Top Guns Go South to Bolster Nelson Show
MEDIA RELEASE
November 20, 2009
At least two of
the finalists from this year's Golden Shears open
championship are expected to compete in the Nelson A and P
Show Shears tomorrow [Saturday], giving a much welcome boost
to the event.
World champion and two-times Golden
Shears champion Paul Avery, the Taranaki farmer who was
second to King Country icon David Fagan in Masterton's big
event last March, will compete will compete, while Wanganui
gun Jerome McCrea, who was fifth at the Golden Shears, is
also scheduled to make the trip, in search of points in the
South Island Shearer of the year series.
But New
Zealand open winner and Napier shearer John Kirkpatrick, who
won a World teams title with Kirkpatrick 13 months ago, has
decided against the trip because of the pressure of work in
Hawke's Bay.
Avery has had one win this season, in
Blenheim, while McRea, was sixth to Fagan in the final of
last Friday's New Zealand corriedale championship in
Christchurch.
The star appearances have been welcomed
by Nelson Shears shears organiser Roger Simpson, who expects
to also be among the competitors, hoping Avery's presence at
the Richmond Showgrounds will draw-out not only the open
class shearers, but also shearers in the junior,
intermediate and senior classes which have struggled for
numbers in the region.
Among the open shearers will be
local-area competitor Nick Nalder, arriving back today from
a stint in Norway and ready to tackle not only the nelson
Open, but also the Top of the South finals at the Show on
Sunday, which will also feature what some people believe is
the Tasman region's first woolhandling competition. An added
attraction for shearers will be a Speedshear at the Nelson
north Country Club on Saturday night.
The Top of the
South will be decided in the intermediate, senior and open
classes, with competitors qualifying for the finals with
their best four sets of points from the eight shows in the
region dating back to last year's Nelson Shears. Also in the
circuit were the Golden Bay, Tapawera, Reefton, Murchison,
Kaikoura, Flaxbourne and Marlborough shows.
The
woolhandling on Sunday will include several competing for
the first time, and industry trainers Tectra were running a
course preparing woolhandlers for the event, under the
guidance of 2007 Golden Shears open woolhandling champion
Huia Whyte-Puna.
The only other competition remaining
on the Shearing Sports New Zealand calendar before Christmas
will be Avery's home show at Stratford next week, and the
competition season will resume with the national
lambshearing championships at Raglan's Western Shears on
January and the Peninsula Duvauchelle Shears in the South
Island on January
9.
ENDS