Wasabi, a fuzzy Pekingese with a black and brown face and soulful eyes, won Best in Show at the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show on Sunday in Tarrytown, New York.
A Whippet named Bourbon came in second, winning the Reserve prize at the 145-year-old competition. This year marked the first time the show was not held in Manhattan.
Wasabi is posed after winning the Best in Show at the 145th Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show.
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, organizers moved the show from its usual Madison Square Garden digs to the 19th-century Lyndhurst Mansion by the Hudson River in Tarrytown, and delayed it from February so it could be held outside.
David Fitzpatrick with his Pekingese, Wasabi.
Mathew, a French bulldog, and Connor, an Old English Sheepdog, were also in the finals on Sunday, along with a West Highland White Terrier named Boy, a German Shorthaired pointer called Jade and a Samoyed named Striker.
Attison, a Komondor dog, competes in the Working Group judging at the 145th Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show.
Held annually since 1877, the show is one of the oldest and most popular sporting events in the United States. Dogs from more than 200 different purebred breeds can compete, with judges determining which contenders best conform to their breed's standards.
A Dandie Dinmont Terrier stands on a judging podium during breed judging.
Wasabi and Bourbon beat out thousands of other dogs to win Best in Show at the American Kennel Club National Championship in 2019 and 2020 respectively.