The Day

U.S. Open’s home hosts famed dog show this year

- By JENNIFER PELTZ

New York — They’re at the top of their sport. They’re primed to run down tennis balls. So perhaps it’s perfectly natural that about 3,000 top-flight canines are converging on the grounds of the U.S. Open tennis tournament, where the Westminste­r Kennel Club dog show began Saturday.

It’s a new venue for the nearly 150-year-old event, now back in New York City after a two-year, pandemic-induced sojourn in the suburbs.

As the show began Saturday with an agility competitio­n and other events, there were a few double-takes, if not double-faults.

Barks, not the pock of tennis balls, were heard across the sunny, 40-acre grounds of the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center. Westminste­r’s traditiona­l green carpet had been rolled out in Arthur Ashe Stadium for fleet-footed — but four-footed — competitor­s.

The fan-friendly South Plaza was set up with a 27,000-gallon pool for a canine dock-diving demonstrat­ion. Turn in any direction, and a dog of some sort was likely to be passing by.

“It’s kind of weird to see them out and about at a place where you don’t usually see dogs,” spectator Haili Menard said as she watched in the dock diving to pick up pointers for her Dalmatian back at home in Bristol, Conn. Menard had been to the U.S. Open but never to the Westminste­r show.

“The sport of it is highlighte­d” by the environs, she said.

Up on the artificial-turf-covered platform, Fletcher the Malinois took the plunge. Owner Jenine Wech had been quick to sign him up for the first-ever dock-diving demonstrat­ion at U.S. dogdom’s most illustriou­s show.

“We’re never going to get to Westminste­r any other way,” laughed Wech, of

Schellsbur­g, Pa. When not doing dock diving or other sports, Fletcher works as a bedbug-detection dog.

For most of its history, Westminste­r was held in Manhattan, where the show long crowned its top dogs at Madison Square Garden. In order to hold the event outdoors during the COVID-19 crisis, organizers moved it to the grounds of an estate in suburban Tarrytown, N.Y., for the last two years.

The club was eager to return to New York City and initially envisioned going back to the Garden. But amid factors including constructi­on plans at a Manhattan pier building that formerly hosted part of the show, the tennis center emerged as an alternativ­e.

Besides hosting one of tennis’s Grand Slam tournament­s, the facility in Queens also has had wrestling and video gaming competitio­ns in recent years. Its management embraced letting dogs have their day.

“From the biggest stars in tennis to the biggest stars in the canine world,” said Chris Studley, the facility’s senior

director for event services. “There’s a big buzz in our organizati­on about having the dog show here. It’s iconic.”

New York-based Associated Press journalist Jennifer Peltz has covered the Westminste­r dog show since 2013.

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER/AP PHOTO ?? Carolyn Carson, right, and her Dalmatian Kipper shop Saturday at the WKC merchandis­e store during the 147th Westminste­r Kennel Club Dog show at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York.
MARY ALTAFFER/AP PHOTO Carolyn Carson, right, and her Dalmatian Kipper shop Saturday at the WKC merchandis­e store during the 147th Westminste­r Kennel Club Dog show at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York.

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