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Two of Canada's worst sports droughts live on (for now)

This is an excerpt from The Buzzer, which is CBC Sports' daily email newsletter. Stay up to speed on what's happening in sports by subscribing here.

Good news: the more famous one could end Saturday. Bad news: the other will drag on until at least next year. The gory details:

The Leafs' playoff curse continues.

As you've surely heard many times, Toronto has not won a Stanley Cup in 56 years or even a playoff series in 19 years. Another fact: since their Game 7 victory over Ottawa in the first round in 2004, the Leafs have had 11 chances to close out a series. They're now 0-for-11 in those games after losing another potential series clincher against the Tampa Bay Lightning last night.

The Leafs' 11-game losing streak in potential closeout games is somehow not the worst in NHL history. That dishonour belongs to the Jets/Coyotes franchise, who dropped 13 straight during a quarter-century-long series victory drought that began in the 1988 playoffs and didn't end until 2012.

Toronto will own a share of that ignominious record if it blows another series to Tampa Bay, which last year overcame a 3-2 deficit to deal the Leafs their eighth consecutive playoff-series loss dating back to 2004 — when Mats Sundin, Gary Roberts, Owen Nolan, Brian Leetch, Joe Nieuwendyk and Ed Belfour still roamed the earth. Game 6 goes Saturday at 7 p.m. ET in Tampa.

Not even Jennifer Jones could save Canada from another curling defeat.

The country that produces the vast majority of the world's elite curlers has not won a major international title since 2018, when John Morris and Kaitlyn Lawes captured Olympic gold in mixed doubles and Jones skipped her team to the women's world title. And Canada has never won the mixed doubles world

Read more on cbc.ca