[1][2] The winning Rachel Homan team represented Canada at the 2024 World Women's Curling Championship at Centre 200 in Sydney, Nova Scotia where they won the gold medal.
[3] A few days before the tournament started, six-time Scotties champion and 2014 Olympic gold medallist Jennifer Jones announced that this would be her final Hearts.
[5] Following the event, in March, it was revealed that Harris had been provisionally suspended for up to four years for testing positive for Ligandrol, a banned substance.
[6] Following five hog-line violations in Draw 2, Curling Canada chief icemaker, Greg Ewasko decided to disable the rock handle sensors, which were used to determine if a curler had released their stone before the near hogline.
[8] In Draw 10, Kerry Galusha's Northwest Territories rink set a record for the largest comeback in Scotties history, overcoming a seven-point deficit after three ends to defeat Ontario's Danielle Inglis 10–9.
[11] At the conclusion of Draw 17, five teams in Pool A were tied for the third championship round spot with 4–4 records: British Columbia (Corryn Brown), Manitoba (Kaitlyn Lawes), Northern Ontario (Krista McCarville), Quebec (Laurie St-Georges) and Saskatchewan (Skylar Ackerman).
Manitoba (Lawes) earned the final spot with Northern Ontario finishing fourth, British Columbia (Brown) fifth, Saskatchewan sixth and Quebec seventh.
[12] In Draw 18, Manitoba's Kate Cameron rink clinched the final championship round spot in Pool B by defeating British Columbia's Clancy Grandy 7–4.
[13] In the Page 1/2 qualifiers, Ontario's Rachel Homan and Manitoba's Jennifer Jones both secured their spots in the final four playoff round.
[14] Kerri Einarson's run of four straight Scotties championships came to an end when she lost her next playoff game to Kate Cameron, 9–4.
Team Homan started the game with hammer, and blanked the first end after Jones removed two Ontario stones as well as her own on her last shot.
It was the second straight silver medal for Jones and her team of Karlee Burgess, Emily Zacharias and Lauren Lenentine who lost in 2023 to Kerri Einarson.
In a change in the qualification format, the Rachel Homan and Jennifer Jones rinks automatically pre-qualified for the 2024 Scotties field based on their 2022–23 Canadian Team Ranking Standings, which meant they bypassed the provincial qualifiers.
Curling Canada subsequently added a second wild card berth for this year's tournament to replace the Nunavut entry.