Canada-Sweden Olympic curling feud still going: ‘He’s a complete prick and nobody really likes him’

The Canadian Olympic menโs curling team isnโt done talking smack with Sweden.
Canadaโs Marc Kennedy went viral for his swear-filled exchange with Swedenโs Oskar Eriksson after he was accused of cheating.
Canada went on to win the match before capturing gold one week later.
Now home from the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympics, Canadian lead Ben Hebert had more to say. In an interview with Sportsnet 960 in Calgary, Hebert didnโt mince words, calling Eriksson a โweaselโ and a โprick.โ
โOskar Eriksson, as much as heโs a weasel, heโs an unreal player,โ Hebert told hostsย George Rusic and Matt Rose. โItโs a good thing that heโs an awesome player, because heโs a complete prick and nobody really likes him.โ
The Swedes entered their match versus Canada with a 0-3 record, something that Hebert believes led to โsour grapes.โ
Canada was golden in Olympic menโs curling (Eric Bolte/Imagn Images)
โThese antics arenโt new to us with Oskar, so we usually just brush it off. Everybody knows that in the curling circles.โ
Hebert also said that what Kennedy did was perfectly fine in Canada, but a new rule brought in by the World Curling Federation earlier this year made things different at the Olympics.
โIn Canada, you can throw the rock however you want, touch any part of the rock, no big deal,โ Hebert explained. โ[Oskar] found this loophole, sounds like he pre-planned it to fire us up and get under our skin.โ
Though Hebert is clearly still emotional talking about the incident at hand, he did give Sweden props, saying that they โwhooped usโ in past years. That has since changed, however.
โTheyโve been on a serious two-to-three-year decline here. I think thatโs probably tough for themโฆ I think they were just kind of reeling and understanding that they had no chance, just stir some sh*t. The only way the Swedish media was going to follow them was if they did something like that.โ
Canada beat Norway in the semi-final before knocking off Great Britain for gold (Candice Ward/COC)
At the end of the day, Canada had the last laugh, something Hebert believes was justice well served.
โHereโs one way to deal with a bully: you punch them in the mouth. Thatโs what we did. We got first place, sat on the podium with a gold, and he got dead last.
Kennedy brings back Olympic gold for St. Albert
A St. Albert curler is off to the Brier this week after winning gold for Canada at the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics.
Theย Gazetteย spoke with St. Albert curler Marc Kennedy Tuesday Feb. 24. He had just returned from the 2026 Winter Games in Italy and was packing for a trip to St. Johnโs, N.L., for the 2026 Montanaโs Brier the next day.
Kennedy and the rest of Team Brad Jacobsย won gold for Canada at the Olympics Feb. 21ย in a 9-6 victory over Britainโs Team Bruce Mouat.
Kennedy said it felt great to be a three-time Olympic medallist (he won bronze in 2022 and gold in 2010), adding that he felt blessed to have had such an illustrious career in curling.
โThe medal is amazing, but itโs really about the journey,โ he said, and all the work his team and supports did to get here.
Tumultuous tourney
Kennedy said the team knew they were in for a tough fight this Olympics, as the rest of the world had fielded some serious talent.
Canada went 7-2 in the opening round robin to reach the semi-finals.
The match against Sweden drew international headlines after Swedenโs Oskar Eriksson accused Kennedy of breaking the rules by touching the curling stone after he had released it โ a โdouble touch.โ This lead to an angry exchange between the twoย during which Kennedy told Eriksson to โf**k off.โย That profanity earned Team Canadaย a verbal warningย from World Curling.
Video footageย appeared to show one of Kennedyโs fingers touching the granite part of the stone for less than a second after he released it but before the stone reached the hog line.
Kennedy said the confrontation arose in part due to a difference between Curling Canadaโs rules and those used by World Curling. Curling Canada does not explicitly state that touching the granite part of the rock post-release was illegal. World Curling does, and Team Canada was not aware of this difference.
โIf Iโm being completely honest, this is probably something Iโve been doing for 10 to 15 years,โ Kennedy said of the granite touch, and no one has ever raised it as an issue before.
โThis has never been enforced as far as I know at an international curling event.โ
Curling analysts interviewed by theย CBCย agreed that while such a touch was a rules infraction, it was a stretch to call it cheating, as it was unlikely to have any effect on the rockโs trajectory.
Kennedy questioned why Sweden never raised this issue during the many previous times they played against him, and characterized their move to do so at the Olympics as the โtactics of a desperate team.โ
โI took the bait and I definitely should have handled it better,” the St. Albert curlerย said.
Kennedy apologized for his on-ice behaviour, saying that he took his job as a role model seriously and knew how his actions could affect young players.
โI donโt apologize for standing up and defending my team and teammates and my integrity,โ he said. โWe werenโt doing anything purposefully to get an advantage over another team.โ
Kennedy said World Curling later clarified the double-touch rule, and he and his teammates changed how they threw rocks as a result.
Ninth end win
Kennedy said that incident helped the team come together and focus on their game as they defeated Norway to face Britain for the gold.
The two teams traded the lead for the first eight ends, with no major mistakes by either squad. The turning point came in the ninth, when Britain missed four doubles in a row (a double in curling is an attempt to knock out two stones with one throw) when they had just a one-point lead on Canada.
Kennedy said he thought, โOh man, this is my opportunity,โ when Britainโs Grant Hardie made one of those misses late in the ninth. Kennedy parked one of his stones in such a way that it would be nearly impossible for Canada not to score at least two points and take the lead. An ambitious shot from Jacobs made that three points, giving Canada a two-point lead going into the final end.
Kennedy was excited and relieved when Britain failed to tie the game with their last throw, securing Canada the gold.
โThat was our ultimate goal as a team when we (came) together four years ago, and reaching that point was a pretty special feeling,” he recalled.
Kennedy confirmedย this was probably his last Olympics, adding that it was time for a new generation to step up. He had no plans to stop curling, though, and would be back in town this March for the Marc Kennedy Junior Classic.


