it is what ⁠it is now.

"We can only try and win the last few ​games we have, play some better ‌curling, enjoy Italy. Right now it feels kind of empty."

Sweden's campaign has also been overshadowed ⁠by controversy after they ​accused Canada of cheating during a game on Friday, sparking a storm that Edin believes drained his team's energy.

"We probably didn't expect the reactions," Edin said.

"We kind of started it, even though we felt like they (Canada) maybe should have ⁠done something different technically. It just felt like a lot of ​energy went the wrong way in this event."

GAMES RECORD

Edin, playing in his fifth Games, set a record by playing his 51st game at the Olympics against Germany – overtaking American John Shuster.

"It's a testament that we've done really ⁠well for a very long time," he said.

"We've got to try and remember all the good stuff and all the good tournaments we've had. This one was definitely one of our worst.

"We didn't think it would be this bad and lose this many games. The teams we played against played great, to be honest. ​Even if we would have played well, we would have lost quite ⁠a few of them."

Team Edin are next in action at the World Championships in the United States, which will ​run from March 27–April 4.

"We're going to try to come ‌back stronger in the World Championships and hopefully we can ​get some results then, too," Edin said.

"If we can't, then we're going to have to look past this and see what's possible going forward."

(Reporting by Aadi Nair, editing by Pritha Sarkar)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Others

Olympics-Ski jumping-Austria win men's super team gold
Olympics-Figure skating-ISU statement follows controversy over Russian coach at Milano Olympics
Olympics-At most gender-balanced Winter Games yet, hosts Italy's women outperform men
Olympics-Alpine skiing-McGrath’s solitary walk into the woods captures weight of Olympic loss
Olympics-Biathlon-Vittozzi may retire despite first Olympic biathlon gold for Italy
Olympics-Leave the kids alone: Norway explains formula behind success
Olympics-Nordic Combined-Watabe savours sixth and final Olympics as Japanese veteran prepares to bow out
Olympics-Alpine skiing-Kristoffersen sympathetic to teammate McGrath after slip-up gives him bronze
Olympics-Bobsleigh-Jamaica seek sliding success to replace 'Cool Runnings' past
Olympics-Figure skating-Malinin says Games pressure led to 'inevitable crash'

Others Also Read