Young gun targets hometown gold
MEDIA RELEASE
On behalf of Shearing Sports New Zealand
Monday, March 1, 10.30pm.
Young gun targets hometown gold to start golden Golden Shears
A 13-year-old schoolboy could become the Golden Shears' youngest ever winner and provide a home-town triumph when the 50th anniversary of the World's most famous shearing and woolhandling championships start in Masterton on Wednesday.
David Gordon, 13, will be lining-up in the Novice event, with four wins in novice events in the lower North Island behind him, along with several placings up-a-class in junior events, and a unique double on Saturday in which he won both the shearing and woolhandling events in the novice grade at Apiti.
At Masterton he has big mocassins to fill, following in the footsteps of sister Cushla who won the novice final two years ago.
Last year, David Gordon was one of three 12-year-olds who shore in the event, thought to be the youngest to compete at the Golden Shears since late East Coast shearer Nuku Smiler first competed in 1970, at the age of 11.
The novice event will be the only title decided on the opening day of the championships which have been extended from three to four days to cater for veterans events, mainly on Thursday.
Altogether, 26 events will be held, including the Junior, Intermediate and Open shearing competitions which were the basis of the original programme in 1961 as the Golden Shears became an instant hit after svereral years in the thinking, and just a few months in the planning.
The two veterans shearing grades will include the very first Golden Shears champion, original junior final winner Melville McConnachy, of South Wairarapa, and the only-surviving first-year Open finalist, Southlander Ian Harrison. But surviving first-year woolhandling champion Wairukuruku Maere, of Hastings, isn't contesting the veterans woolhandling event. She's now 92.
The championships also include a blade-shearing event, commemorating a blade shearing competition at the first Golden Shears. But, with the craft now confined to a short season in the South Island, it will be the first blade-shearing event in Masterton since the 1996 World Championships.
New Zealand will also compete in shearing tests against Australia and Wales, while there will also be a transtasman woolhandling test.
A World Woolhandling Championships selection trial is expected to overshadow the Golden Shears' own woolhandling championship, but the major interest will centre on the Golden Shears open shearing final on Saturday night.
Almost 100 shearers will start in the opens heats on Friday afternoon, aiming first for places in the Top 30 shootout a few hours later, then the 12 for Saturday afternoon's semi-finals, and ultimately the six-man final in which King Country icon David Fagan is expected to be trying to win the title for a 17th time - the 30th and 40th anniversary titles included.
ENDS
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