New Zealand woolhandlers Joel Henare (left) and Ngaio Hanson on their way to a transtasman test match win over Australia at the Otago Shears on Friday. Photo / Barbara Newton
New Zealand woolhandlers Joel Henare (left) and Ngaio Hanson on their way to a transtasman test match win over Australia at the Otago Shears on Friday. Photo / Barbara Newton
New Zealand have scored a comfortable win over Australia in a transtasman woolhandling test match held in South Otago.
The New Zealand team of Golden Shears champion Joel Henare, of Motueka, and Ngaio Hanson, of Eketahuna, won by more than 75 points from Australians Alexander Schoff, of Chinchilla, Queensland, andRacheal Hutchison, of Gilgandra, NSW.
The match took place on the first day of the 2026 Otago Shears at Carterhope Estate, Te Houka, on Friday.
The Kiwis’ victory enabled New Zealand to square the 2025-2026 series, with Australia having won the first leg during the Australian National Shearing and Woolhandling Championships at Jamestown, South Australia, in October.
It was the 51st transtasman woolhandling test since the annual home-and-away series started in 1998, with New Zealand having 38 wins.
Henare, 34, extended his record as the most successful individual, with 16 appearances, including 14 wins.
Hutchison, as Australia’s most successful, made her 13th appearance, including nine wins, but it was her first appearance with Schoff, who was contesting a fifth transtasman test in a row.
Henare also won his 14th New Zealand Woolhandler of the Year title, in an encouraging result ahead of his attempt to win a third world individual title at the 2026 Golden Shears World Shearing and Woolhandling Championships in Masterton on March 4-7.
It was the 149th win of his open woolhandling career, dating back to his first at Waipukurau in 2006.
Defending New Zealand Wool Handler of the Year champion Pagan Rimene, of Alexandra, was runner-up, and Schoff was third.
North Island competitor Tre Ratana Sciascia won the senior title, and Talia Nelson, of Alexandra, won the junior final.
New Zealand’s home transtasman tests have traditionally been held at the Golden Shears in Masterton, but have been squeezed out of the programme next month to make way for the 20th Golden Shears World Shearing and Woolhandling Championships.
Friday’s test was the second of five shearing sports international matches for New Zealand teams on successive weekends before the championships, with New Zealand having beaten Wales at Aria on Waitangi Day in the first of three Wools of New Zealand shearing tests.
A moment of triumph at the Otago Shears with New Zealand judge Dawn Ratana (left), woolhandler Ngaio Hanson, manager Gordon ("Flash") Duxfield, and woolhandler Joel Henare. Photo / Barbara Newton
A transtasman shearing test will be shorn next Saturday on the second day of the Southern Shears in Gore, celebrating its 60th anniversary.
Wales will be at Pukekohe on February 22 and the Taumarunui Shears on February 27, in the remaining New Zealand and Wales shearing tests.
Roxburgh shearer Leon Samuels on Saturday put a recent world record behind him and set his sights on regaining the Golden Shears open title in Masterton next month with victory in the Otago Shears Open shearing final over Northland gun Toa Henderson, who won both events last year.
Henderson won the race over 20 sheep, and finished in 16m 0.08s – thought to be easily the quickest time for the Otago open final, and 40 seconds quicker than last year, when Henderson all-but put a sheep around the whole field.
There were just seven seconds in it this time, for Samuel’s better quality to give him victory by almost two points.
Justin Meikle, of Oamaru, was third, while Invercargill shearer Nathan Stratford, fourth, had the best quality points.
Corey Palmer, of Dipton, was fifth, and former Golden Shears novice, intermediate and senior champion Connor Puha, of Kimbolton, was sixth in his first open final.
The Otago Shears open final was the first leg in an unofficial grand slam of four open titles on successive weekends, also including the Southern Shears at Gore, the Pahiatua Shears, and the Golden Shears.
The transtasman teams at the Otago Shears woolhandling test. New Zealand manager Gordon ("Flash") Duxfield, judge Dawn Ratana, woolhandlers Ngaio Hanson and Joel Henare, and the Australian contingent, Alexander Schoff, Racheal Hutchison and Claire Lowe (manager). Photo / Barbara Newton
It is thought to have been first claimed by Taranaki shearer Roger Cox on his way to winning the Golden Shears open in 1978.
Since then, it has been completed only by David Fagan (1991, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2001), John Kirkpatrick (2011) and Rowland Smith (2018).
Mataura shearer Dre Roberts had a big win in the senior final, over 12 sheep each, with the fastest time (13m 13.14s), and best board and pen points to beat runner-up and Northland shearer Tommy Stephenson by almost four points.
Tye Meikle, of Ōamaru, scored his ninth win in 11 intermediate finals this season, by just under a point from South Australian shearer Jackson Lockett.
It was even closer in the junior final, in which Reuben Wilkinson, of Wyndham, won by less than a 10th of a point from Welsh shearer Tane Maguire.
The 60th Southern Shears in Gore will be held on February 19 - 20, including the transtasman shearing test.
Also next weekend are the North Hokianga A&P Show shearing at Broadwood in Northland, the Ohura AP&I Show shearing and woolhandling, and the Murchison Shears, all on Saturday, and the Counties Shears in Pukekohe on the Sunday.
Otago Shears results
Carterhope Estate, Te Houka, South Otago, on February 13-14, 2026