View all newsletters
Receive our weekly newsletter - World Of Fine Wine Weekly

Simon Field MW on Bordeaux 2020: Nuance and complexity will out

”Fascinating, overall—how could it not be? Despite the early adolescent posturing, many of the wines celebrate their terroir with dignity.”

By Simon Field MW

Hindsight and hearsay are easily banished when one is faced with nearly 200 glasses of wine from the Bordeaux 2020 vintage (not all, despite the brilliance of the World of Fine Wine team, poured at the same time). My deep dive into the en primeur whirligig only started properly with the 2021 vintage, so I am approaching these youthful specimens from 2020 with curiosity, unsure hitherto of the validity or otherwise of the “reputation” of the vintage.

Warm but not hot; drought but no water stress; precocious yet classic—the usual joyous litany of contradictions… which either means that no one agrees or that no one has yet decided. All eminently reasonable, one may say, given the category in question.

I was anticipating rich, strident wines, more in the mold of 2018 than, say, 2016. As it turned out, I think that the latter exemplar bears better comparison, although many of the wines were (understandably) somewhat closed, some of them downright reticent.

I was also anticipating a Right Bank triumph, because of the difficult arrière-saison and its knock-on effects (or so we were advised) on the ripening of the Cabernet Sauvignon. Yet many of the wines that stood out were, in fact, from the Left Bank and therefore Cabernet-rich. Palmarès run up and down the region: A terrific Fieuzal (albeit not quite in the league of La Mission Haut-Brion) in Péssac set the pace, to be followed in rapid succession by totems from each key commune.

Primi inter pares: Cos, Gruaud-Larose, Pichon Lalande, and Palmer. The Pichon Lalande, for example, edged the Baron in Pauillac and underlined the personality of some of the most successful of the Left Bankers: sappy, supple, finely grained tannins; upstanding, authoritative acidity; generous but not overbearing fruit; and an overall harmony rich in allusive potential. Not in the least hot or flustered… or overblown. Both Cos and Gruaud-Larose dazzled the intellect; intimations of Calvinist austerity and gravelly rigor tempered by teasing ripeness and a lack of excess or caricature.

Showing its true colors

The Bordeaux 2020 vintage, first touted as one of the “warm” ones, now starts to show its true colors; nuance and complexity will out over the medium term. Maybe less so than the excellent 2019s, but not as far removed stylistically as one might originally have expected. Three things support the optimism: the long hang-time (120 days rather than the traditional 100); the timely mid-August precipitation, which tempered inclinations to balmy excess; and the diurnal temperature variations, which are less evident in the genuine canicule years. Only the slightly troubled second half of the harvest might be perceived as a source of complication. All is to play for…

Less so for the Sauternes, which were almost universally disappointing. The botrytic episodes were fragmented and parsimonious, characteristics that inform many of the wines, too. Maybe a good time to have a look at some of those 2014s!

Content from our partners
Wine Pairings with gooseberry fool
Wine pairings with chicken bhuna 
Wine pairings with coffee and walnut cake 

Fascinating, overall—how could it not be? Despite the early adolescent posturing, many of the wines celebrate their terroir with dignity. A beautifully aromatic, silky Giscours and a precise, thought-provoking Montrose are but two that stand out. This was more evident, to me anyway, on the Left Bank. Some of the Right Bankers presented transitional, troubled faces; fruit character and latent complexity (not to mention sheer generosity of spirit) somewhat unforthcoming. A function of youth, maybe, and it was not without significance that some of the second wines (Petit Cheval and Les Pensées de Lafleur two obvious examples) were more communicative than the grands vins on the day. This, one may argue, is as it should have been.

Simon Field MW’s top Bordeaux 2020 wines

Château La Mission Haut-Brion 97

Château Palmer 97

Château Pichon Longueville Comtesse de Lalande 97

Château Cos d’Estournel 96

Château Gruaud-Larose 96

Château Cheval Blanc 95

Château La Fleur-Pétrus 95

Château Pichon Baron 95

Alter Ego 94

Château Branaire-Ducru 94

Château Calon Ségur 94

Château Canon 94

Château de Fieuzal 94

Château Giscours 94

Château Hosanna 94

Château Lafleur 94

Château Léoville Barton 94

Château Léoville Poyferré 94

Château Montrose 94

Château Phélan Ségur 94

Les Pensées de Lafleur 94

Les Perrières de Lafleur 94

Château Troplong Mondot 94

Topics in this article :
Select and enter your email address For award-winning content from the world’s most respected and intellectually satisfying wine magazine, sign up to our newsletter here
Visit our privacy Policy for more information about our services, how Progressive Media Investments may use, process and share your personal data, including information on your rights in respect of your personal data and how you can unsubscribe from future marketing communications.
Thank you

Websites in our network