Career
After having curled with the Mike Armstrong junior rink, Muyres joined the Braeden Moskowy rink at second position in 2010. The team would go on to represent Canada at the 2011 World Junior Curling Championships where they would find less success. The team found themselves in 4th place after the round robin with a 6-3 record.
The team beat Norway (Steffen Mellemseter) in their first playoff match, but in the semi-final they lost to Switzerland (Peter de Cruz), and then lost to Norway again in the bronze medal game.
After the World Juniors, the team played in their first Grand Slam event, the 2011 Players" Championship where they surprised many by making into the quarterfinals. After the season, Moskowy and Muyres graduated from the junior level
Language and Flasch remained together, with Language at skip and Flasch at second. They added Tyler Hartung and Jayden Shwaga.
Following juniors, Flash joined the Steve Laycock rink at second, rejoining his former junior teammate, Kirk Muyres who is third on the team
Kirk"s brother Dallan would play lead. In Flasch"s first season with the Laycock rink, the team would play in all four Grand Slam events, making it to the semi-finals of the 2012 Masters of Curling. At the 2013 provincial men"s championship, the team finished 4th.
Following the season, the team had accumulated enough CTRS points to qualify for the "Road to the Road" 2013 Canadian Olympic pre-qualifying event.
At "the Roar" the following season, the team placed fourth, which was not good enough to qualify for the 2013 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials. At the Brier, the team narrowly missed the playoffs, after finishing the round robin with a 6-5 record.
In the 2014/2015 season the team had their best year yet finishing the season 4th in Canada and 5th in the world. The team qualified in the first three Geandslams with a runner up finish to Team Gushue.
The Laycock team repeated as Saskatchewan champions and finished the round robin with a 8-4 record finishing 3rd in the round robin.
They would lose the 3vs4 game to Team Canada but with the bronze medal. Flasch currently owns Flasch Construction. He attended the University of Saskatchewan and Biggar Central School.