Tax Season Tribune

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Cheat sheet: What curling can teach you about cheating on your taxes

By Kathryn Zdan, EA

Editorial Director

There are two arenas in life where ordinary, respectable people are lured down a dark path, throwing the rules out the window and hoping no one will notice: the curling rink and the tax return.

The Canadian men’s curling team showed us this at the 2026 Olympics, when a player was accused of illegally touching a stone mid-play. It was a transgression so subtle it required video review to confirm, and yet apparently is something that “happens all the time”… the home office deduction of a sport otherwise known for its honesty and sportsmanship. (“Yes, my home office equals the entire square footage of my apartment.”)

What follows is a comparison of two of history’s great cheating traditions: one played in ugly pants and Teflon-bottomed shoes, one played in reading glasses in front of a pile of receipts. The strategies are more similar than you’d think.

  • The double touch vs. the double deduction: In curling, touching a stone twice is illegal. In the tax world, this is the equivalent of divorced parents both claiming their child as a dependent.
  • The spirit of curling versus the letter of curling: The Canadian player reportedly said he didn’t intentionally touch the stone; the Swedish team challenged — how could you touch 42 pounds of freezing granite and not feel it? Sounds like, “Well, it’s not my fault if I didn’t get a 1099 for that income” [leaves the income off the return].
  • The sweep: In curling, teammates furiously sweep the ice to influence the stone’s path. When cheating on your taxes, you also sweep — frantically sweeping receipts into a shoebox and hoping the auditor doesn’t look too hard.
  • The penalty: In curling, a “burnt” (i.e., illegally touched) stone is removed. In taxes, the IRS essentially does the same thing, except your deduction is the stone being removed.

When you cheat in curling, it happens on a world stage with cameras everywhere. Tax cheating happens on a laptop with Doritos crumbs stuck between the keys at 11p.m. in March, and yet somehow the IRS still finds out. The lesson from Canada’s curling scandal is timeless: Whether you’re on the ice or filing your return, the moment you think no one is watching is exactly when everyone is watching.

tax pro

OMG you’re killing me!

By Sandy Weiner, J.D.

California Editor

Okay, March is around the corner, which means things are starting to get a little tense. Here’s a few accounting puns to provide a little relief (no pun intended):

  • Don’t hate, depreciate.
  • It’s an accrual world.
  • Accountants work their assets off.
  • Accountants are great at relationships — they always know how to carry one.
  • Auditors are just accountants with trust issues.
  • I’m not lazy, I’m just on deferred action.
  • I tried to come up with a tax pun … but I didn’t want to push my levy.
  • Why did the accountant break up? There was too much ledger drama.
  • My accountant has a great sense of humor — his jokes always have a net positive effect.
  • Some people find accounting boring. I find it very taxing.
  • I’m outstanding in my field — my boss put me on accounts receivable.
  • Never trust an accountant who’s always losing their balance.
  • Accountants know the most romantic way to propose is with an engagement letter.
  • Why are accountants so calm? Because nothing phases them — only phases in and phases out.
  • Why do accountants make good lovers? They’re great at going over the figures.
  • Accountants are audit and a bag of chips.  

Do you have some other puns to share? Send them to us at: Editor@spidell.com.

A concession

In last week’s Tax Season Tribune article Olympic gold (sort of), I ruffled some feathers within our reader base by not-so-subtly suggesting that Olympic handball isn’t a “real sport.” One kind soul took the time to send me a link to a YouTube video produced by USA Team Handball that explains the sport to an American audience.

After watching the video and taking our reader criticism to heart, I will concede that handball is more of a sport than I gave it credit for last week.

In the spirit of paying it forward, here’s the YouTube link for the short three-minute video www.youtube.com/watch?v=zWh4tmKtIuw.

— Mike Giangrande, J.D., LL.M.

A few fun facts about this week’s writers:

Kathryn Zdan, EA

Kathryn Zdan, EA, spends her non-Spidell hours on photography and watching horror films (and then sleeping with the light on). She also enjoys hiking, biking, and watching foreign films.

Sandy Weiner, J.D.

Sandy Weiner, J.D., as California editor, loves all things California. Whether it's hiking at Big Sur or playing at the beach in San Diego where she lives, Sandy takes full advantage of all that California has to offer as a way to clear her head after trying to comprehend and explain California's Revenue & Taxation Code.

Mike Giangrande, J.D., LL.M.

Mike Giangrande, J.D., LL.M., is an Orange County native, and you can find him around his backyard smoker, working in his garage, or sipping lemonade at either a baseball or soccer game for this three children.

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