How Team GB is leading the way in curling’s arms racePublished1 hour agoImage source, Hammy McMillanByRichard WintonBBC Sport in CortinaOne of the first things you notice is the number of cameras. They’re everywhere, trained on the four ice sheets at a variety of angles. Some fixed. Some swooping down on cables. Others manoeuvred on long arms.Coaches clad in anoraks and armed with laptops discuss data posted on large screens, their conversations punctuated by the clunk of granite on granite as Team GB’s curlers hone their games on the perfectly prepared ice.This is the National Curling Academy in Stirling. From the outside, it’s just a public leisure centre on the edge of town, with sprightly pensioners staying flexible in aerobics classes and excitable kids in for swimming lessons.But slipping past the joyful chaos in reception and through a side door takes you to another world. A world in which British Curling leads the way.”We hope we are a bit ahead of the curve in our behaviours around nutrition, physical performance, conditioning, innovation and technology, but it’s getting competitive,” says British Curling’s head of performance services Nikki Gibson.Day-by-day guide to the Winter Olympics
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