The man about the house wins unique
Napier dad Ricci Stevens claimed dinner-table bragging rights with Shearing Sports New Zealand’s No 1 Senior
woolhandling ranking for the season after a unique national championshps final in Te Kuiti today.
He and wife and fellow 26-year-old former Junior champion Angela started the day equal on points at the top of the
rankings after each making more than 10 Senior finals during the season which started at the beginning of October.
A rankings and championships showdown emerged when each made their way through the heats today to qualify in the top
five for the final, which was won by first-season Senior woolhandler Ricci Stevens, giving him the point to also claim
gthe top ranking.
The runner-up was nearest other rankings challenger Ash Boyce, of Dannevirke, and Angela Stevens was third in her last
Senior event after two seasons in the grade and heading for the Open-class next season.
Golden Shears Senior final winner Sharon Tuhakaraina, of Gore, was fourth.
The triumph by the man about the Stevens house, as the couple’s near two-year-old son Carter nestled in a pushchair
nearby, was true to latest form. While Angela Stevens had the better placings in the two finals in which the couple had
come up against each other before Christmas, today’s win made it six-out-of-six for him in their rivalry in the new
year.
Ricci Stevens put the form reversal down to his wife’s break from from the woolshed in the last few months. “I carried
on working,” he said.
But it wasn’t so much as as a woolhandler, for, mainly a shearer, with a 2015 national title to his name with the
handpiece, his training for the woolhandling competitions was limited to the end of the run or the day in the family
shearing gang run by his parents-in-law, World champion shearer John Kirkpatrick and wife Raylene.
“I sometimes help the presser out,” said Riccie Stevens, adding he only started competing in woolhandling events
because it helped pass the time of day while he waited through the woolhandling events for shearing events later in the
day, or in the week as it is at the New Zealand championships where he competes in the Senior shearing heats tomorrow
(Friday).
Angela Stevens has shorn a sheep or two, but hasn’t competed. “I’d love to,” she said, pondering maybe a bit of
prep-work before the Novice shearing at next year’s Golden Shears. .
Meanwhile, Manawatu competitor Ngaira Puha completed a Golden Shears and New Zealand Junior woolhandling finals double
today, among the beaten finalists being partner Whakapunaki (Naki) Maraki. Second and third respectively were sisters
Samantha Baxter and Summer Pritchard, of Pongaroa, in Northern Wairarapa, and fourth, from Flaxmere, was Maraki, who is
also mainly a shearer.
Results from the opening day of the 34th New Zealand SAhearing and Woolhandling Championships being held in Te Kuiti on
Thursday-Saturday, April 5-7, 2018:
Woolhandling:
Senior final (5 second-shear sheep) Ricci Stevens (Napier) 47.34pts, 1; Ah Boyce (Dannevirke) 48.78pts, 2; Angela
Stevens (Napier) 57.94pts, 3; Sharon Tuhakaraina (Gore) 5d9.34pts, 4; Adrienne Samuels (Marton) 69.362pts, 5.
Junior final (5 second-shear sheep): Ngaira Puha (Kimbolton) 52.41pts, 1; Samantha Baxter (Pongaroa) 67.12pts, 2; Summer
Pritchard (Pongaroa) 71.16pts, 3; Whakapunaki (Naki) Maraki (Flaxmere) 76.09pts, 4; Lucky Garrett (Eketahuna) 76.85pts,
5.
ENDS