The last rock thrown in each end is called the "hammer." Having the hammer is an obvious advantage, since you have the "last say," so to speak, in that end. Whichever team does NOT score in an end inherits the hammer for the next end. At the beginning of a game, a coin flip determines what team gets the hammer for the first end.
No the weight is a prefrence the stone is pushed on ice. The term "throw" is used in curling to mean the process of sliding or "delivering" the rock down the ice. A curling rock is not actually thrown through the air in the conventional meaning of the word. A curler "throws" (slides) the rock down the ice with a certain "weight" (speed). More or "heavy" weight means the rock is thrown with more speed. Less or "light" weight means the rock is thrown with less speed. The speed of the rock does not come from arm motion, but rather the speed with which the curler slides out of the "hack" (the black foothold that looks like a starting block). A curler always releases the rock gently out of his hand. If more speed "weight" is needed, then he pushes out harder from the hack.
"Shot rock" is the term for the rock that is currently the closest to the center (the "pin") of the scoring area (the "house").
The term "hammer" in curling refers to the last stone thrown in an end, giving the team with the hammer a strategic advantage. It is believed to have originated in the 1970s, though its exact first use is unclear. The term symbolizes the power of having the final shot to potentially score points or control the end. Over time, it has become a fundamental concept in the sport's terminology.
Curling is an Olympic sport with four players on each team where players slide heavy granite stones. The term throwing your hammer in curling means having the last shot at the end.
A tendril is the term given to the thin curling part of a climbing plant.
It means when the baseball is thrown on a line, like when it is thrown strait without a loop or rainbow.
A curling tournament is typically called a "bonspiel", sometimes shortened to "spiel." An exception is that qualifying tournaments for national or world championships are typically called "playdowns," with the act of competing in such a tournament called "playing down."
between 146-150 feet (45-46 m) in length by 14.5-16.5 feet (4.4-5.0 m) in width. The proper name for the playing surface is a curling "sheet." Also, the term "rink" actually refers to a curling team (for example, the Pete Fenson rink).
Disqualified. they are no longer qualified to compete in the competition. ;]
The word hammer comes from the Old English word hamor which in Germanic means "stone"
The general term for a rock fragment is a sedimentary rock. This is taught in science.
The hog line in curling is named for the term "hog," which refers to a stone that does not reach the designated line during play. Historically, the term may have originated from the practice of using a hog to indicate where stones needed to be delivered. If a stone fails to cross the hog line, it is considered out of play and removed from the game. Thus, the hog line serves as a crucial marker for the validity of a thrown stone.