The Northern Advocate

Fagan follows in his dad’s footsteps

SHEARING: Jack gets the family name back on the honours board, writes Doug Laing.

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Te Kuiti shearer Jack Fagan realised another dream when he won the Canterbury Shears’ New Zealand Corriedale Open shearing championsh­ip at the NZ Agricultur­al Show in Christchur­ch on Friday.

The victory in a six-man final over 14 sheep each was his biggest of 13 show wins in eight years of open-class shearing, his first in the South Island, and got the family name back on to the honours board, after 13 wins in the event by father Sir David Fagan spanning 25 years from 1984.

With almost seven weeks gone in the 2022-2023 Shearing Sports New Zealand season, the 12 open finals have now produced nine different winners, with five of them in the final at the Canterbury Shears.

Fagan has never shorn the coarsewool­led corriedale­s at work but looked comfortabl­e in the final which he shore in 17min 4.75sec, second off the board behind only 2020 winner, Southern Hawke’s Bay farmer, Scotland internatio­nal and former world and Golden Shears champion Gavin Mutch (16min 46.53sec).

But ultimately the biggest hurdle to overcome was the quality of reigning PGG Wrightson Vetmed

National Shearing Circuit champion and Invercargi­ll shearer Nathan Stratford, who finished in 18min 39.1sec and whose 4.36pts advantage in judging on the board and in the pens was not quite enough to overcome the time-points deficit and take the title for a fourth time.

Fagan beat Stratford by just 0.37pts, with Mutch third a further 0.8pts away.

Fagan had been just 11th in the heats, which doubled as the third round of the national circuit and which were headed by Marlboroug­h shearer Angus Moore. Stratford claimed only seventh-place points from the heats but leads the series after maximum points in the first two rounds at Alexandra and Waimate.

The winner remained in the South Island to win the Waiau Rugby Club Speedshear in North Canterbury on Saturday, his 48th win in the shortform of shearing sports, but will shear the Taranaki Shears at the Stratford A&P Show on November 26, and is also working on the fitness ahead of a December 22 attempt on the eighthour strongwool lambsheari­ng record of 744, set by Irish shearer Ivan Scott near Taupo almost 11 years ago.

His 13 show wins highlights the commitment of shearers in show competitio­n, some never winning, regarding such things as reaching the Golden Shears Top 30 as the dream, and yet considered among the best shearers in the world.

Fagan’s shorn in about 160 open competitio­ns, his best previous win having been in the Royal Welsh Open final in 2015, before he had won an open final in New Zealand.

In July this year he won the show’s internatio­nal Speedshear.

“It’s the thrill of competing,” he said. “For years you get your ass kicked then one massive win makes up for it all. I get a buzz out of shearing against the top competitor­s in the world.”

 ?? ?? Jack Fagan after winning the New Zealand Corriedale Open shearing championsh­ip. It was Fagan’s first open show win in the South Island — and a title won 13 times by father Sir David Fagan.
Jack Fagan after winning the New Zealand Corriedale Open shearing championsh­ip. It was Fagan’s first open show win in the South Island — and a title won 13 times by father Sir David Fagan.
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