Standard poodle crowned top dog in finale of Westminster Kennel Club
show
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[February 12, 2020]
By Gabriella Borter
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A standard poodle
named Siba was crowned "Best in Show" at the annual Westminster Kennel
Club Dog Show in New York on Tuesday, taking home the grand prize in the
most prestigious competition for pure-bred canines in the United States.
Just shy of four years old, the graceful black female from Northampton,
Pennsylvania triumphed over crowd favorites Daniel the golden retriever
and Bono the Havanese at the grand finale of the three-day event at
Madison Square Garden, her crown of tall black fluff bobbing as she
loped around the ring.
"We think she's beautiful and has that special something, so hopefully
that's what he saw," Siba's handler Chrystal Murray said, referring to
the Best in Show judge, Robert Slay, in a post-show interview.
Before Siba embarks on a whirlwind tour of television appearances and
celebrity photo shoots, as is customary for Westminster champions,
Murray said she would get to enjoy plenty of her favorite treat:
chicken.
Siba advanced to the final round as the champion of the non-sporting
group, going head-to-head with the winners in six other groups - hounds,
toy dogs, herding dogs, working dogs, sporting dogs and terriers.
Rounding out the roster of finalists in Tuesday's best-in-show contest
were Bourbon, a female whippet, who was awarded second place or "Reserve
Best in Show"; Daniel, a male golden retriever; Bono, a male Havanese;
Conrad, a male Shetland sheepdog; Wilma, a female boxer, and Vinny, a
male wire fox terrier.
The wire fox terrier had an edge after the breed took home the top prize
last year, but the golden retriever, a breed that has never won Best in
Show, seemed to win the hearts of the audience on Tuesday.
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Siba the Standard Poodle competes during the Best in Show
competition at the 2020 Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show at Madison
Square Garden in New York City, New York, U.S., February 11, 2020.
REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
Chants of "Daniel! Daniel!" echoed from the crowd of thousands, as
Slay inspected the seven canines before making his choice.
It was the fifth time a standard poodle took home the alpha prize in
the Westminster show’s 144-year history. It is the second-oldest
sporting event in the country, after only the Kentucky Derby horse
race.
This year's competition drew a field of contenders consisting of
more than 2,600 dogs representing 205 breeds from 20 countries,
including the United States.
The prestigious dog show grew out of an 1870s gathering of sporting
gentlemen who regularly chatted at a bar in the long-gone
Westminster Hotel in lower Manhattan.
On its website, the Westminster Kennel Club says the men decided to
put on a dog show named for the meeting spot, while trading stories
about hunting and their dogs' exploits.
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter in New York; Editing by Jonathan
Oatis and Clarence Fernandez)
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