Stevens’ double double at NZ Shears
Napier shearer Ricci Stevens completed a unique double of doubles on Saturday night when he won a New Zealand Senior
Senior title final which would almost inevitably have it’s own special place in shearing sports history whomever won.
The 26-year-old had also on Thursday won the Senior woolhandling title, having also previously won the Junior titles in
both aspects of the shearing sports – shearing in 2015 and woolhandling last year.
No other competitor has won New Zealand championships titles in both shearing and woolhandling.
The runner-up was King Country-based Catherine Mullooly, who as a Junior on the same stage in 2014 became the first
woman to be named top-ranked competitor in any grade of shearing and who last night was just 1.145pts from becoming the
first female Senior winner since the championships were first held as the King Country Shears in 1985.
Third place went to South Island-based Luis Pincol, from Chile, just 2.211pts from scoring the biggest-ever win by a
shearer from South America.
The shape of the Senior final changed dramatically when top-ranked Tegwyn Bradley, of Woodville, winner of 14 other
finals during the season including the Golden Shears, was eliminated in the semi-finals on Saturday afternoon.
Son-in-law of 2017 World champion and employer John Kirkpatrick, Stevens made his intentions clear, more than 20 seconds
clear of nearest challengers Mullooly and Pincol through the halfway stage and ultimately shearing the 12 sheep in 13min
58.38sec, half-a-minute clear of eventual second-man-off and Gore-based fourth placegetter Lionel Taumata, from
Taumarunui.
Mullooly was third to finish, in 13min 31.28sec, and was by more than a point the best shearer in the board judging, but
suffered in the judging in the pens afterwards.
The 2017 Intermediate champion, Masterton-based Sean Gouk was fifth, and sixth wasWhakapunaki (Naki) Maraki, of
Flaxmere, who on Thursday was fourth in the Junior woolhandling final won by partner Ngaira Puha.
Stevens has the choice of going up to Open grade in both shearing and woolhandling next season, but is still just short
of the threshold for upgrading.