Scoop has an Ethical Paywall
Work smarter with a Pro licence Learn More

Art & Entertainment | Book Reviews | Education | Entertainment Video | Health | Lifestyle | Sport | Sport Video | Search

 

Scotsman wins Golden Shears Open final

A Thistle in their side

Scotsman wins Golden Shears Open final

A Scottish shearer who settled in New Zealand to farm in Taranaki has become the first shearer from overseas to win the Golden Shears Open Shearing Championship.

Gavin Mutch, the 36-year-old won the title title on the same stage in Masterton where he won the World Championships final in 2012, bringing fame both to Huntly in Aberdeenshire and New Zealand’s Forgotten Highway hamlet of Whangamomona.

Wife Pip and their children watched the internet livestreaming from home in Taranaki, and others were watching the history-making 55th Golden Shears Open finalist over breakfast about 20,000km away.

The win ushered in a new era of open shearers after legendary Te Kuiti shearer David Fagan was eliminated in the semi-finals, in what was to have been a bid for a 17th and final Golden Shears Open title before retiring next month.

Mutch said Faghan had styopped a lot oother great shearer from achieving the ultimate goal in World shearing, and he was glad to have won before the 53-year-old Fagan retired.

The 2010 winner, Cam Ferguson, of Waipawa, was also ousted in the semi-finals, leaving a unique field comprising just one former winner, Hastings shearer Dion King, and including three newcomers.

It was the first time since 2002 that there had not been at least two former winners, and the number of first-time Golden Shears Open finalist in the six-man field was the most since 1983.

Advertisement - scroll to continue reading

Are you getting our free newsletter?

Subscribe to Scoop’s 'The Catch Up' our free weekly newsletter sent to your inbox every Monday with stories from across our network.

Amazingly, the six finalists had won just four competitions between them this season, Mutch winning two of them.

After the elimination of Fagan and Ferguson, the winners of 18 finals between them this season, the pace in the final was expected to be a battle between Mutch and King, and possibly the unheralded 30-year-old Pyper, who ultimately was top emerge as a serious hope of being the first South Island shearer to win the title since 1989.

The lead see-sawed mainly between King and Pyper, on stands one and two, King ultimately claiming the ascendancy to finish in 17min 36.835sec, almost losing his last sheep over the front side of the board instead of through the poirthole.

He beat Pyper by 10 seconds, Mutch by 20, and fast-finishing surprise packet Aaron Haynes, of Feilding, who finished in 18min 4.407sec.

Few in a crowd of well over 1600 were prepared to pick the ultimate outcome whole judges calculated pen quality points, and ultimately Mutch, scoring well in quality points but still not the best, had done enough to win by just 0.596pts from Haynes.

Southland shearer Nathan Stratford had his best result in six Golden Shears Open finals by finishing third, and claiming the honours for best quality points.
King, the 2006 winner and in the final for a 9th time, was 4th, followed by first-time finalists Murray Henderson, of Feilding, and Pyper.

Mutch first reached tnhe Golden Shears Open final in 2005 and tonight’s was his 6th, the best previous results having been two 4th placings.

In other major events on the final night, Australia scored a fourth consecutive Transtasman shearing test win over New Zealand, and edged in front at 29-28 in the number of tests won in matches between the two countries since the Transtasman series began in 1974-75.

Rakaia shearer Tony Coster returned to No 1 as New Zealand’s top all-wools shearer by winning the PGG Wrightson National Circuit final, having won three times consecutively from 2009 to 2011, while 23-year-old Joel Henare, of Gisborne, won his third consecutive Golden Shears Open woolhandling title.
The end of the night was chocked with emotion, as Fagan was honoured on stage to a standing ovation marking the end of a Golden Shears career spanning 35 years.

He then presented the trophies to the new kildted champion, who in an ironic twist wins a place in the New Zealand team to shear against Australia next season..

This time, tears of emotion welled as the National Anthem of Scotland was played to honour his success at a championships where the first and last of more than titles went to Scotland.

On Thursday Lanarkshire lassie Claire Wilson’s novice Woolhandling win was Scotland’s first New Zealand Golden Shears title since senior shearer Doug Lambie’s win in 1990.

http://www.goldenshears.co.nz/the-2015-event/2015-press/

ENDS

© Scoop Media

Advertisement - scroll to continue reading
 
 
 
Culture Headlines | Health Headlines | Education Headlines

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

LATEST HEADLINES

  • CULTURE
  • HEALTH
  • EDUCATION
 
 
  • Wellington
  • Christchurch
  • Auckland
 
 
 

Join Our Free Newsletter

Subscribe to Scoop’s 'The Catch Up' our free weekly newsletter sent to your inbox every Monday with stories from across our network.