Ever wonder about curling shoes

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I have been watching the USA Olympic Trials.

 

Curling shoes are similar to ordinary athletic shoes except that they have dissimilar soles; the slider shoe (usually known as a "slider") is designed for the sliding foot and the "gripper shoe" (usually known as a gripper) for the hack foot.

The slider is designed to slide and typically has a Teflon sole. It is worn by the thrower during delivery from the hack and by sweepers or the skip to glide down the ice when sweeping or otherwise traveling down the sheet quickly. Stainless steel was once common for slider soles, and "red brick" sliders with lateral blocks of PVC on the sole are also available. Most shoes have a full-sole sliding surface, but some shoes have a sliding surface covering only the outline of the shoe and other enhancements with the full-sole slider. Some shoes have small disc sliders covering the front and heel portions or only the front portion of the foot, which allow more flexibility in the sliding foot for curlers playing with tuck deliveries.[27] When a player is not throwing, the player's slider shoe can be temporarily rendered non-slippery by using a slip-on gripper. Ordinary athletic shoes may be converted to sliders by using a step-on or slip-on Teflon slider or by applying electrical or gaffer tape directly to the sole or over a piece of cardboard. This arrangement often suits casual or beginning players.

The gripper is worn by the thrower on the hack foot during delivery and is designed to grip the ice. It may have a normal athletic shoe sole or a special layer of rubbery material applied to the sole of a thickness to match the sliding shoe. The toe of the hack foot shoe may also have a rubberised coating on the top surface or a flap that hangs over the toe to reduce wear on the top of the shoe as it drags on the ice behind the thrower.

No, never had, but now that I know a little, I think that's as much as I need to know. Thanks for bringing it up, Jaz.

can't say that i have 

and now you know.

weren't those trials like a month ago?

i remember going to a sports bar and the curling trials were on the tv. nobody in the place knew what the rules were. The announcers said "team x has taken time out" and we're all "there's a clock?"

Something on NBCS channel pre Olympic from Omaha. It might be a rerun. Still thrilling.

"thrilling" is an adjective not often applied to curling competition.Wow!! damn that's some hot broom work!!

you should watch more mixed doubles. It gets really intense.

Curling is weirder than hurling.

 

Which is saying something.

Quick show of hands - anybody else have 2 weeks of curling in high school Phys Ed*?

It was fun once some of the rules were explained and you got out on the pebbled ice (it's not like ice you would skate on). We didn't have special shoes but there was some sort of rubber shoe cozy we had to pull over one shoe - the slip-on gripper referenced at the top of the thread. 

"HURRY HARD!!!!"

 

(*obviously, this high school was located in small town Ontario, Canada...)

^ Those do look like curling shoes to me.

You can drink beer while curling which is great.

you can’t drink beer during Irish hurling but it is highly recommended you drink heavily after, if not before. If only to dull the inevitable pain. 

Doesn't the beer induce the hurling?

Thought this was a thread about the Iron Sheik. 

Curlingshoes.jpg

 

Rubber gripper on one and a teflon sole on the other.