Part of the Masterton War Memorial Stadium crowd that saw New Zealand complete a haul of five first placings from six world championship events. Photo / Golden Shears
Part of the Masterton War Memorial Stadium crowd that saw New Zealand complete a haul of five first placings from six world championship events. Photo / Golden Shears
Black singlets, black T-shirts, and red ribbons mixed like streamers on election night as New Zealand claimed an unprecedented five wins in six events at the Golden Shears World Shearing and Woolhandling Championships, which ended in Masterton on Saturday night.
Following a cleansweep of the team’s machine shearing, blade shearingand woolhandling titles on Friday, Joel Henare, from Gisborne, completed a third teams and individual titles double, and Rowland Smith, of Maraekakaho, claimed a second individual machine shearing title.
The only event not won by the Kiwis, recoiling from a failure to win any of the events in Scotland in 2023, was South African Bonile Rabela’s successful defence of the blade shearing title.
In the other two major events on the last night, Northland shearer Toa Henderson successfully defended the Golden Shears open shearing title, and Motueka-based Joel Henare, from Gisborne, won a 12th Golden Shears open woolhandling title, in an unbeaten sequence that started in 2013, spanning the two Golden Shears that were cancelled in the Covid era.
Henderson essentially blew the 20-sheep world machine shearing final apart.
He trailed veteran New Zealand-based Scotland international and 2012 winner Gavin Mutch mid-race, taking control on the long wool stretch, and pulled away on the second-shear sheep to clock 16m 40.349s.
He beat Mutch about a sheep, with 2014 winner Smith sneaking through to be second-man off, in 17m 15.67s.
However, Smith had the better quality and beat Henderson by 2.683 points, with Mutch taking third place, ahead of Welsh shearers Llyr Jones and defending champion Gwion Evans, and Denis O’Sullivan, from the Republic of Ireland.
In the Golden Shears open final, Mutch again took the lead to hold on to finish the 20 sheep first in just under 16 minutes, beating Henderson by 14 seconds, but Henderson had the better quality and claimed victory by about half a point.
New Zealand blade shearers Allan Oldfield and Tony Dobbs won the team title on Friday.
However, the South African pair Rabela and Teboho Nyatsa got their revenge by finishing first and second, respectively.
In the woolhanding individual final, it was a New Zealand resident first three, with Henare’s win, Cook Island representative Keryn Herbert the runner-up and Charis Morrell placed third, representing Switzerland.
Toa Henderson looks a spent force after winning the 20-sheep Golden Shears open final, about an hour after a second-placed effort behind New Zealand teammate Rowland Smith, in the world individual machine shearing championship final. Photo / Golden Shears
Second New Zealand representative woolhandler Marika Braddick, of Eketāhuna, was fifth.
Earlier in the day, Te Kūiti’s Jack Fagan won the National Shearing Circuit final, after dominating the five preliminary rounds, which ended with him heading 12 qualifying for the semi-final earlier on Saturday.
Three former winners were eliminated in the semi-final, but the major threat and three-time winner Nathan Stratford remained and led the chase.
Fagan finished in 17m 15.213s, a time advantage of almost four points, which Stratford pegged back to some degree with the better quality, but Fagan still won by 1.378 points, to secure a place in the 2026-2027 New Zealand transtasman shearing and woolhandling series team.
Joel Henare won the World Championships woolhandling title, his third, to go with three team titles. Photo / Golden Shears
It was clearly a dream for Fagan to win the title, father Sir David Fagan having won the title from 1986 to 2008.
Jack Fagan shore in the 2024-2025 series, after finishing third in the circuit final.
In other Golden Shears shearing title finals, senior honours went to Taylor Tarrant, of Taumarunui; the new intermediate champion is Joseph Scahill, of Ireland; Sreffan George, of Wales, won the junior title, and Sam Lawson, of Ongaonga, won the novice title.
New Zealand shearer Rowland Smith on his way to winning a second world individual shearing championship at the 2026 Golden Shears in Masterton. Photo / Golden Shears
Lucy Elers, of Mataura, retained the senior woolhandling title, the junior woolhandling winner was Leah Tamainu, of Nūhaka, and Isabelle Joiner, of Canada, won the novice title.
The North Island Woolhandling Circuit final was won by Ngaio Henson, of Eketāhuna, retaining her place in the transtasman series team.
Jeremy Goodger, of Masterton, won the Golden Shears Men’s woolpressing title for a 14th time, and the women’s title was won for the first time by Mollie Moffett, of Ferrnhill, Hawke’s Bay.
South African clippers ace Bonile Rabela successfully defends the world blade sharing title. Photo / Golden Shears
The next World Championships will be held in Geelong, Victoria, in 2029, and are expected to be in the first week of November.
The championships have previously been held in Australia in Perth, Western Australia, in 1986, and Toowoomba, Queensland, in 2005.
Individual final (8 fleeces - 2 perendale, 2 crossbred long wool, 4 second-shear): Joel Henare (New Zealand) 105.780pts, 1; Keryn Herbert (Cook Islands) 122.680pts, 2; Charis Morrell (Switzerland) 138.362pts, 3; Racheal Hutchinson (Australia) 151.161pts, 4; Marika Braddick (New Zealand) 177.484pts, 5; Rosie Keenan (Scotland) 226.665pts, 6.
Teams final (10 fleeces – 6 crossbred long wool, 4 second-shear): New Zealand (Joel Henare, Marika Braddick) 110.965pts, 1; Cook Islands (Keryn Herbert, Tina Elers) 163.022pts, 2; Australia (Racheal Hutchinson, Alexander Schoff) 171.858pts, 3; Switzerland (Gabriela Schmidt-Morrell, Charis Morrell) 173.664pts, 4; Falkland Islands (Talia Jones, Pilar Castro) 175.1pts, 5; England (Hilary Bond-Harding, Jess Parkhouse) 223.723pts, 6.
Blade shearing:
Individual final (6 sheep – 3 perendale, 3 crossred long wool): Bonile Rabela (South Africa) 14m 26.441s, 56.322pts, 1; Teboho Nyatsa (South Africa) 15m 45.612s, 56.781pts, 2; Allan Oldfield (New Zealand) 14m 39.239s, 61.462pts, 3; Tony Dobbs (New Zealand) 17m 20.313s, 65.016pts, 4; Johnathon Dalla (Australia) 16m 56.497s, 68.995pts, 5; Andrew Mudge (England) 19m 06.945s, 77.517pts, 6.
Teams final (6 sheep – 3 perendale ewes, 3 crossbred long wool): New Zealand (Allan Oldfield, Tony Dobbs) 16m 46.515s, 63.496pts, 1; South Africa (Bonile Rabela, Teboho Nyatsa) 16m 51.275s, 64.724pts, 2; Australia (Johnathon Dalla, Daniel Rogers) 19m 40.136s, 76.177pts, 3; England (Andrew Mudge, George Mudge) 22m 15.006s, 83.75pts, 4; Wales (Elfed Jackson, Rhydian Evans) 20m 20.777s, 84.039pts, 5; Republic Of Ireland (James Hopkins, Martin Hopkins) 24m 2.857s, 89.973pts, 6.
Womens Invitation Shearing Final (6 sheep): Laura Bradley (Woodville) 8m 03.351s, 32.668pts, 1; Pagan Rimene (Alexandra) 9m 07.208s, 34.700pts, 2; Emma Martin (Gore) 8m 47.807s, 35.220pts, 3; Kate Donald (Stirling) 8m 46.318s, 37.316pts, 4; Nicki Guttler (Lockhart) 9m 26.355s, 39.318pts, 5; Una Cameron (St Boswells) 8m 31.728s, 42.416pts, 6.
Golden Shears MKM Originals Student Challenge (two sheep): Napier Boys’ High School No 1 Sam Lawson/Sam Whiteside) 23.93pts, 1; Lindisfarne College No 2 (Cooper Ellingham/Lachie Butler) 31.29pts, 2; Pukemiro (Oliver Selby/Riley Priest) 32.16pts, 3.
Open Speed Shear (1 sheep): Jack Fagan (Te Kūiti) 19.345s, 16.676pts, 1; Forde Alexander (Taumarunui) 20.611s, 2; Llyr Evans (Napier) 3; Paerata Abraham (Masterton) 4.