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  • John Stokes

    John Stokes

    John Stokes was raised around an auction barn in Lubbock Texas that his dad owned. “Somebody was always daring you to do something you don’t normally do,” said John. “I was an aggravating kid back then.” He shared a story about shooting a bow and arrow at the neighbor kids after watching Little Beaver do it at the movies. “I got a good spanking.”
    Born in 1939, he enjoyed life and as an only child, he tried many things at the sale barn that led him to raise, ride and fight bulls. “My dad sold cattle, horses, and calves and I remember we got 17 head of bucking horses, and 17 head of bulls that belonged to Gene Autry. They were there for Everett Colborn’s rodeos that were held in the college football field. My daddy trucked them over there.” Clyde had a trucking company as well as the auction barn on the north side of Lubbock. The auction barn had a straightaway race track and on Sundays they would have horse races. “My mule, Josephine, could outrun most of them,” he said. “I thought it was a neat deal – they would bring in bulls and calves and horses and we’d rope and ride.”  He picked up his dad’s livestock trading skills and took it on with him into the rodeo world. “When I was rodeoing I’d buy bulls from one producer and sell to another one.”
    He started competing in 1953 at Rising Star, Texas, as a small open rodeo. He entered the bull riding at the age of 13. Two years later, at the age of 15, he had his first “gig” as a clown/bullfighter at that same arena. When they came out with the Rodeo Cowboys Association permits in 1956, he ended up with one. “If you won money, you had to buy a card for $25. The First RCA rodeo I entered, in Taylor, Texas, I entered two in one weekend. It was a two head in the bull riding – I won $15, so I had to buy a card.” Like many bull fighters in his time, he showed up to ride at rising star event and the bull fighter didn’t show up, so they asked John to do it. “After that, I would get on my bull first, and then I’d fight bulls for everyone else. Some of those rodeos down in South Texas there would be thirty or forty bull riders – and I was the only bull fighter – I was pretty skinny and pretty quick.” He won many rodeos as a bull rider.
    John attended Tarleton College in Stephenville, and in 1958 he was instrumental in helping form the first rodeo club at the school. That year he entered the Tarleton rodeo in bull riding, wild horse race, bulldogging and bareback – winning the All Around
    He married Lynn Kirby, the girl down the street, who he had known since junior high. The two will celebrate being married for 50 years this coming January. They settled on a ranch near Sonora, Texas, ranching 90 miles from the border. Lynn went with him to all the rodeos after they were married.
    John was drafted into the military, but he couldn’t serve due to his lack of hearing. “I got hit by lightning when I was 12 and that started my hearing problem. We had a rock barn, with jersey heifers. I’d come in from school and was down at the barn. Lightning hit the barn right next to me – I had a bad taste of sulfur in my mouth for six weeks – it killed a bunch of the heifers.”
    He continued a trade that he started in high school “I got paid .35 an hour for welding when I was in high school, and I could see how gates worked from growing up in the sale barn and being around my daddy (Clyde Stokes).” John built a set of metal pens for a friend and that’s how his welding business started. “Over the period of years we built four different auction barns, repaired a large feed yard – all while I was rodeoing and ranching.”
    Lynn and John had one daughter, Tamara Shane. His welding business ended up employing 20 people – 15 of them rodeoed. His bull fighting and riding slowed down, but he still wanted to go and rodeo – so he took up team roping and steer roping. “I learned how to rope as a kid – .it’s something I did every day of my life when I had cattle, sheep, and goats. It wasn’t hard to take what I did every day and put it in the arena. I roped left handed for a long time, but I got my finger mashed in a door, and had to start roping right handed.”
    John not only went to ropings, he and Lynn started producing them in the 1978. “Our first roping we had at the ranch we had a progressive after six and we had two kids, one was 13 (Guy Allen), one was 14 (Tee Woolman), won the roping.” They produced ropings for fifteen years, and after they quit, John continued roping until he was 70. “I roped and tripped until five years ago,” he said. “I spent 53 years in rodeo.” During that time, he endured 88 broken bones.
    He is still involved in the industry, raising bucking bulls – he has six coming two-year-olds that will be entered in futurity derbies for ABBI and UBBI. “All my cows are registered. All the bulls are out of our cattle and I trained them all. When I sell one for $5,000, I think I’ve made a lot of money! I train them and gentle them up. You can’t sell a mean one. They are just like people – they’ve got their own little thing.” John and Lynn enjoy their life on the ranch. “We ranched all our life, I don’t think we’ll ever get away from it. As long as the Lord lets us, we’ll be in the cattle business.”

     

    Story is also available in the September 15, 2014 issue.

  • JD Schulze

    JD Schulze

    JD (James Daniel) Schulze calls Brighton, Colo., home, but he is most at home in the arena. The rodeo clown spends the summer working rodeos in Colorado and surrounding states. “From June until the end of September I will have worked 63 performances,” said the 39-year-old single dad. “I’ve been home a couple days all summer.” His ten-year-old son, Landon James, travels with him on the weekends JD has him. “This year he’s really taken a part in wanting to help out with the acts.” One of JD’s acts, the Shrinking Machine, features Landon as the small version of JD. Landon plays baseball too, a sport that JD helps by being one of the coaches.
    “When it comes to coaching, I really try to make it fun and have fun with the kids so they learn to love the game – and have fun – which in turn hopefully carries over to everyday life in all they do. In the rodeo arena, I’m there to be a goofball and be part of the bull fighting trio – the island of safety – that’s where the barrel man comes in.”
    JD grew up on the Eastern side of Aurora, Colo., and the middle of Denver. His parents were divorced and he and his three older brothers split their time between the two houses. He also has three younger sisters. “It was my norm,” he said of having two homes. Growing up in the city, JD got his break into rodeo through friends who were bull riders. “I always loved the Western lifestyle and hanging out with friends that rode bulls got me started riding.” JD rode bulls until injuries took him out.
    Full story is available in the September 15, 2014 issue.

  • Kyle Irwin

    Kyle Irwin

    Winning the Ram National Circuit Finals in Guthrie, Okla. earlier this year, the young gun, Kyle Irwin, 24, from Robertsdale, Ala. has big goals for his steer wrestling career. Clocking a record-tying time of 3.3 seconds naming him the 2014 RNCFR Champion, Irwin is confident and motivated with an eye on a gold buckle.
    “I’m inspired by the people that succeed when the odds are stacked against them. No one person in particular, just anyone you might read or hear about that started from rock bottom and had nothing, then beat the odds and excelled tremendously. Just to prove that nothing is impossible.”
    Growing up around rodeo and cattle, Irwin began junior rodeo at the age of 11 competing in tie-down roping, chute dogging, and team roping. Irwin jumped his first steer at 13 years-of-age at Steve Duhon’s Steer Wrestling School.  Graduating from Northwestern Okla. State College, he was fortunate to have a mentor and coach, Stockton Graves. Graves taught Irwin not only about steer wrestling but about life and experiences.  Traveling with Kody Woodard and Dru Melvin his senior year in college, he had the opportunity to ride Dru’s horse, Moonshine.  By riding Moonshine, Irwin gained a tremendous amount of knowledge and confidence to keep pushing through any doubts about himself. Unbeknownst to Irwin, his adventure into a professional steer wrestler was headed in to a victorious one.
    “I remember when I was in high school and signed with Western Okla. State College. The local newspaper wrote an article that read, Robertsdale High Senior Wrestles His Way to Higher Education. I never knew I had a chance to make a career out of the sport of steer wrestling. I had watched guys on TV making a career and I was in awe at how good they were. Now, I am able to pay my bills and enjoy this life that I had dreamed about.”
    Full story is available in the September 15, 2014 issue.

  • Feild captures first Ellensburg title

    Feild captures first Ellensburg title

    ELLENSBURG, Wash. – In Kaycee Feild’s decorated rodeo career, he had never won the Ellensburg Rodeo.

    That’s not the case anymore.

    Feild, who has won the last three bareback riding world championships, totaled 169 points on two head to capture the title Monday at the Ellensburg Rodeo Arena. “This was one of the rodeos, for sure (on my bucket list),” Feild said. “I wrote a whole bunch of goals down in January on my mirror and that was one of my goals, and it means a lot for me to win there.”

    Feild secured the coveted title with an 87-point ride on Calgary Stampede’s Special Delivery in the short round. “That horse was all there,” Feild said. “Going into it, I knew that horse would have one or two moves and be pretty strong. So my main focus before I got to the rodeo and got down in the chute was to be strong with my core and my feet, and try to just muscle through that first jump, and then let loose and get rolling.

    “I had him (Special Delivery) at the NFR in 2012 in the fifth round, and I knew he was going to be quite a handful, but it was a lot of fun.”

    Despite his three gold buckles, Feild shows no signs of letting up. In the Sept. 2 Windham Weaponry High Performance PRCA World Standings, Feild has a substantial lead with $147,553, which is $30,900 more than second-place Steven Peebles. “This win is just what I needed,” said Feild, who was third in the first round in Ellensburg with an 82-point ride. “At the end of August, I just couldn’t get anything going, and I was getting a lot of re-rides. This is what I needed to get my momentum going again.”

    Other winners at the $269,914 rodeo were all-around cowboy Trevor Brazile ($4,380 in tie-down roping, team roping and steer roping), steer wrestler K.C. Jones (13.3 seconds on three head), team ropers Charly Crawford and Shay Carroll (18.5 seconds on three head), saddle bronc rider Chad Ferley (174 points on two head), tie-down roper Hunter Herrin (26.2 seconds on three head), barrel racer Christine Laughlin (51.65 seconds on three runs), steer roper Joe Wells (27.0 seconds on two head) and bull rider Josh Koschel (167 points on two head).

  • PBR China Series delayed

    PBR China Series delayed

    PBR China Series delayed

    PUEBLO, Colo. – The Professional Bull Riders announced today that the debut of the PBR in China is being postponed. The much-anticipated series of events originally scheduled to run from August to October 2014 in Qingdao, Nanjing and Shanghai, China, will now be revisited in 2015.

    “We always knew that there would be extensive complexities associated with this endeavor,” PBR Chairman and CEO Jim Haworth said. “In order to produce a series this year, we knew it would take virtually a miracle to navigate the many obstacles associated with the approval process and the events’ production. James [Wang] and his team’s hard work nearly delivered that miracle. Unfortunately, however, unforeseen circumstances have made us step back and honestly review our position. While we’re excited to bring the PBR to China, we want to ensure that we enter the Chinese market in a style that accurately represents the PBR and the sport of bull riding to the people of China.”

    James Wang, the CEO of Xinniu International Sports Culture Company, which is based in Beijing, approached PBR Australia in 2013 about bringing the sport to China. In early 2014 a partnership was finalized and plans were fast-tracked for a late summer 2014 debut. Present circumstances and scheduling make it necessary to push the debut until at least the summer of 2015.

    “When it happens, PBR’s arrival in China will be a historic moment,” Wang said.  “China will have the opportunity to experience the authentic cowboy culture, and observe firsthand the brave and resilient spirit of these hardworking athletes. We appreciate Jim Haworth and the entire PBR staff for their hard work and dedication while preparing for the upcoming tour and are looking forward to continuing our work together.”

    More than 30 million households in China have watched highlights of the PBR’s elite Built Ford Tough Series on CCTV.

    “While they won’t be the easiest events we’ve ever produced,” Haworth said, “when the series kicks off, it will probably be the most highly-anticipated.”

  • Sweet & Sour Chicken Over Rice

    Sweet & Sour Chicken Over Rice

    • 1 lb. boneless chicken breasts
    • 1/4-1/2 cup apricot preserves
    • 2 (16oz) bottles russian dressing
    • 2 cups instant rice
    • 2 cups steamed broccoli

    Directions:
    Grill chicken in skillet. Meanwhile saute apricot preserves and russian dressing on medium-low heat until it has a smooth texture. You can add apricot preserves to taste. Steam broccoli.
    Prepare instant rice. When chicken is fully cooked mix with sweet and sour sauce. Serve over  rice with broccoli.

     

  • Tavis Walters

    Tavis Walters

    Tavis Walters grew up in Ovid, Michigan and got started roping at the local arena with his friend Tommy Tyler. His impressive resume began after his parents were working with customers showing “all around” horses mostly at AQHA shows. One thing led to another and Walters was soon winning AQHA titles in both the Team Roping and Tie Down events. His accomplishments include:
    7-Time American Quarter Horse Association Congress Champion
    4-Time AQHYA High Point National Champion
    4-Time AQHYA World Champion
    3-Time AQHYA Reserve World Champion
    During his teenage years, Tavis spent several summers with renowned AQHA trainer, Robbie Schroeder. During high school he spent much of his time at horse shows or jackpots. Hard work and horsemanship earned Walters a scholarship at Rogers State University in Claremore, Oklahoma, for his freshman and sophomore years. Walters then transferred to Southeastern Oklahoma State University where he graduated with a degree in Occupational Safety and Health.
    Tavis qualified for College National Finals in 2009. The following year he was awarded the Rogers State University Rodeo Team MVP. Also in 2010, he was named the National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association Central Plains Region men’s horse of the year owner/trainer.
    Walters now makes his home in Elmore City, Oklahoma and trains horses, both for others and himself. He also has a successful business, Walters Halters (walterhalters.com) selling braided halters and other tack.
    “I do most of the braiding myself,” says Walters. “I’m pretty particular about the quality.”
    The Walters’ relocated to Oklahoma soon after Tavis left for college, though the family visits Michigan often. Tavis’ father, Barry, is a horseshoer and his mom, Tricia, is a Seminar Coordinator for Michigan State University.
    Tavis competes regularly and in 2013 won 6th in the average at the George Strait Team Roping Classic; and won the UPRA Rookie of the Year Header. Earlier this year at the AQHA Tulsa Holiday Summer Walters was Circuit Exhibitor of Circuit Champion Sr. Calf Roping Horse and Overall High Point Open Rope Horse.

    How much do you practice?
    I ride every day, and probably rope four or five days a week.

    Do you make your own horses?
    Yes

    Who were your roping heroes growing up?
    Speed Williams and Rich Skelton.

    Who do you respect most in the world?
    My parents. They have done so much for me and made sacrifices for my benefit.

    Who has been the biggest influence in your life?
    My parents.

    If you had a day off what would you like to do?
    Rope. I always rope when I get the chance.

    Favorite movie?
    21 – a movie about card counters.

    What’s the last book you read?
    Rich Dad, Poor Dad.

    How would you describe yourself in three words?
    Quiet, responsible, motivated.

    What makes you happy?
    Getting up everyday and getting to do what I love.

    What makes you angry?
    People not doing what they say they will.

    If you were given 1 million dollars, how would you spend it?
    Invest for the future.

    What is your worst quality – your best?
    My worst is I’m not very outgoing until I get to know you. My best is that I’m trustworthy. If I say I will do something, I will do it.

    Where do you see yourself in ten years?
    In ten years I will be training horses, showing horses in AQHA, and going to rodeos. I expect my halter business will have grown quite a bit by then.

  • Back When they Bucked with Richard Claycomb

    Back When they Bucked with Richard Claycomb

     

    Richard, (Dick), Claycomb, was born June 6, 1939. He spent the first two years of his life in a two-room cabin in Fox Park, Wyo. “My dad was hauling logs from Fox Park, Wyoming to Ft. Collins, Colorado. Mom hauled water from the creek.” The family moved to Cheyenne when his dad got a job at the UP Railroad. Dick decided to take on a paper route when he was ten, at first riding a bike, and then switching to horseback, and extending the route from 22 to 145 papers. “I paid $15 for the horse,” he said. “I’d ride seven miles every night – that’s where I learned how to ride.” His mare stepped on a coffee can and severed a tendon, which ended the paper route. Dick’s next job was as an apprentice mechanic and he received his mechanic license.
    Dick got his first taste of rodeo in Pine Bluffs, Wyo., at a high school rodeo, when he was 16. “I won the bull riding and was second in the bareback riding. I got $47 and I was hooked.” He won the All Around saddle at the Cheyenne High School Rodeo riding bareback horses and bulls and after he graduated from high school, he continued to rodeo in the summer and packed hod in the winter. “Packing hod for brick layers kept me strong,” he said.
    Dick met his wife, Darlene Stumpf, when they were seniors in high school. They married in 1958 and they worked winters and rodeoed summers and later went to college. “Tracy was born in 1964 and Troy was born in 1966. Tracy is an attorney for Office Depot in Idaho, and she has two middle school daughters, Maureen and Emery. Troy is a principal in Gillette, Wyo., and he has three children, Sophie a senior, Lainee is a freshmen, and Jess a sixth grader. He operates a fly in fish camp in Saskatchewan, Canada in the summer. I go up there every summer to help and fish, mostly fish.”

    Full story available in September 1, 2014 issue.

     

  • On the Trail with Garrett Tribble

    On the Trail with Garrett Tribble

    “A lot of kids ride bulls, but some kids are just born to do it.” This is how Phil Fabela, a family friend and mentor, describes Garrett Tribble, who has been sitting first in the IPRA bull riding standings for nearly two months. Garrett isn’t the type to boast, but the bull rider from Slick, Okla. joined the IPRA in January 2014, and 11 states, three Canadian provinces, and nearly 50 rodeos later, he is sitting first in the world standings – ahead of second place by almost $20,000. And he’s only 17.

    “Garrett’s bull riding career really started when he was about two or three years old,” says his dad, Rodney Tribble. “He fell in love with bull riding and has wanted to do it since he was very young. From about the time he was three, he’d come home from school and put in Eight Seconds – he watched it every day!” Garrett’s bull riding dream took shape when he was about five. One of his friends was participating in the mutton busting at a local rodeo and invited Garrett to join him. Short as it was, the wooly ride made up Garrett’s mind. He was going be a bull rider. Although none of Garrett’s immediate family had ever competed in rodeo, his parents helped him join youth associations like the Junior Bull and Bronc Riders Association (JBRA), National Junior Bull Riders Association (NJBRA) and the Oklahoma Junior Rodeo Association (OJRA).

     

    Full story available in the July 15th edition.

     

    Full story available in the July 15th edition.
    Full story available in the July 15th edition.
  • Grand Prize winner of Pro Fantasy Rodeo Christmas in July

    Grand Prize winner of Pro Fantasy Rodeo Christmas in July

     August 19, 2014

    Grand Prize winner of Pro Fantasy Rodeo’s Christmas in July

    Pro Fantasy Rodeo and RFD-TV are proud to announce the Grand Prize Winner of the first ever “Christmas in July” game that ended July 28. Grant Godfrey of Berthoud, Colorado is the winner of an all-new 2015 Ranger XP 900 H.O. Godfrey’s winning team, which he named “GG2”, amassed the most winnings during the hottest season of rodeo referred to as Christmas in July. The largest number of rodeos occur during this time, giving rodeo contestants the chance at more money than any other time during the season other than the WNFR in December.

    GG2 won a total of $250,449.90 during the month-long span of rodeos and consisted of: bareback rider Kaycee Field $22,866.90; steer wrestler K.C. Jones $18,034.00; team roping header Erich Rogers $41,576.00; heeler Cory Petska $41,576.00; saddle bronc rider Wade Sundell $19,032.00; tie down roper Hunter Herrin $34,214; barrel racer Kassidy Dennison $30,721.00; and bull rider Reid Barker $19,510.00.

    When asked about his winning strategy, Godfrey said he tried to pay attention to all the contestants throughout the season to see who’s hot and seems to be on a winning streak. Watching the standings and results on the PRCA website is especially helpful as well as reading the “News and Notes” section since that may give a hint or two about particular contestant’s standings.

    As an avid team roper who has qualified for the USTRC National Finals and the World Series numerous times, he is, of course, most aware of the timed event end of the arena. It’s also important to watch the rough stock end and that’s what he likes about the concept of Pro Fantasy Rodeo—the manner in which it keeps fans interested in All the events. “Before Pro Fantasy Rodeo, I kept my focus on the timed event end,” said Godfrey. “But now I try to keep up on contestants in every event.” Obviously it has paid off for Godfrey since he has won money with his teams each of the 12 years Pro Fantasy Rodeo has been available to play.

    “I’ll love having the Polaris Ranger around the place,” said Godfrey. He stated that he knows it will be helpful in toting hay around the place where his horses and team roping cattle are utilized to keep him sharp for his weekend sport. “Maybe we’ll find time to take it to the hills for some recreational riding too,” he mentioned.

    Godfrey and his wife of 32 years have owned and operated a facility for high risk youth for 29 years in the front range of Colorado. A daughter, Cassie, competed in rodeos throughout her youth and is currently employed in the banking industry in Sterling, Colo. where she and her husband ranch and farm.

    Godfrey feels the support PRCA has given PFR through its endorsement has done more to engage the fans with the sport than anything else they’ve tried. “It’s a great venue that allows PRCA fans to become more connected to the contestants. Once you’ve picked a team, you stay more focused on what’s happening at each rodeo. In addition, you also start getting your friends and family involved, and then you want to know how their teams are doing which usually involves all kinds of kidding and one-up-man-ship, so it’s just lots of fun,” Godfrey explained. “I’ve always been wholly immersed in the NFR game, but the summer game of “Christmas in July” was great—especially because RFD-TV offered it for free! What’s not to like? I encourage everyone to play the game!”

    Second place winner, Michael Bates of Tohatchi, New Mexico’s team “RockinNB” won $241,973 winning Bates the Cactus Saddlery package valued at $5,000. Prizes were awarded through 20th place including a Pendleton Whiskey Firepit, Yoder Brothers Custom Log Bench, gift certificates, BEX sunglasses, ball caps and free Pro Fantasy Rodeo entries (valued at $89) to the Wrangler National Finals Rodeo Game in December. Weekly prizes were also awarded to individuals whose team won the most money for that particular week in July.

    Since its inception in 2003, Pro Fantasy Rodeo paid out over 2.2 million in cash and prizes which includes payouts of 8 places in the 10-day average and daily payouts to 6th place in the Wrangler National Finals Game. Payout for the 2013 game was $165,000. Noted as the official PRCA fantasy game, it has become the gold standard for fantasy rodeo. Pro Fantasy Rodeo players can log on to www.profantasyrodeo.com to sign up for information for the 2014 WNFR game and receive the preview magazine to aid in picking their team. Interested players can also click on the results tab to study the rodeo results as well as the winning PFR teams. For example, studying the results can help players estimate how much payout a winning team might total—a dollar amount that players need to estimate as a tie-breaker.

    Pro Fantasy Rodeo is especially proud to have RFD-TV as a partner in the “Christmas in July” game and wishes to thank them for their support.

  • K.C. Jones engineers big win in Caldwell

    K.C. Jones engineers big win in Caldwell

    CALDWELL, Idaho – Steer wrestler K.C. Jones is having a season to remember.

    The 43-year-old Decatur, Texas, cowboy is putting himself in the best position of his career to win a coveted gold buckle.

    Jones’ hot streak continued at the Aug. 12-16 Caldwell Night Rodeo, as he won the average title with a time of 15.5 seconds on three head.

    “This is just awesome,” Jones said after his win. “The fans here were great and it was just a great atmosphere. It was like a standing-room-only crowd.”

    Jones, who joined the PRCA in 1995, has proved himself over the years, qualifying for the Wrangler National Finals Rodeo seven times, including the last two years.

    Jones finished a career-best fourth in the world standings in 2006, and he entered last week seventh in the Aug. 11 Windham Weaponry High Performance PRCA World Standings.

    He moved up to sixth in the Aug. 18 standings, yet sits only $15,911 behind standings leader Trevor Knowles, which is less than one round win at the WNFR. In fact, the top 10 steer wrestlers in the world are only separated by $25,377, which should make for a wild competition during those 10 nights in Las Vegas.

    Making Jones’ run of success even more remarkable is that he is at least 10 years older than every other man in the top 10 of the bulldogging standings. The average age of the other nine men is just under 30 years old, making Jones the veteran by a wide margin.

    “I’m just not putting any pressure on myself,” Jones said. “I’m just glad to be out here competing, and I’m having fun.”

    And, winning rodeos.

    In addition to the Caldwell Night Rodeo, Jones also has won the Cheyenne (Wyo.) Frontier Days, Rodeo Austin (Texas) and Rodeo de Santa Fe (N.M.) outright, and he was the co-champion at the Dodge City (Kan.) Roundup Rodeo.

    “The biggest difference out here right now is we have the horsepower,” Jones said. “I rode Tebow (Saturday night) and that horse is really coming alive.”

    Jones clinched his win in Caldwell with a solid 6.6-second run in the finals, allowing him to leave the arena with $6,822 in winnings – $3,956 for the average victory.

    Other winners at the $257,885 rodeo were all-around cowboy Rhen Richard (tie-down roping and team roping, $3,848), bareback rider Luke Creasy (171 points on two head), team ropers Brandon Beers and Jim Ross Cooper (14.5 seconds on three head), saddle bronc rider Taos Muncy (165 points on two head), tie-down roper Tuf Cooper (25.0 seconds on three head), barrel racer Nancy Hunter (51.48 seconds on three runs) and bull rider Reid Barker (169 points on two head).

  • A lifetime’s journey ends in ProRodeo Hall of Fame

    A lifetime’s journey ends in ProRodeo Hall of Fame

    For elite 10, a lifetime’s journey ends in ProRodeo Hall of Fame

    COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – There was a recurring theme in the speeches at the 35th annual ProRodeo Hall of Fame induction ceremony Aug. 9, connected to heritage, history and the long road traveled to reach the sport’s pantheon. Everybody had a great road story to tell; nobody’s stretched longer or had more air miles than Glen O’Neill’s. From Down Under to Top of the World.

    O’Neill, the 2002 saddle bronc riding world champion, became the first cowboy from outside North America to be inducted into the Hall Saturday, the Australian joining fellow world champions Wayne Herman, Byron Walker and the late Pete Grubb, along with champion bullfighter Miles Hare, legendary bucking horse Spring Fling and four elite committees, from the Clovis (Calif.) Rodeo, Snake River Stampede (Nampa, Idaho), Rowell Ranch Rodeo (Hayward, Calif.) and Greeley (Colo.) Stampede.

    “When you’re retired,” O’Neil said, “you think back to where you came from. I think back to when I started rodeoing as a country kid in the Outback riding bucking horses. I was lucky enough to have the right attitude to make the right decisions I did in my career. I kept moving forward, and once I got to the top in Australia, I came to Canada and America and wanted to keep climbing. It’s been a hell of a ride.”

    Apart from his many honors in the arena – the gold buckle, 11 qualifications for the Wrangler National Finals Rodeo and career earnings of $1.6 million – O’Neill may have set a record of sorts Saturday, for the longest distance traveled by a family to witness their kin’s Hall of Fame induction ceremony.

    His parents, brother and aunt and uncle were on hand from New South Wales, Australia (8,325 miles away). He also had in-laws from Canada here, as well as his wife, Jennifer, and kids from their home in Didsbury, Alberta.

    “This is pretty exciting,” said O’Neill, 41, “and I’m at a loss for words a little bit, because it’s a big deal and there are a lot of people here. To come here and be inducted, see all the history that’s in the Hall of Fame and to now be a part of it, is something special.”

    Herman, the 1992 world champion bareback rider and also an 11-time Wrangler NFR qualifier, was no less awestruck by the path that had taken him from the tiny North Dakota community of Golden Valley to his plaque in the ProRodeo Hall of Fame.

    “I told my wife, Connie, when we walked into the (Cowboy Ball Aug. 8) that this was almost surreal,” said Herman, 50. “It was a quite a journey to get here and I’m honored and quite humbled to be standing in (the ProRodeo Hall of Fame) with the names that we were pretending to be to win the world when we were kids riding the bucking machine. To be one of them (a ProRodeo Hall of Famer) is unbelievable and hard for me to imagine.”

    For Walker, who won his gold buckle as a steer wrestler in 1981 and whose 16 WNFR qualifications are equal to the second-highest total in the history of his event, this was a day that felt forever in coming.

    “I’m thankful to get up and give this speech and not be dead,” said Walker, 56, with a chuckle.

    “Waiting all this time (since the April 1 announcement) before going into the Hall of Fame was kind of like waiting to go into the principal’s office. I knew it was happening, and I was anxious to get it over with. Being here has been really nice, and walking around the Hall you realize that this is real.”

    Grubb was the second ProRodeo cowboy – following Clay Carr – to win world championships at both ends of the arena. The Salmon, Idaho, native won the bareback riding title in 1938 and the team roping (as a heeler) in 1940. Grubb, who died in 1969 the age of 56, was represented at the induction by his son, Pete Jr.

    For 33 years, beginning in 1975, Hare’s full-time job was protecting bull riders in arenas all across North America from 2,000-pound farm animals. He was a bullfighter at the National Finals Rodeo six times (1977, 1985, 1988-91) – making his first appearance when he was just 22 years old – and twice more as an alternate (1984, 1992).

    He was the inaugural Wrangler World Champion Bullfighter in 1981 and shared that honor with fellow Hall of Famer and lifelong friend Rob Smets in 1988, developing a style based on careful study and his memory of the bulls’ moves.

    “The people who are in the Hall are people who I idolized and are the gods of the game, and it’s just an honor to be in here with them,” said Hare, 58. “It’s no accident that I’m here. I’m a product of my environment. My father (Dean) had bucking bulls and fighting bulls in my backyard when I was born. I just had to step out the door and do it. I didn’t have me a basketball hoop out there. I had rodeo stock. It is all I have ever known. I get along much better with things with four legs than things with two legs.”

    Along with Kingsway Skoal and Lonesome Me, Big Bend Rodeo’s legendary mare Spring Fling is the only horse to be honored as both a Bareback and Saddle Bronc Horse of the Year. Spring Fling started out on the bareback side and received the PRCA’s top honor in that category in 1997, then came back to twice claim the saddle bronc award, winning it outright in 1999 and sharing it with Surprise Party Skoal, of Sankey Rodeo, a year later. Spring Fling was also voted the top saddle bronc horse at the 2001 Wrangler NFR and three times was voted the top saddle bronc horse at the Dodge National Circuit Finals Rodeo in Pocatello, Idaho.

    “Whenever Spring Fling was up, I would go out the arena to watch her – no matter what I was doing in the office – and I got goose bumps every time,” said rodeo secretary Crystal Longfellow, who accepted the award on behalf of Big Bend’s Sonny Riley and Don Hutsell. “(Six-time World Champion) Dan Mortensen knew how good Spring Fling was; it was the only horse he ever drew five times and never rode.”

    “She really deserves it,” Hutsell said. “She’s the best bronc ever, I think. She just flat bucked, and she had the power to get guys off.”

    The PRCA committees selected for enshrinement this year are among the PRCA’s longest-standing and most respected rodeos. Clovis, part of the Wrangler Million Dollar Tour, celebrated its 100th anniversary in April. Nampa will have its centenary rodeo next year, while Hayward just wrapped up its 93rd year and Greeley its 92nd.

    “It’s a bit overwhelming, and to have this line up with our 100-year anniversary next year is more than we could’ve asked for,” said Snake River Stampede chairman Jeff Agenbroad. “It’s a great way to send us off on our second 100 years.”

    ProRodeo Hall of Fame inductees are selected by a committee of former contestants and rodeo experts. More than 150 individuals are nominated each year and selection is based on contributions to the sport of professional rodeo in any one of seven categories: contestant, stock contractor, contract personnel, rodeo committees, livestock, media and notables/lifetime achievement.

    Including this year’s inductees, 236 people, 28 animals and 22 rodeo committees have been selected for enshrinement in Colorado Springs since the Hall opened in 1979.