2008 Trophy Winners
Of the 267 wines awarded gold medals 90 wines have been elevated from gold medal to trophy status following a further rigorous blind tasting.
Following two weeks of blind tasting to establish the medal rankings, the IWC co-chairmen Tim Atkin
MW, Sam Harrop MW, Charles Metcalfe and Derek Smedley MW hosted a separate trophy tasting for
their newly appointed panel chairs as well as their senior judges. It was the balance, personality and
finesse of these exemplary wines that distinguished them as deserving of an IWC trophy.
A total of 116 trophies were awarded. The majority of wines picked up a single trophy however some
extraordinary examples were found to be deserving of a host of awards. Most notably, francophiles
will be delighted to hear that a Burgundy has received four trophies whilst on the other side of the
earth both the Australians and New Zealanders can rejoice with a Cabernet Sauvignon from
Coonawarra and a Pinot Noir from Central Otago also walking away with four trophies a piece:
France has regained the crown for the most trophies which Australia had narrowly snatched from it last year
whilst Portugal has made it to third place in the trophy stakes for a third year running. Argentina has
recorded its best record to date with six trophies, beating Chile’s very respectable five, amongst them
the international trophies for Cabernet Franc and Tannat. The trophy winning wines hail from 16
different countries. The top five are as follows:
Trophies by country 2008: France (20), Australia (18), Portugal (13), Italy (10), Spain (8) & Japan (8 for Sake).
As usual, the IWC has rewarded regional excellence and specificity with trophies for Maipo, Jurançon, Pernand-Vergelesses, Dão and Castilla y León among the regular, more expected winners.
“The judges responded to an even wider range of entries than ever before not only with 35 regional trophies, 26 national trophies, 18 international trophies but also by awarding trophies to all the grapes you can think of – and then some, examples being Aglianico, Fiano and Tannat,” explained IWC co- chairman Charles Metcalfe. Click here for the complete list of trophy winning wines.
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