James Halliday announced the annual Wine Companion awards on Tuesday night this week, at an invitation-only ceremony in Melbourne. This is the prelude to the release of the 2015 Wine Companion due out on Friday August 1.
Six major awards were presented:
- Wine of the Year: 2011 Xanadu Stevens Road Margaret River Cabernet Sauvignon, WA (Sponsored by Qantas epiQure)
- Winery of the Year: Hentley Farm, Barossa Valley, SA (Sponsored by SMEG)
- Dark Horse of the Year: Haselgrove Wines, McLaren Vale, SA (Sponsored by Nikon)
- New Winery of the Year: Flowstone, Margaret River, WA (Sponsored by Kennards Wine Storage)
- Winemaker of the Year: Castle Rock Estate’s Rob Diletti, WA
- Best Value Winery of the Year: Hoddles Creek Estate, Yarra Valley, VIC
Halliday’s Scores compared to the Winefront’s
Halliday also announced his best wines, and Gary Walsh at the Winefront wrote a note on WF’s Facebook page that compares Halliday’s scores with some of the Winefront’s. I’ve said more than once that Halliday’s scores are consistently 3 – 6 points higher than the WF’s, which covers several brackets. That’s a serious issue in the 100 point system since you only have a range of around 10 points to work with (87 – 97):
Halliday’s Scoring System | Our Scoring System |
97 – 99 – Exceptional | 99 – 100 – Perfection |
95 – 96 – Outstanding | 95 – 98 – Outstanding |
94 – On the cusp of gold medal status | 91 – 94 – Pretty damn good |
90 – 93 – Highly Recommended | 87 – 90 – OK to Good |
Take the Grosset Polish Hill Riesling below. Halliday’s score puts it near the top of the outstanding scale, while the Winefront’s score says it’s highly recommended. That’s 3 brackets further down in the Wine Companion Scoring System. As an aside, the same wine didn’t make the cut at a recent Gourmet Traveller Wine Riesling tasting (90 points) so it scored a plain old Recommended (We checked on what happened to the big guns HERE). So these three scores effectively cover 5 categories, which boggles the mind.
We should add that we’ve found the guys at the Winefront the most reliable reviewers out there.
The Rest of the Wines
Here’s how the scores compare to those reviewed on WineFront (Gary Walsh, Campbell Mattinson and Mike Bennie):
- Sparkling Wine: 2004 House of Arras Grand Vintage (97 points) vs 95+ Mike Bennie
- Riesling: 2013 Grosset Polish Hill Clare Valley Riesling (98 points) vs 93+ Campbell Mattinson
- Semillon: 2013 Thomas Braemore Individual Vineyard Hunter Valley Semillon (98 points) vs 95+ Gary Walsh
- Chardonnay: 2011 Leeuwin Estate Art Series Margaret River Chardonnay (98 points) vs 93 Mike Bennie
- Sauvignon Blanc: 2011 Flowstone Margaret River Sauvignon Blanc (97 points) vs 92 Campbell Mattinson
- Pinot Noir: 2012 Bass Phillip Reserve Pinot Noir (99 points) vs 97 Gary Walsh
- Other Reds: 2012 SC Pannell McLaren Vale Grenache (97 points) vs (NOT YET REVIEWED)
- Shiraz: 2011 Mount Pleasant Maurice O’Shea Shiraz (98 points) vs spritzy bottle not yet reviewed – sans spritz around 93 Points Gary Walsh
- Cabernet Sauvignon: 2011 Xanadu Stevens Road Margaret River Cabernet Sauvignon (99 points) vs 93 Campbell Mattinson.
Several other wines singled out by Halliday for special mention
- 2004 Tahbilk 1927 Vines Marsanne, 97 points (Other Whites and Blends) vs 94 CM
- 2013 Clonakilla Shiraz Viognier, 98 points (Shiraz Viognier) vs 96 CM
- 2012 Yarra Yering Dry Red Wine No. 2, 98 points (Shiraz Family) – NOT REVIEWED
- 2012 Cullen Diana Madeline, 98 points (Cabernet Family) vs 97 GW
- NV Rockford Black Shiraz, 97 points (Sparkling Red) – NOT REVIEWED
- 2013 Bellarmine Pemberton Riesling Select, 96 points (Sweet Wine) – NOT REVIEWED
Kim