原文摘自犬展年鉴。 In Defense of Professional Handlers
These are all legitimate reasons why professional handlers will typically do better at the shows than the amateur exhibitor, especially the occasional one. Professional handlers often do even better than these factors would justify. I have written before that some top ranked dogs are there more by virtue of their owners’ pocketbook and the prestige and competence of their handler than the quality of the dog. It is even worse that handlers only too often win in the classes over considerably better and equally well-presented dogs. But that’s not the professional handlers’ fault, they have an ethical and practical obligation to do the best they can for their clients. If we must point fingers somewhere, it would be at judges who take the easy way out by putting up the best-known face rather than acting with knowledge, honesty and integrity to seek the best dog in each class regardless of who is at the other end of the lead.
The next time you lose to a professional handler, resist the immediate impulse to blame it on the handler or the judge. Those are easy answers that help you get over the loss and make you feel good about yourself and your dog, but they will not help you win the next time. Instead, ask yourself whether you really have the better dog overall (not just better in some single characteristic), whether your dog was groomed at least as well as the one to whom you lost, and whether you handled well in the ring. Most importantly, ask yourself what you could have done that would have improved your chances of winning. Again it’s best to resist the easy answer – “nothing” – because that will not help you get better or improve your chances in the future. Ask a friend to videotape you and your competitor in the ring the next day and then play it back several times. I am always amazed how different my dog and I look from what I think we look like. It’s a great way to learn even if it is a bit of a downer. Learning is really what it is all about.
Finally, showing your dogs is a sport, and there is no perfect sport. Breeders, exhibitors, handlers of all kinds, and judges are people and people are not perfect, they make mistakes and have weaknesses. It would be naive indeed to expect all judges to be perfect and completely knowledgeable, objective and honorable. While the most egregious offenders should be removed expeditiously. The perfect system has not yet been invented and never will be. Don’t let the bad experiences get to you but learn from them.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR - He and his family have owned, bred and shown (primarily in conformation) West Highland White Terriers since 1959, have finished over 50 home-bred Westies and a number of dogs in other breeds, notably Norwich Terriers and Lhasa Apso. He is a judge licensed for all Terriers, Delegate to the AKC for the St. Petersburg Dog Fanciers Association, President of the Lakeland-Winter Haven KC, and chair of the West Highland White Terrier Club of America’s Judges’ Education Committee.
There isn’t a show where you can’t hear “amateur” breeder-owners grumbling about the preference judges seem to give to dogs shown by professional handlers. Just recently a lengthy discussion of this subject dominated one of the breed list-servs. Is this grumbling and the implied criticism of handlers justified? Is there anything we “amateur” exhibitors can do to improve our odds for success?
Before we can answer these questions, we need to identify and clarify the differences in the expectations from dog shows of breeder-owner-handlers and professional handlers. The “amateur” exhibitor’s first objective is to win the points that eventually lead up to a championship. In principle, at least, that relates to the most basic purpose of conformation shows, evaluation of breeding stock and advancement of breed quality. Another objective may be to promote a stud in BOB competition, and to enhance the opportunities to place puppies in quality homes, especially show homes. Some “amateur” owner-handlers become highly skilled in the preparation of their dogs for the ring, and in presenting them to judges. Such “amateur” handlers do so on a par with professional handlers, with the only difference being that they are self-funded and do not earn a significant part of their living from their involvement in the sport. Not so long ago the delegates debated whether they should be permitted to charge a fee for judging. A former handler who was then a delegate put in writing a comment that probably helped substantially to defeat that attempt. He referred to “amateur” owner-handlers as not being good enough to get paid for what they were doing. I was not the only one offended by such ignorance and arrogance.
It would be a mistake to lump all “amateur” handlers into a single group. There are some outstanding amateur handlers and many that are less than highly skilled. It would also be a mistake to lump all professional handlers together. Many became professional handlers, i.e. began showing for others for pay, primarily to help meet the expenses of showing their own dogs. They tend to show just a few dogs, and travel within a limited range. Most of these also hold full-time jobs that provide the major source of their income. At the other extreme are the “big time” professional handlers that carry 20 or 25 dogs to well over 100 shows every year. They may have gross revenues (before expenses) of up to half a million dollars a year. They are typically the ones who carry the most heavily promoted dogs that are on top of the major ratings systems. No matter how they began, when the operation gets to be that size it must be run as a business. The success of that business depends on the number of dogs they get to show, their quality, and the pocketbook of the owners. Owners don’t keep their dogs with handlers unless their dogs win consistently. Thus winning becomes a necessity and the virtually exclusive purpose of being in the ring.
Once professional handlers reach that level of success, they can become selective in the dogs they accept. “Amateurs” must show what they have bred. A few amateurs operate kennels large enough so that they too can show only the best. It stands to reason that the average quality of dogs shown by top flight handlers is likely to be higher than the average quality of all dogs shown by amateurs. The repetition of the word average is critical because it emphasizes that the statements do not apply to individual dogs. Many individual dogs shown by amateurs are also of top quality.
The experience gained by being in the ring thousands of times in one year gives handlers an extra edge because they know exactly what to anticipate from both the judge and the dog. Not too long ago, I watched a very good dog shown by an amateur lose to a professionally handled good dog of slightly lesser quality. The judge put both dogs through their paces obviously having a difficult time making up his mind. Then the judge asked the dogs to spar and the amateur allowed his dog to wander off and drop his tail. That was enough to swing the decision. Ring experience gives professional handlers a real and well-earned edge.
Finally, top professional handlers out-groom most (but not all) amateurs. We have been helped enormously by handlers. Cliff Hallmark, George Ward, and Dora Lee and Wendell Wilson stand out especially in our memories as we learned to groom our Westies, a process that took decades and continues to this day. Professional handlers have their dogs with them all the time, week after week. They see what needs to be done repeatedly, and they gradually improve their dogs’ appearance. I know from our own experience that our dogs look a lot better on the last day of a four-day circuit than they do on the first. We as amateurs cannot get to shows every weekend as professionals do, and even with the best intentions it is difficult to keep up with the work. After all, most of us also have to go out and make the money that allows us to participate in the sport, and maintain the dogs that have retired from the ring. We may have a bitch to breed and then whelp. It is very easy and natural to be distracted from keeping the show dogs in top shape. |