logo
Shearing: New Zealand Pair Beats England In Great Yorkshire Show Shearing Test Match

Shearing: New Zealand Pair Beats England In Great Yorkshire Show Shearing Test Match

Scoop10-07-2025
New Zealand shearers Toa Henderson and Jack Fagan have continued a down under dominance of England at the Great Yorkshire Show by winning the second test of their 2025 Wools of New Zealand Tour of the UK and France.
With Henderson first to finish the test of 20 swaledale hoggets each, which he shore in 13m 43s in also scoring the best points overall, the pair beat England shearers Nick Greaves and Dean Nelmes by 4.3pts on Wednesday (Thursday morning NZT).
Fagan was also runner-up to Welsh shearer Gethin Lewis in defence of the Great Yorkshire Open title Fagan won last year, when he and Greaves both featured in a test match New Zealand won by just 0.55pts.
Henderson, the Golden Shears and New Zealand Shears Open champion, just a fortnight into his first shearing in the Northern Hemisphere, on his first tour in the New Zealand singlet, and currently a clear leader in the 2026 World Championships New Zealand team selection series back home, was also first to finish the Open final but had to settle for third place overall.
He shore the 20 sheep in 13m 5s, beating Lewis by 16 seconds and also claiming the scalp of 2019 World champion and Welsh gun Richard Jones, whom he beat by almost two minutes.
The test match win followed New Zealand's loss to Scotland at the Lochearnhead Shears Scottish Black Face championships on June 28, and Henderson, Fagan and team manager and shearing judge Neil Fagan (Jack Fagan's cousin) now cross the channel for a test against France at Boussac, Central France, on Sunday.
Among other New Zealand shearers at the Great Yorkshire Show, at Harrowgate, was Golden Shears Senior champion Bruce Grace, who just missed a place in the Senior final, and with Paul Hodges, of Geraldine, for a New Zealand selection in an Open/Senior relay, in which they were fourth.
After the test in France, Henderson and Fagan complete their tour with a three-match series against Wales, before heading home for the New Zealand season starting in the South Island in October.
They have also had a good start to the shorter form of competition, with Fagan winning the Dunblane Charity Speed Shear Open title in Scotland last Friday, with Henderson the runner-up.
Results:
International (20 sheep): New Zealand (Toa Henderson 13m 43s, 54.95pts; Jack Fagan 14m 11s, 56.45s) 111.4pts, beat England Nick Greaves 14m 31s, 56.15pts; Dean Nelmes 15m 6s, 59.55pts) 115.7pts.
Great Yorkshire Open Championships final (20 sheep): Gethin Lewis (Wales) 13m 21s, 50.9pts, 1; Jack Fagan (NZ) 13m 40s, 52pts, 2; Toa Henderson (NZ) 13m 5s, 55.2pts, 3; Richard Jones (Wales) 15m 3s, 55.6pts, 4; Nick Greaves (England) 15m 4s, 56.3pts, 5; Stuart Connor (England) 15m 1s, 56.95pts, 6.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Golf: Lydia Ko six strokes off the pace at last major of year
Golf: Lydia Ko six strokes off the pace at last major of year

RNZ News

time2 days ago

  • RNZ News

Golf: Lydia Ko six strokes off the pace at last major of year

Lydia Ko won the event last year when it was held at St Andrews. Photo: Brian Spurlock/Icon Sportswire / PHOTOSPORT New Zealand's Dame Lydia Ko is six strokes off the pace after the first round of the Women's Open at Royal Porthcawl in south Wales. Japan's Eri Okayama and Rio Takeda topped the leaderboard, with rounds of five-under 67, while Ko had a one-over 73 as she failed to take advantage of calm conditions on the coastal course. Fellow Kiwis Amelia Garvey and Momoka Kobori were a stroke further back, in joint 91st place. Ko won the event last year at St Andrews, but it is her first time playing in Wales. She opened well enough in the final major of the year, with a birdie on the first hole but negated that with a bogey on the par-4 third hole. She had one more birdie, on the ninth hole, while dropping shots at the par-5 13th and the par-3 15th before finishing in a 17-way tie for 74th place. Garvey had birdies on the same two holes that Ko birdied, with four bogeys spoiling her round, while Kobori had a late spree of three consecutive bogeys after an early double-bogey before finishing with her second birdie. Okayama's five-under 67 gave her the lead before she was joined by Takeda after she birdied the 18th, Reuters reported. Japanese players dominated the opening day with Miyu Yamashita at four-under ahead of a large group on three-under that included Chevron Championship winner Mao Saigo, Shiho Kuwaki and Chisato Iwai. World number one Nelly Korda finished two-under par. Okayama, who is world number 139, bogeyed her opening hole but birdied five of the next eight and was rock solid on the way back with another birdie at the 17th moving her ahead. Takeda recovered from a double-bogey seven at the ninth with four birdies on the back nine, putting her joint first. By far the largest galleries assembled just after lunchtime to watch England's Lottie Woad in a group alongside Ko and American Lilia Vu. An astonishing July, which culminated in Woad winning the Scottish Open in her first event as a professional, had made the 21-year-old favourite for the year's final major. But the former Florida State University player found the going tough as she ground out a level-par round of 72 thanks to a birdie at the last. - RNZ Sport / Reuters

King Of The Castle - Canterbury Shearer Wins Big Lambs Championship In Northern Ireland
King Of The Castle - Canterbury Shearer Wins Big Lambs Championship In Northern Ireland

Scoop

time2 days ago

  • Scoop

King Of The Castle - Canterbury Shearer Wins Big Lambs Championship In Northern Ireland

North Canterbury shearer Hugh de Lacy has had his biggest win in Open-class shearing by claiming the Northern Ireland Lambshearing Championships wool Open title at historic Antrim show-venue Shane's Castle. de Lacy won the four-man final on Saturday, from 2023 Northern Ireland World championships representatives Jack Robinson and Graeme Davidson and Republic of Ireland shearing legend and former World lambshearing records holder Ivan Scott. In a close contest over 13 lambs each, with just 26 seconds separating the quartet, de Lacy was first-off, in 10m 16s, and also scored the pest points in pen judging, to beat Robinson by 1.257pts. From Fernside, near Rangiora, and in his eighth year as an Open-class shearer had possibly his most notable win in a two-sheep all-nations Senior speedshear during the 2017 Golden Shears World Shearing and Woolhandling Championships in Invercargill in 2017. He's had seven Open wins in mainly smaller New Zealand Shows of 10 sheep or more in the South Island, but won the Canterbury All-Breeds Circuit final in 2023 and 2024 (each over 12 mixed sheep), and in 2022 was third in the national circuit final, over 15 sheep comprising three each of five different wool types, at Armidale Merino Stud in Central Otago. Working in Omagh, de Lacy has been one of several New Zealand shearers working and competing in the UK and Ireland in recent weeks, in addition to the New Zealand team of two that also last Saturday completed a test series against Wales. He has just finished work, is "holidaying now" and will do the All-Ireland championships in Clonmany, Co Donegal, Ireland, next week before heading home to prepare for the shows in Canterbury in the Shearing Sports New Zealand season which starts at the New Zealand Merino championships in Alexandra in October. Result of the Northern Ireland lambshearing Championship at Shane's Castle, Antrim, on July 26, 2025 (13 sheep): Hugh de Lacy (New Zealand) 10m 16s, 40.877pts, 1; Jack Robinson (Northern Ireland) 10m 35s, 42.134pts, 2; Graeme Davidson (Northern Ireland) 10m 44s, 44.431pts, 3; Ivan Scott (Ireland) 10m 42s, 45.177pts, 4.

Lydia Ko six strokes off the pace at last major of year
Lydia Ko six strokes off the pace at last major of year

RNZ News

time3 days ago

  • RNZ News

Lydia Ko six strokes off the pace at last major of year

Lydia Ko won the event last year when it was held at St Andrews. Photo: Brian Spurlock/Icon Sportswire / PHOTOSPORT New Zealand's Dame Lydia Ko is six strokes off the pace after the first round of the Women's Open at Royal Porthcawl in south Wales. Japan's Eri Okayama and Rio Takeda topped the leaderboard, with rounds of five-under 67, while Ko had a one-over 73 as she failed to take advantage of calm conditions on the coastal course. Fellow Kiwi Amelia Garvey is a stroke further back, in joint 91st place. Ko won the event last year at St Andrews, but it is her first time playing in Wales. She opened well enough in the final major of the year, with a birdie on the first hole but negated that with a bogey on the par-4 third hole. She had one more birdie, on the ninth hole, while dropping shots at the par-5 13th and the par-3 15th before finishing in a 17-way tie for 74th place. Garvey had birdies on the same two holes that Ko birdied, with four bogeys spoiling her round. Okayama's five-under 67 gave her the lead before she was joined by Takeda after she birdied the 18th, Reuters reported. Japanese players dominated the opening day with Miyu Yamashita at four-under ahead of a large group on three-under that included Chevron Championship winner Mao Saigo, Shiho Kuwaki and Chisato Iwai. World number one Nelly Korda finished two-under par. Okayama, who is world number 139, bogeyed her opening hole but birdied five of the next eight and was rock solid on the way back with another birdie at the 17th moving her ahead. Takeda recovered from a double-bogey seven at the ninth with four birdies on the back nine, putting her joint first. By far the largest galleries assembled just after lunchtime to watch England's Lottie Woad in a group alongside Ko and American Lilia Vu. An astonishing July, which culminated in Woad winning the Scottish Open in her first event as a professional, had made the 21-year-old favourite for the year's final major. But the former Florida State University player found the going tough as she ground out a level-par round of 72 thanks to a birdie at the last. - RNZ Sport/Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store