Governor’s Cup® Judging


Rating Scale

Ratings will use the 100 point Wine Spectator scale.

The numerical rating will be used to determine medal winners and advancement to the subsequent round.

100-90A Classic Wine, Among The Best Wines In The World
94-90Outstanding, Superior Character And Style
89-85Very Good, A Wine With Special Qualities
84-80Good, A Well Made Wine Of Good Quality
79-75Average, A Drinkable Wine That May Have Minor Flaws
74-50Not Recommended (NR)
49-0No Score (NS)
Medals

Gold Outstanding/Classic 90-100 points
Silver Very Good 85-89 points
Bronze Good 80-84 points

Tasting Notes

Our esteemed judges assemble tasting notes for each wine commenting on:

•  Appearance: clear or dull, color, intensity, other visual observations

•  Aroma: descriptors as to clean or faulty aromatics, fruit, floral, vegetal, spice, oak, chemical, animal, and intensity

•  Flavor: dry, off dry, etc. RS, character of the alcohol, acidity, body, tannin, oak, fruit, floral, vegetal, spice, oak, chemical, animal, and intensity

•  Overall Quality

•  Commercial Suitability

The average wine score will be used to determine if it qualifies for a medal.

Preliminary Round

Over the course of 3 days, each wine is tasted by 6 judges. This is a single-blind tasting, meaning that judges only know the grape or category of a wine, but the vintage, winery and name are hidden behind coded-glasses. Finally, individual judges’ scores of a wine are averaged into one score after the lowest score is dropped.

Final Round

Over the course of 3 days, 12 judges assess the highest ranking wines from the preliminary round. Unlike the preliminary round, each judge samples all of the Final Round wines. Each wine in the Final Round receives a final average score after lowest is dropped. The 12 wines with the highest average score are identified as the “Governor’s Cup Case®.” The wine with the highest overall score is the Governor’s Cup® Winner.