Listen Live
97.9 The Box Featured Video
CLOSE

As with all curling teams, Team Canada features five members. Well, six if you really want to get technical with it.

Alternate Kristie Moore, 30, is 5-1/2 months pregnant, making her just the second athlete ever known to be with child during Olympic competition. Ninety years ago, Swedish figure skater Magda Julin won a gold medal at the Antwerp Games of 1920 while in her first trimester.

Though she has started to show (as evidenced in the picture above), Moore says that her pregnancy has not affected her ability to deliver rocks … yet. “[In] the eighth month or so, that might be an issue,” she said.

Moore found out about her pregnancy weeks before team officials invited her to join Team Canada as an alternate. When she divulged her secret, the team was more than supportive. Said team leader Cheryl Bernard, “she is young and fit. There’s no reason we’ll have any problems and she’ll be out there.”

Barring any unforseen problems with the other four members of the team, it’s unlikely Moore would see any action during the Games. During competition her role as an alternate is much like a backup quarterback in football. She’ll be called upon if needed. Moore has said that while she’d like to get out on the ice, doing so would mean having to play at the expense of someone else’s injury.

Team Canada is the gold medal favorite in the women’s curling event, which begins today and runs through next Friday. Even if Moore doesn’t play, she would receive any medal Canada wins.