Los Angeles Times

Scandal prompts revoking of master sommelier titles

San Diegan is among 23 affected after secret wine-tasting informatio­n is leaked.

- By Michele Parente michele.parente @sduniontri­bune.com Parente writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

‘I can only imagine how hard it hit everyone to learn that something they worked so hard for was tainted by the actions of a single individual.’ — Devon Broglie, chairman of the Court of Master Sommeliers Americas board of directors

SAN DIEGO — A cheating scandal that has rocked the wine world has affected a San Diegan, who has been stripped of his prestigiou­s master sommelier title.

Joshua Orr — who only a month ago was celebratin­g passing the famously grueling multi-part exam after failing five times before — is one of 23 newly minted master somms who had their coveted credential­s taken away Tuesday, when the Court of Master Sommeliers Americas announced that it was voiding the results of the blind wine-tasting exam due to insider informatio­n being leaked.

The court’s board of directors voted unanimousl­y to invalidate the exam outcome “due to clear evidence that a Master breached the confidenti­ality with respect to the wines presented for tasting,” according to a statement from the board.

The statement did not name the master sommelier who gave away the “detailed informatio­n concerning wines in the tasting flight,” nor did it explicitly say how many of the test takers — if any — were provided informatio­n in advance about the wines they were required to identify.

“There are no words I can say that will take away the disappoint­ment and anger that our candidates are feeling today,” board chairman Devon Broglie said in a follow-up statement Wednesday. “I can only imagine how hard it hit everyone to learn that something they worked so hard for was tainted by the actions of a single individual.”

Orr declined to be interviewe­d for this story, saying only in an email Thursday morning: “I apologize, but I am unable to comment on the situation at this time. Thank you.”

The mystique of the master sommelier, who are the undisputed rock stars of the wine world, is derived in large part by the difficulty of the exam process, which is considered on par with the medical boards or legal bar. Often called “the hardest test you’ve never heard of,” the extreme lengths that candidates have to go through to study for it was captured in the 2012 documentar­y film “Somm.”

The exam’s notorious 95% failure rate has led to one of the more exclusive clubs in the world: Since 1973, when La Jolla’s Eddie Osterland became the first American master sommelier, only 250 people have passed and received the career-changing MS lapel pin.

It’s unclear how, or if, the cheating scandal affected the number of people who passed the exam,which was administer­ed in St. Louis in September. Five days after earning his pin, a still-elated Orr noted in an interview that the class of 2018 was unusually large.

“It was the biggest class to pass the MS; it’s very unpreceden­ted,” Orr said. “I knew a lot of people taking the test, people who’ve ... been trying for 14 years. There were people there taking it for the ninth time. It’s crazy . ... This is the year the levee broke — there were just a lot of people committed to it.”

According to the Court of Master Sommelier’s website — which as of late Thursday still listed the 2018 candidates whose credential­s have been rescinded — the highest number of MS titles bestowed in a single year since 2000 was 13, in 2005. An average of seven people passed each year between 2000 and 2017.

Kathleen Lewis, executive director of the Court of Master Sommeliers Americas, declined to comment when asked if the person or people directly involved in the cheating would be named so that the scandal’s taint could be lifted from those not involved.

She said the court’s board members were sequestere­d in a meeting Thursday, dealing with the situation.

“The focus is on the well being of those people [the candidates], there’s so much speculatio­n being thrown out right now,” Lewis said. “You can imagine they are working diligently on this … these candidates and the integrity of the organizati­on are at the forefront.”

The board’s statement said it had initiated “the process of terminatin­g the membership” of the master sommelier who leaked the informatio­n.

The board also said it would be holding two retesting opportunit­ies, one before the end of the year and one in the spring or summer of 2019.

During the 25-minute blind-tasting test, regarded as the most difficult portion of the three-part exam, which also includes sections on theory and service, candidates try six wines and have to identify each one’s grape varietal, its wine region of origin and its vintage year.

Candidates can spend years — and thousands of dollars — studying for it, often in small groups with a timer set.

 ?? Misael Virgen San Diego Union-Tribune ?? JOSHUA ORR, shown preparing for the master sommelier exam in 2015, is one of 23 people who have been stripped of the title amid a cheating scandal.
Misael Virgen San Diego Union-Tribune JOSHUA ORR, shown preparing for the master sommelier exam in 2015, is one of 23 people who have been stripped of the title amid a cheating scandal.

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