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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
Sport
Bryan Armen Graham at Madison Square Garden

Giant schnauzer Monty named America’s top dog in Westminster first

Katie Bernardin and Monty celebrate their best in show win at the 149th Westminster Kennel Club dog show on Tuesday night in New York City.
Katie Bernardin and Monty celebrate their best in show win at the 149th Westminster Kennel Club dog show on Tuesday night in New York City. Photograph: Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP

A giant schnauzer named Monty has been chosen as America’s top canine after earning the title of best in show on Tuesday at the 149th Westminster Kennel Club dog show.

Judge Paula Nykiel tapped the five-year-old male with the jet-black coat from Ocean City, New Jersey, over a stacked field of six other group winners, among them a whippet named Bourbon (awarded reserve best in show for a third time), a German shepherd named Mercedes, an English springer spaniel named Freddie, a bichon frisé named Neal, a Skye terrier named Archer, and Comet, a sassy, crowd-pleasing shih tzu who won the toy group for a second consecutive year only to again be pipped at the final hurdle.

The victory marked a historic first. No giant schnauzer had ever won America’s most prestigious dog show in the 95 years since the breed was first entered in 1930.

Monty, whose official champion’s name is Hearthmore’s Wintergreen Mountain, was the last dog standing on a snowy night in midtown Manhattan after a winnowing-down process that began on Monday morning with more than 2,500 canines in over 200 breeds and varieties hailing from all 50 states and 12 other countries, including Canada, Japan and South Korea.

“Winning best in show is a dream come true,” said Katie Bernardin, Monty’s handler and co-owner, who became overcome by emotion almost immediately after Nykiel’s verdict. “I won best junior handler at this dog show when I was 18 and I always used to sit up in the rafters and watch and just want to be them. All those people were my idols and then I got to be them and be down there and get to win the big ribbon.”

Monty’s rise in the sport has been meteoric. He had won best in group at Westminster and reached the last seven in both 2023 and 2024, only to come up short in the final round, and entered this year’s contest as the top-ranked dog in the country based on points compiled across previous shows. The third time proved the charm as he became the first dog from the working group to win the big prize since a Newfoundland named Josh in 2004, ending a two-decade hoodoo that represented the longest active drought of any group.

“He thrives off this environment and he’s just so much fun to show in these situations,” the 39-year-old Bernardin said. “Because he just knows it’s important.”

Asked what was going through her mind as she took her final lap around the green-carpeted ring before the judge’s decision, Bernardin said: “That it would probably be our last lap together. And I just wanted him to enjoy it and I wanted to enjoy it.”

Bourbon, a nine-year-old whippet handled by Cheslie Pickett Smith who came out of retirement after winning reserve best in show in 2020 and 2021, was forced to settle for second yet again at the oldest continuously held sporting event in the United States after the Kentucky Derby.

A total of 201 breeds and varieties were represented at this year’s show, from affenpinschers to Xoloitzcuintlis. Some had better odds of advancing than others: only one bluetick coonhound, Dandie Dinmont terrier and Belgian laekenoi apiece were entered, compared to 52 dachshunds, 44 poodles, 40 French bulldogs, 39 Chihuahuas, 38 golden retrievers, 34 Rhodesian ridgebacks and 33 Labrador retrievers.

Breed judging took place during the day at the nearby Javits Convention Center, with the breed winners advancing each evening to the finals at Madison Square Garden, home to Westminster for all but 12 of its 149 years (and back after a five-year absence prompted by the coronavirus pandemic). There’s no prize money for winning, but owners of champions can demand top dollar for breeding rights.

“Monty is special,” Bernardin said. “I saw him when he was a puppy and I knew he was special. He slept on my stomach when I was pregnant. He slept under [my daughter’s] bassinet when she slept in a bassinet.

“He’s just our dog. He’s just … we all love him. He’s our family dog, whether it’s me, my husband, the kids that work for us, my best friends. He gets excited when anyone comes and sees him. They go, ‘Hey, Monty,’ and Monty explodes because Monty loves his family. And I think that’s so special about Monty. Through the years, he is just so loyal to his people.”

The immediate aftermath will include the traditional Wednesday media blitz, a whirlwind itinerary that includes TV appearances on the morning shows and a photo-op atop the Empire State Building, before resuming life as “just our family dog” in Chaplin, Connecticut. Asked how she thinks Monty will take to his newfound celebrity, Bernardin didn’t hesitate.

“Oh, he’ll love it,” she said. “He’ll love it. It’s all about Monty. Just ask him.”

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