NEW Zealand shearer Jack Fagan has completed a remarkable series of four open final wins on a United Kingdom and France tour with victory at the Corwen Shears international lambshearing and woolhandling championships at Rhug Estate in Wales.
For the second time in four days the Te Kuiti legend pipped reigning world champion Gwion Evans, whom he had beaten in the Royal Welsh Show Open on Wednesday, having already won the Great Yorkshire Show open final in England and open final at Martel in France earlier this month.
The wins came while on the Wools of New Zealand Shearing Sports New Zealand tour, on which he and teammate David Buick, of Pongaroa, claimed test match wins at the Great Yorkshire Show, in France and the Royal Wells Show.
But there was not quite the same success for the test team that was comfortably beaten by Welsh pair Richard Jones and Gethin Lewis at Corwen to secure a 2-1 series victory, a week after Lewis and original teammate Llyr Jones won the opening Welsh series test at Cothi on July 20.
The black-singlets pair were beaten in the opening test of the tour against Scotland last month.
A 32 year-old Fagan, who won his way into the team with victory in the New Zealand Shears Circuit final in Te Kuiti in April, near emulated an achievement of father Sir David Fagan, who, during numerous tours in the Northern Hemisphere in 2000 had a string of wins including at the All-Ireland Championships, the Royal Bath and West and Great Yorkshire shows in England, the Royal Welsh Show and the Corwen Shears.
The Corwen Open attracted 56 entries, with Buick qualifying from the heats in fourth place of among 18 for the semi-finals and Fagan ninth.
While Buick dropped out, Fagan qualified in second-place for the final, between leader Evans and world teams championship teammate Richard Jones, and then made a sprint of the final, in which the world eight-hours lamb shearing record holder in 11m 41s – 20 seconds clear of next-man-off Lewis.
Richard Jones had the best quality points on the shearing board and in the pens, but having finished last in 13m 14s had to settle for sixth place.
Fagan was also first to finish in the test, at 12m 28s and just three seconds quicker than Lewis. With the better quality points, and Buick incurring a maximum 5pts penalty on one lamb, Lewis and Jones won by a comfortable 7.15pts.
For Buick, who won the New Zealand Shears Open final in April, capping a remarkable comeback after suffering critical injuries in a farm accident in 2021, it was his 21st test match since debuting in a trans-Tasman test in Australia in 2014.
While a regular shearing in the UK and France, Fagan, who also won three speed-shear events in the last week, and is a qualified shearing judge and a shearers’ delegate to the Shearing Sports New Zealand national committee, was on his first tour.
In October, he will be in Australia for the first of the summer’s trans-Tasman tests at Katanning, WA, joined by new Golden Shears Open champion Leon Samuels and the best New Zealander in the open final at the New Zealand Merino Shears, that kicks-off the Shearing Sports New Zealand season on October 4-5. Also on at Katanning will be blade shearing and woolhandling tests, with teams each of two representatives.
Results:
Third Test (20 lambs each): Wales (Gethin Lewis 12m 31s, 47pts; Richard Jones 14m 32s, 50.45pts) 97.4pts, beat New Zealand (Jack Fagan 12m 28s, 47.75pts; David Buick 13m 18s, 56.8pts) 104.55pts. Wales win by 7.15pts and won the series 2-1.
Corwen Shears Open final (20 lambs): Jack Fagan (New Zealand) 11m 41s, 42.3pts, 1; Gwion Evans (Wales) 12m 4s, 43.65pts, 2; Gethin Lewis (Wales) 12m 21s, 45pts, 3; Llyr Jones (Wales) 12m 1s, 45.55pts, 4; Alun Lloyd Jones (Wales) 12m 2s, 46.05pts, 5; Richard Jones (Wales) 13m 14s, 46.1pts, 6.
ENDS
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