what does the sweeping do in curling
Sweeping in curling makes the stone go farther , straighter , and can slightly adjust its curl by changing friction and cleaning the ice in front of it.
What sweeping actually does
- Reduces friction by briefly warming the ice and creating a thin film of water so the stone keeps its speed longer and travels farther.
- Helps the rock run straighter by lowering friction along a specific path so it resists curling as much.
- Clears tiny bits of debris (dust, ice chips, hair) so the stone doesn’t “pick” and veer off unpredictably.
An easy way to picture it: sweeping is like lightly sanding and warming a narrow lane in front of a sliding puck so it glides smoother and doesn’t grab the surface.
A bit of the physics
- Fast, high‑pressure brushing creates frictional heat in the top layer of ice.
- That heat melts a microscopic layer of ice, turning it into water; stone-on-water has less friction than stone-on-ice, so the rock slows down less.
- By choosing where to sweep (inside of the curl vs. outside), skilled sweepers can help keep a rock straighter or allow it to curl more, within limits.
This is why you’ll hear sweepers yelling “Yes!” (keep sweeping to carry it) or “Off!” (stop so it curls and slows naturally).
What sweepers are trying to control
- Distance (“weight”)
- If a shot is light, sweepers scrub hard to carry it farther into the house.
- If it’s already heavy, they back off so friction can slow the stone.
- Line (the path)
- Sweeping on the inside of the curl tends to hold the stone straighter.
- Timing is crucial: the rock is most sensitive to directional sweeping as it approaches the hog line and then the house.
- Consistency
- They also “clean” early in the shot to remove debris, even when they’re not trying to add distance.
Modern technique and “directional” sweeping
- Optimal strokes are usually fast back‑and‑forth motions at roughly a 45° angle to the rock’s path, covering just wider than the running band of the stone.
- The most effective sweeping uses high brush head pressure plus speed (often 2–4 strokes per second) while staying balanced on the ice.
- Since the mid‑2010s, rules have tightened after “broomgate,” when special pads and techniques could dramatically bend rocks, so now approved fabrics and more limited directional effects are allowed.
So when you watch curling now, sweeping is still a subtle art, but not the extreme “remote control” it briefly threatened to become.
Why it matters so much today
- Elite games often come down to inches; the difference between scoring two or three points can be a couple of seconds of hard sweeping.
- As equipment and athletes have improved, sweeping has become a major skill set, with teams drilling specific systems for communication, stroke rate, and who takes which side of the rock.
TL;DR: sweeping in curling is a precision tool to manage speed, straightness, and small path adjustments by heating and cleaning the ice right in front of the stone, turning a simple brush into a key piece of strategy.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.