Bono the Havanese, Siba the Poodle advance to Westminster finals
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[February 11, 2020]
By Gabriella Borter
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Four dogs advanced to
the final round of the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show on Monday,
including crowd-pleasers Bono the Havanese and Siba the standard poodle,
who will compete in a pool of 7 for the “Best in Show” crown on Tuesday
in New York.
The top dogs declared in the hound, non-sporting, herding and toy groups
on Monday stood out among the more than 2,600 dogs entered in
Westminster, the most prestigious annual event for show dogs in the
United States.
Bono the Havanese seized Westminster’s toy group title for the second
year in a row, drawing shouts of glee from the crowd of thousands at
Madison Square Garden as he trotted around the ring, his floor-length
silk coat flowing behind him.
“He has something that makes people look at him,” said Taffe McFadden,
Bono’s handler, in an onstage interview.
A black standard poodle named Siba maintained her breed’s tradition of
dominating the non-sporting group, becoming the 31st standard Poodle to
win the group after she wowed the crowd with her towering crest of
fluff.
Bourbon the whippet beat out crowd favorites like the beagles and basset
hound to win the hound group, and Conrad the Shetland sheepdog spun
around in joyful circles when he was proclaimed the winner of the
herding group over the popular corgis and German shepherd.
Now in its 144th year, the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show bills itself
as the second-oldest sporting event in the country, behind only the
Kentucky Derby horse race.
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The winner of the Toy Group, a Havanese named Bono, is judged at the
2020 Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show at Madison Square Garden in
New York City, New York, U.S., February 10, 2020. REUTERS/Carlo
Allegri
The "best-of-group" competition will continue Tuesday with the
terrier, sporting and working groups, after which the seven group
winners will vie for the "Best-in-Show" trophy in a grand finale on
Tuesday night.
Last year, a Wire Fox Terrier named King won the terrier group and
took the top prize. He was the 15th member of his breed to take the
"Best of Show" title.
The Westminster Kennel Club has its roots in New York City in the
1870s, when a group of sporting gentlemen would meet at a hotel bar
near Union Square in lower Manhattan to trade stories about hunting
and the exploits of their dogs, according to the club's website.
One night, the men decided to put on a dog show, and they named it
after the gathering spot, the long-gone Westminster Hotel.
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter; Editing by Steve Orlofsky, Robert
Birsel)
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