
Olympic Curling Proves Even Polite Sports Can Tell You to F— Off!
Scandal swept across the ice at the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympic Games this week, where a men’s curling match between Canada and Sweden proved that even the politest sport on Earth can absolutely lose its cool.
During the Feb. 13 showdown, Sweden’s Niklas Edin and Oskar Eriksson accused Canada’s Marc Kennedy of committing curling’s gravest sin: the dreaded “double-touch.” The allegation? That Kennedy released the handle, complete with electronic sensors, and then casually gave the 20-kilogram granite stone a sneaky fingertip nudge past the hog line.
Edin argued that even a whisper of pressure can change a stone’s speed or angle. Officials responded with the Olympic equivalent of “pics or it didn’t happen,” saying they didn’t see it and don’t use replay to re-referee.
Kennedy denied any wrongdoing, defended his integrity, and told Eriksson, on live TV, to kindly f— off. Canada won 8–6. Sweden got a physics lecture. The granite got top billing.
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