Rodeo Life

Author: Siri Stevens

  • Morgan Robson

    Morgan Robson

    Morgan Robson has a positive attitude, no matter what she does. The Hugoton, Kansas cowgirl knows that being cheery makes things better, and if she’s in a situation that isn’t the greatest, she works at being positive. Both of her parents have taught her, “make the best of it,” she says. “All along, have a great attitude about everything and it will end up good.”

    Morgan, who is 14, is a member of the Kansas Junior High Rodeo Association. She competes in the breakaway roping, team roping (she heads for Hunter Brunson), ribbon roping (she runs for Hunter), and the goat tying. Of all her events, goats are her favorite. “I get to fly off a horse, have fun getting off and tying fast.” Tying goats appeals to the daredevil side of her, which causes her to do “stupid things” – like mudding when she’s not supposed to, riding four-wheelers with her little brother, and “doing crazy things as much as I can.”

    For the roping, she rides a twenty year old paint named Robin. He’s “got quite the attitude,” she says. “If you make him mad, he’s going to bite you on the shoulder or anywhere he wants to. When you’re picking out his front feet, he’ll bite you on the butt.”

    For the goat tying, she trades off between Robin and an equally ornery horse, a mare named Annie. Annie is her brother’s calf roping horse, and she’s a prima donna, Morgan says. “You’ve got to have everything perfect or she won’t do it. She has to have her feed in the same spot. She’s the same way (as Robin). She’ll bite you, paw the trailer, all that fun stuff.”

    She loves being an eighth grader at Moscow School in Moscow, Kan. “School is fun for me. You can make school boring, or you can make it fun. I choose to have fun. You’ve got to have a good attitude about it.” Her favorite class is pre-algebra, because it’s easy, but life science is not on her good list. It’s too complicated: “It’s crazy how you have to have everything perfect (in science) or it won’t turn out.”

    Morgan loves basketball almost as much as she loves rodeo. Even though she’s the tallest girl in junior high, she plays guard and forward, because she has good ball handling skills. She also plays volleyball and is on the school’s Principal’s Honor Roll.

    When she goes to college, she’d like to play basketball for the Oklahoma Sooners. She loves the coach, Sherri Coale, and would like to be involved in her program. After college, she’d like to play for the WNBA or be a nurse. Her favorite WNBA team is the Atlanta Dream, and her favorite player is Elena Delle Donne, who plays for the Chicago Sky.

    Morgan has a pet mini Australian shepherd, Wrangler, who loves to cuddle with her. He’ll sleep right next to her, his head on the pillow and under the covers.

    She also competes in the Kansas Pro Rodeo Association and the Little Britches Rodeo Association. She’s qualified for state junior high finals both of the last two years, and finished seventh grade in the top fifteen in the team roping and in second place in the breakaway, going on to compete at the National Junior High Finals in Gallup, N.M.

    She has an older sister, Jackie, who is deceased, a younger brother, J.D., who is eleven, and a younger sister, Megan, who is eight. She is the daughter of Dave and Brandy Robson.

  • Craig Allen

    If you’re a spectator at the Allen family arena, you’ll get to see a cowboys and Indians battle. Craig Allen, age five and a Northeast Junior Rodeo Association member, usually plays as one of the cowboys, and his younger brother Clancy, age two, is usually an Indian.

    The boys occupy themselves by the hour with the game, says their mom, Christen Allen. (And sometimes the parents join in.) After Craig is done practicing his events, he’ll get on a little pony, and fall off when his parents or brother shoot him. And usually, somebody ends up getting tomahawked.

    When he’s not getting shot or scalped, Craig enjoys doing the pole bending, flag race, barrel racing, goat ribbons, breakaway roping, junior ranch bronc riding, and mutton bustin’. He rides Yella for his events, but the boys also have Buck, Squirrel, Gunny, Roanie, and Coldbear as other mounts.

    Craig is a kindergarten student at Sperry (Okla.) Public School, where he loves to play outside at recess time on the monkey bars and do the fun stairs. He loves to get “smileys” at school for his good behavior, and he loves math and reading.

    He has competed in rodeo since he was two, and is in his second year of NJRA competition. He is the 2013 Pole Bending Year End champ for the six and under division. Prior to the NJRA, he was a member of the Checotah Roundup Club and the Okay Roundup Club. He won four buckles in those associations.

    Christen and Cody love what rodeo does for the kids. “It’s something we all do together. We’re at rodeos to support our kids and help them, and rodeo teaches them to take care of their animals and to train them. It teaches them patience and sportsmanship with the other kids. The kids get quite a bit out of it.”

    Christen and Cody and their boys work together on the family business, Pay Window Performance Horses, so rodeo is an extension of their family time. “We spend time together in the arena and the barns. We feed together, ride together, train together, and when we’re at the rodeos, it’s the same way.” When he grows up, he’d like to be a cowboy and a roper. The family lives in Sperry, Oklahoma.

  • Kelsey Garrison

    Kelsey Garrison

    It’s April, and Kelsey Garrison is on vacation. The Channing, Texas cowboy doesn’t get away often from his business, but when he does, it usually involves rodeo. He’s spending much of the month of April in California, tie-down roping at several pro rodeos and enjoying the warm sunshine. When he returns to his home in Channing, Texas, it’ll be back to the day-to-day operations for the Texas Cowboys Rodeo Association man.

    Kelsey began his rodeo career as a youngster in Oklahoma and Texas, and in high school, competed in the Tri-State Rodeo Association in Texas. After graduating from Channing High in 2003, he went to South Plains College in Levelland, representing them at the College National Finals in 2006. After that, he attended West Texas A&M in Canyon, and graduated with his bachelor’s in general studies in 2008.

    His dream was to be a full time rodeo cowboy, but after eight months, he realized something had to change. “I planned to rope (full time professionally) but reality set in,” he said. “I want to have a successful business and be able to take care of my family real well.”

    So he began his own business. He sold a tie-down roping horse and bought a semi-truck. After driving for a while, he earned enough money to buy a second truck. Then he bought some manure spreaders, and got into the manure spreading business. The dairies he worked for asked him to cut silage for them, so he bought silage cutters, then more semis, and his business was growing.

    Now, his business has morphed into highway transport and silage cutting. He owns four trucks that make a round trip to California each week, hauling meat from the Texas panhandle to Salinas, and bringing produce back to San Antonio, Houston or Amarillo. In May and September, he’s busy in the wheat fields and corn fields, cutting wheatlage and silage. Kelsey’s business, KGMS, Inc., employs seven people, with his dad helping and his mom doing the books.

    In his spare time, Kelsey competes at TCRA rodeos, and this year, hopes to go to a few PRCA rodeos as well. He’s qualified for the TCRA Finals four times, finishing last year in third place.

    Being a successful entrepreneur can be a double-edged sword, he says. Now that he has more money, he has less time to rodeo. “I try to do more rodeoing, but it doesn’t work,” he said. “You have to be home every day, making sure your business is going right. Either you’re going to be a rodeo cowboy, or an entrepreneur. Whatever you do, you have to do it every day.”

    Kelsey enjoys playing basketball. He cheers for the Dallas Mavericks and loves to attend Texas Tech games. He has a younger sister, Haley, who is 24 and is training barrel horses. He is the son of Jed and Kelly Garrison.

  • Fort Western Whitaker Award

    Fort Western Whitaker Award

    The Nebraska High School Rodeo Association is pleased to announce the inaugural “Fort Western Whitaker Award,” sponsored by Fort Western Stores with locations in Lincoln, Nebraska City, and Columbus, Neb., and given in honor of Kyle and Chip Whitaker.

    Fort Western Stores will provide a custom trophy saddle to the cowboy excelling in at least three events, encompassing both rough stock (bareback riding, saddle bronc riding and bull riding) and timed events (steer wrestling, tie-down roping, and team roping), in coordination with the Nebraska High School Rodeo Association, and a $500 scholarship payable to the continuing education facility of the winning high school student. The award will be similar, in nature to the “Linderman Award” of the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association.

    Kyle, 37, has won the Linderman Award six times, more than any other cowboy. He credits his dad with getting him started in his three events: tie-down roping, steer wrestling, and saddle bronc riding. “I started out doing all the events in high school rodeo, because dad was teaching me, and I wanted to try them.”

    Kyle’s dad, Chip, who won the Linderman Award four times, did the same three events as Vern Whitaker – his dad – and Kyle. “In those days,” Kyle said, referring to his grandfather’s time, “it was common for guys to work both ends of the arena. Things hadn’t been specialized. Now if you want to be good enough to make the National Finals Rodeo, you have to devote all your time to honing your skills in one event. It’s a lot tougher to be competitive in more than one event.”

    “It’s a tremendous accomplishment, what Chip and Kyle have done in the sport of rodeo, and we’re grateful to Fort Western Stores for working with us to recognize similar achievement at the high school level in Nebraska,” said Jim Wakefield, President of the NHSRA.

    Tricia Schaeffer, Nebraska’s National Director for High School Rodeo, says it’s an honor for the association to have the Fort Western Whitaker Award. “It’s great that The Fort Western has come on board. I think it’s a good way to encourage kids to give (the riding events) a try.” And the high school association can provide help. “We’re fortunate that we have people who can give kids instruction, and that’s what it takes, too.”

    “Recognizing high school students for achieving what’s considered one of the most prestigious honors at the professional level, shot from an idea to ‘we’re doing this’ in a matter of hours.” said Reed Tuttle, Fort Western Stores Special Events Coordinator.  “The Nebraska High School Rodeo Association welcomed the idea with so much enthusiasm that we knew this was something special – the students benefit from the honor and all the hard work and diligence it takes to achieve it.”

    About The Fort Western Stores:
    Fort Western Stores is a national leader in Western lifestyle apparel and merchandise. The family owned business, founded in 1972 by Carl and Shirley Wohlfarth, has grown from a 1600 square foot retail store into a multi-channel marketer with three retail store locations, extending its reach worldwide through a catalog and the web; visit www.FortWestern.com.

  • Denise Nelson

    Denise Nelson

    Denise Nelson has been a Northwest Ranch Cowboys Association member for much of her life. The Midland, S.D. cowgirl grew up around horses on her family’s ranch near Wall, S.D. She ran barrels in junior high, high school and 4-H rodeos, but it wasn’t till she married into the Nelson family that she began to rope. After graduation from Wall High School in 1983, she attended Chadron (Neb.) State College and earned a degree in ag business. She graduated from college in 1987 and married Tim Nelson in 1988.

    It was at the age of 26 that she picked up a rope. It’s a standing joke with her, that the only reason she learned to rope was so she didn’t have to be chute help. “I always make this joke,” she said. “I got tired of pushing steers for everybody else.” In 1991, she joined the NRCA and spent much of her time breakaway roping. After her children, Kaylee, age 25, and Jade, 21, were born, she added team roping to her resume.

    Rodeo was on the back burner as she and Tim attended the kids’ activities, but when Jade got old enough to compete in the NRCA, she was back in the arena. Jade often ropes with his dad, and then with Denise in the mixed team roping. Roping with her son is great, she said. “It’s a wonderful family sport. You can’t beat it. You spend your weekends together. It’s just amazing.”

    The four Nelsons are often at the same rodeos, Tim and Jade in the team roping, Denise and Jade in the mixed team roping, and Kaylee in the breakaway roping. The whole family also competes in the South Dakota Rodeo Association; Tim, Jade and Kaylee also compete in the North Dakota Rodeo Association, but Denise does not, as they do not have mixed team roping. Jade is a Pro Rodeo Cowboys Association member and has qualified for the Badlands Circuit Finals the last four years.

    The Nelsons raise most of their own horses and train them. For a while, they rode outside horses, but the demands of their own horses keeps them busy. “Trying to keep horses for your kids takes a lot of time,” she said. Roping and rodeo is her and Tim’s fun, and their hobby. “We used to go to basketball and football games when the kids were  younger. That was our fun. Now we enjoy the horses, roping and rodeo. That’s what we do on the weekends.”

    Denise was NRCA Rookie of the Year in the breakaway roping in 1991. Since then, she’s competed at the NRCA Finals and SDRA Finals about twelve times each. She considers winning the USTRC National Finals Number 8 Shoot-Out with Brian Meredith a highlight in her roping career. Last year’s NRCA Finals were extra-special, as she, Jade and Kaylee all won the year-end saddles in their respective events. The family raises black Angus cattle; calving begins this month.

  • Randy Bernard

    Randy Bernard

    Randy Bernard has paid out over 100 million dollars in the rodeo world throughout his career as a sports executive. Bernard grew up wearing a cowboy hat while working on his family’s ranch and farm in central California. Born in Paso Robles, Calif., he attended Kindergarten to eighth grade in a small town named San Ardo where there was never more than 18 classmates. Bernard studied at Cal Poly and in 1988 interned with the Calgary Stampede gaining valuable experience that set the course of his future career path.
    Bernard came back from the Calgary Stampede to work for the California Mid-State Fair, where one of his responsibilities was making the rodeo profitable. “I believed that we could help it significantly with guaranteeing the best in the world. I created a match with Ty Murray and Cody Lambert who were sitting number one and two in the PRCA all around world standings,” stated Bernard, “The rodeo attendance increased from 3,400 to a sellout crowd of 7,500 the first year. I knew then that our sport was no different than any other sport. People want to see the best in the world.”
    Bernard, had no idea that years later Murray, Lambert and Tuf Hedeman three of the Professional Bull Riders, Inc. (PBR) founders, would ask him to run the PBR. “In the early board meetings of the PBR it was about who yelled the loudest and fought the hardest for their vision,” stated Bernard.
    “We were all cowboys when we hired him. Randy’s ideas and work ethic took a group of the best bull riders in the world and built the PBR. Rodeo people weren’t ready for Randy. He is a cowboy and his ideas were coming from his background working on his family’s ranch,” stated Cody Lambert, PBR co-founder, 3x PBR World Finals qualifier and 6x NFR qualifier.
    Ty Murray, 9x World Champion Cowboy and PBR co-founder said, “Randy Bernard is a natural born promoter. He was a good honest person, really smart and had big ideas. That is the premise that we hired him to come run the PBR. We worked together for 15 years at the PBR. We’ve still remained really good friends and talk on a regular basis.”
    Under Bernard’s leadership, the PBR became one of the fastest growing sports properties in North America, providing opportunities to bull riders that only existed in the imaginations of the founding members. In April 2007, Bernard successfully executed a merger between PBR and Spire Capital Partners, a New York-based private equity firm. The merger allowed the founding members and other bull riding shareholders to capitalize on their vision, dedication and commitment, while maintaining a significant equity stake in the organization.. (Time magazine listed Bernard as one of the top sport executives in 2008. The PBR was named a finalist for the 2010 Sports Business Awards presented by Sports Business Journal and Sports Business Day in the Professional Sports League of the Year category with the MLB, NBA and NFL.)
    Bernard decided to leave PBR and emabark on a new venture, as CEO position of INDYCAR. He was instrumental in creating the new DW12 car introduced in 2012, which critics have said brought the best open wheel racing in over two and half decades. Add to that, changing the name from INDY Racing League to INDYCAR, creating a successful ladder series, implementing double file starts, and the first to develop double header races in a weekend. Under his leadership turbo charged engines returned along with manufactures Chevrolet and Lotus.
    “He helped come up with the most competitive car we’ve had in 20 years. He reintroduced double headers and the triple crown (three 500 mile races at Indianapolis, Pocono and Fontana ) and tried to light a spark under a series that had pretty much fallen off the map,” stated Robin Miller, racing writer and television analyst for Racer Magazine and NBC Sports Network.
    Miller recalled his first meeting with Bernard being six hours long. “The best thing about Randy is he’s a great people person. He is smart, knows marketing and leadership. I asked him if he hit his head in rodeo to take this job,” Miller mentioned, “Bernard was the best thing in INDYCAR management in three decades. He has friends in all these different fields of entertainment. He is a genuine guy and doesn’t have a phony bone in his body.”
    “When I left the PBR I wanted to see if I could capture lightning in a bottle twice. My life changed and I had to become a racing fan to understand their lifestyle. I ate, breathed and slept INDYCAR. I moved out of the western lifestyle for three years to wear suits and work on a different sport, but soon realized that my true passion is the western lifestyle,” stated Bernard.
    Randy came back to his western roots in 2012 when he joined Rural Media Group (RMG) as the President & CEO. On Sunday, March 2 2014, he produced the richest one-day rodeo in western sports history with RFD-TV’s THE AMERICAN paying out $2 million dollars. “I had the concept in the back of my mind, Patrick (Gottsch, Founder of RMG) asked for some big ideas and Jerry (Jones) always wanted me to do it. I’ve never had the opportunity to produce the event due to my commitments with PBR and INDYCAR,” he said.
    “I presented THE AMERICAN model to Patrick due to the tremendous potential for growing RFD-TV, western sports and rodeo in a very positive way. RFD-TV is the perfect vehicle to develop this concept and grow the sport” stated Bernard.
    Bernard feels he is sitting in the perfect position to continue to advance the viewership and monetary opportunities for rodeo athletes. “RFD-TV has a management team in place that loves western sports and understands it and wants to see it grow,” commented Bernard.
    THE AMERICAN focuses on developing stars and showcasing the elite athletes in rodeo while rewarding the best on a given day. “Professional rodeo is unfortunately one of the most faceless sports in America. It needs more media coverage that can help develop stars. If we can help build superstars it helps everyone in the sport. It is my personal belief that all you have is a club if you aren’t always building and showcasing the best in the world,” he explained. Bernard’s goal is to build THE AMERICAN into a $5 million purse.
    “I’d like to say I’ll have this done in five years, and to do that, a lot of good things have to happen,” Bernard admitted, “We aren’t a bunch of television executives who sit in an ivory tower in New York or Los Angeles that only appreciate stick and ball sports. Not one national network gave any news coverage to THE AMERICAN, which proves my point if they truly loved the sport they would give credence and provide coverage to showcase these great athletes.”
    “Our goal was to create the Super Bowl of the western industry and I have some other strong goals. I want to reinvigorate the rodeo fan from the 1980’s into today. I felt that we needed major events in this sport to engage our youth as we see youth rodeo participation declinging. When I was a kid, I roped the dummy countless times dreaming of winning the tenth round of the NFR and the Bob Feist Invitational. There is not enough of those events in my opinion. We want to help our grass roots by building awareness of our sport. We have the best athletes and personalities in the world, but there’s never been a way to showcase them. Even the rural world – if you don’t read the magazines, there’s no way to become familiar with the stars. That’s what we’ve done with Western Sports Roundup on RURAL RADIO and during the Rural Evening News segment.” Rural Media Group commands an audience of 26 million listeners on RURAL RADIO Sirius XM channel 80 and 60 million on RFD-TV and FamilyNet.As for the future of THE AMERICAN, “I want to continue to make cowboys wealthy just like we did Richmond Champion. I’m more passionate now than I ever was.”

  • Steve Gramith

    Steve Gramith

    Steve Gramith considers himself a “foot soldier” in the sport of rodeo. The humble man was involved as both a contestant and a pickup man, and even though he may deny it, he’s contributed his share to the sport.

    He was born in St. Louis Park, Minnesota, in 1942, the son of Clifford and LuVern Gramith. The family had no ties to rodeo, but his mother’s parents had a couple hundred head of cattle, and when they left Dupree, S.D., after their general store burned down twice, his grandfather gave the cattle to a neighbor and friend.

    Years later, Steve’s family would drive past the grandfather’s friend’s ranch in South Dakota. That started my enthusiasm for ranch life,” Steve remembers. From then on, he spent every summer on the family friend’s ranch, located seven miles upriver from White Horse, on the Moreau River and the Cheyenne Indian Reservation in north central South Dakota.

    In 1960, Steve graduated from Waconia (Minn.) High School and went straight back to the ranch, “as fast as my little legs could carry me,” he jokes. It was college that introduced him to rodeo. He  spent his freshman year at Colorado State University, and then took a year off, returning to the ranch near White Horse. He began learning to rope calves with a neighbor, Harlan Gunville. He and Harlan would head to the Timber Lake arena in the evenings, where they would rope calves. “We played, and visited, and practiced,” Steve says.

    After a year off, Steve returned to college, but this time to South Dakota State University, and as a member of the rodeo team. Roping calves was his first event, but not his best. “I basically started from scratch at South Dakota State, and was really inconsistent. I’d maybe win a go-round, and then miss. The calf roping was not something I was good at.” But he soon found an event at which he was good: steer wrestling. With roping he was nervous. Bulldogging was different. “Steer wrestling was just like getting out of bed,” he says. “It was easy. There was nothing to it. There were no nerves there. I’d just grab ahold and go to the mat.”

    It was at his home college rodeo, his senior year that he won the buckle he still wears: for winning first in the steer wrestling. He also won the SDSU all-around saddle that year, because he placed in the calf roping. After graduating in 1966 with an animal science degree and a minor in economics, he moved to Canning, S.D., and went to work for Erv Korkow. He had met one of Erv’s sons, Jim, at the Highmore rodeo, and Erv needed a pickup man. He became friends with Jim, and Steve found himself picking up alongside him at high school, college, and pro rodeos, and when they weren’t on the road, doing chores, feeding horses and bulls, riding colts, and driving truck. And while he was on the road with the Korkow and Sutton Rodeo Co., as it was owned by Erv Korkow and James Sutton at the time, he was able to bulldog professionally.

    Steve wasn’t the only college student recruited by Jim to work for the company. Alvin Chytka, Gary Chytka, Gerald Dewey, David Daul, and others were at the ranch. And even though Erv was the boss, it was his son Jim who was the reason for the crew. “We worked for Erv and James (Sutton), but we came there for Jim. It was because of Jim. We worked like dogs, but he was friends with everybody and he was fun to be around.”

    Along with picking up, Steve steer wrestled, qualifying for the National Finals Rodeo in 1971. Because he was working as a pickup man, he got to fewer rodeos than the other bulldoggers. On the weekends he wasn’t picking up, he’d make three or four. But when he picked up, he competed at that rodeo only, while other cowboys were hitting several on the same weekend. In 1971, he went to forty rodeos, “the most I’d ever gone to,” he remembers. The 1971 year end champion, in comparison, went to more than 100 rodeos.

    He also held the record for the fast time at the NFR, winning the third go-round in 3.7 seconds. That record held till Tom Ferguson broke it in 1975. In those days, the steers were big Corrientes and arenas were larger, including the NFR arena at the state fairgrounds in Oklahoma City. “You could win money being ten (seconds) or under,” Steve says.

    In 1972, Steve left South Dakota and moved to Tunas, Missouri, southwest of the Lake of the Ozarks. He had started a cattle herd by then, and his friend Jim Korkow trucked them to his new home. Land was cheaper in Missouri than it was in South Dakota, the acres per unit for a cow/calf pair were lower, and the winters weren’t as severe. Steve still picked up for the Korkows, but his emphasis was turning to cattle. He had seen Simmental cattle at Jim Sutton’s, and he began crossing Herefords with Simmentals. Eventually, he became a purebred Simmental breeder. He lived near Tunas for about eight years, then moved to Marionville, Mo., where he lived for another eight years. In 1992, when he married his wife Beth, they moved to Willard, Mo., and on to Neosho, where they live now.

    In 1976, Steve ran his last steer. He went to two pro rodeos that year. “It wasn’t that much fun anymore,” he says. His cattle herd was demanding more and more attention. “I was working too hard to really rodeo properly.” He won first at the first rodeo he went to that year, and at the second rodeo, missed his steer and got run over by his hazer. It was time to quit. He didn’t own a bulldogging horse anymore, and the work at home was his focus. “I was always so busy, that the mental aspect was more difficult than the physical aspect. When you have bills to pay at home, and you want to win too bad, it doesn’t go well.”

    His wife, Beth, holds an important place in his heart. They began dating in 1989. She had divorced and was raising three kids. “We’d date some, then she’d want to do things with her kids, then we’d date some more. Finally I wore her down,” Steve laughs. Actually, it was her youngest child, daughter Christine, who helped her mother see what Steve was. “Christine was my champion,” he says. “She said to her mom, “That’s a pretty good guy.’”

    It was through God’s intervention that he found Beth. “I was just out twirling in the wind, until I decided I could not do life alone. It was my decision to ask Christ to come into my life, and I was 48 years old. I didn’t grow up till then. “It not only made a world of difference,” he says, “but I met someone of value that He put in my path. She’s my soul mate, my best friend. I found someone to spend the rest of my life with, and I have the comfort of knowing that Jesus Christ is my Lord and Savior and He died for my sins.”

    Steve has three step-children: Christine Ryan, an OB/GYN in Colorado Springs, Stephen Shank, who works with The Navigators in Texas, and Nathan Shank, a missionary in northern India.

    Of his work as a steer wrestler and a pick up man, he is most proud of picking up. “I think my picking up was more important to me than the steer wrestling, mostly because of my friendships, especially with Jim (Korkow). The work was very satisfying. We had some really nice horses to ride, and it was just such a pleasure because it was cowboying. It wasn’t rodeoing, it was cowboying. We were riding, working, and it was old time cowboyin’.”

  • Lyle Kathrein

    Lyle Kathrein

    At age 45, he has at least four more years to repeat his championship titles that he claimed in 2013. Those titles are the World Champion All Around, the Reserve World Champion Tie Down roper, and the Reserve World Champion Ribbon Roper, all in the 40’s age class. The 2013 rodeo season was Lyle Kathrein’s first year in the National Senior Pro Rodeo Association. Not bad for a ‘rookie’ year. It was his second year in the Canadian Senior Pro Rodeo Association and he finished on top of the 40’s tie down roping and ribbon roping there, too.

    He talks about his 2013 season, “That’s the first time I was able to really compete for those kinds of titles and it was quite an honor for me. Things just sort of came together for me and I had a really good horse and that’s a big part of it. It was really neat to be competing in the ribbon roping with my wife; she was my runner and did great. I was quite happy with it, for sure.” He is quick to give credit to his horse and says that without a good horse he would not have been able to achieve all that he has. He looks at the conformation of a horse first then the papers and says, “If the build is there, then the papers probably won’t dissappoint.”

    For Lyle the Senior Pro association has provided opportunities to travel and meet people from all over the U.S. and Canada. “I’ve been able to meet a lot of people that have helped me and they just welcome you into the group.” While Lyle is competing in the tie down roping and team roping, his wife, Michelle competes in the barrel racing.

    Lyle had an interest in rodeo and roping from the time he was a young boy. “As a boy I always had a rope in my hands so everything around home got roped. Nobody else in my family was a roper, but my granddad rode broncs when he was young. We always had some horses around and would work with them. I can remember being able to go to the spring rodeo in Edmonton, and I just knew that there was something there for me.” His first rodeo competition was in the Wild Rose amateur circuit. “My mom was the secretary for that and I was a director on the committee several times. I was in some other amateur associations back then and they don’t even exist anymore.”

    He tried steer wrestling but eventually gravitated to tie down roping as his primary event. “I never was big enough for the bull dogging and it was always calf roping that caught my interest. You tend to go to the events that you’re better at, and that’s what I did.” To learn the technical aspects of calf roping, Lyle went to several clinics and honed his skills. “I went to some Buck Weimerich schools and Bill Reeder clinics. I’ve probably been to a dozen Larry Robinson calf roping schools. It really helps to go to the guys that you look up to, to learn calf roping.”

    He lives in Mayerthorpe, Alberta near where he was born and raised. He and Michelle have a 12-year-old daughter, Dani. During the winter, Lyle does oil field work, stays busy shoeing horses in the warmer months, he does some farming and putting up hay. Lesure time spent with the family and maybe a little golf. Goals for the future are to continue to rodeo in both Senior Pro associations and “…win whatever is available to me.”

  • Jamie Christensen

    Jamie Christensen

    Jamie Christensen is a big fan of the Rocky Mountain Rodeo Association. “Every Rocky Mountain rodeo I go to is big, it’s fun, and it’s a show. The events payout well and that makes it well worth your time to go. I always feel like I’m going to do well at Rocky Mountain rodeos. I try to go to all of the rodeos that don’t conflict with my college rodeo schedule.” Jamie has been a member of the RMPRA for three years and competes in breakaway and barrel racing. She also is a member of the Utah Barrel Racing Association. She would like to say ‘thanks’ to the RMPRA for putting on great rodeos where the competition is always tough.

    She is a member of the NIRA and competes for Utah Valley University on a rodeo scholarship. The sophomore is studying communications for TV broadcasting and is working to get an internship by her junior year at a television station. “Then by my senior year and graduation, I would have my foot in the door and be able to start a career in broadcasting.” In addition to her rodeo scholarship, she serves as a school ambassador. “I go to transfer colleges, junior colleges, or schools where students want to move up to university level schools, and talk about the Utah Valley programs and what the school has to offer. I like meeting people and helping them to pursue their dreams.”

    For Jamie to start her rodeo career was a natural. “My father was a bull rider in the PRCA and trained horses, my mom ran barrels, and I grew up going to all my older sister’s high school rodeos. So, I was kind of an arena rat. I was in the little Buckaroo Rodeo, Junior rodeo, Junior High rodeo, and High School rodeo.”

    Like most top athletic competitors, Jamie spends plenty of time watching ‘game film’. “I have the videos of my runs on my phone and I watch them every night before I go to sleep. I have to keep my mind ready, and then it’s just muscle memory when you get to the rodeo. I don’t ‘safety-up’ on any run; I go for it every time.” Just to be sure there is plenty of good karma in the arena, she’ll keep track of the shirts that she does well in and save them for competition.

    A big part of her preparation was instilled by here father. “He always taught me, ‘If you want to be champion, you need to act and look like one.’ When I was real young, I never understood why I had to have my shirts ironed, but it matters how you look and act, being a good sport, and acting like a champion.”

    When she’s not at school in Orem, Jamie is at home in Erda, Utah with her parents, Wade and Ruth. She makes weekend commutes home to reunite with family, pets, and horses.  Leisure time is spent doing some drawing or painting.

    She says that her parents have been her biggest influence in her life. “They have always kept me on track and have gotten me where I need to be. They’ve taught me to be the best person that I can be. Two other people that mean a lot to me and have helped me in rodeo are Doyle Rollie and Edria Day. Doyle is a great roper and has helped me a lot with my roping skills and has put me on some great horses. Edria did the first 30 days training on my barrel horse and she is helping me become a much better barrel racer.”Goals for the future are to be working in the broadcasting industry, possibly in news programs and eventually into talk shows.

  • Sam Felber

    Sam Felber

    There are a few people that are fortunate enough to find that one event, that one activity that becomes their life’s passion. Sam Felber is one of those fortunate individuals. The 28-year-old cowboy has been riding bulls for the last eight years and still has that fire-in-belly desire to ride as much today, as when he started. “I’m the first one in my family to compete in any rodeo event. My younger brother tried it, but it wasn’t for him.” He has been in the Mid-States association for the last six years and says the Mid-States rodeos are well run, close to home and, “…they have good money added and they pay out pretty good.”

    Besides Mid-States he competes in the Nebraska State Rodeo Association and Bull Riders of America. “I’ll only get to about 10 rodeos this year, but I went to about 50 or 60 bull ridings. The bull ridings are set up where you might have two in a day and they pay better. But, there is more travel. Mid-States rodeos are a lot closer. This year I plan to hit more rodeos and maybe stay a little closer to home.”

    Sam got his start bull riding with the help of some of his friends and recalls, “I had a couple of buddies that were riding and I started going with them. Then I started climbing on a few bulls and I was hooked and I went on from there. I was 20 when I got on my first bull.” He says that his mother has been his biggest influence to him and always been there with encouragement to weather the inevitable slumps that happen in rodeo. “It doesn’t matter whether I buck off or ride 10 in a row; she is always there for me.”

    Learning to stay aboard 1,500 pounds of mad bovine takes some doing and seeking out some expert support is the way to go. Sam explains, “I had a lot of help from Cody Bode when I started. Then I went to a Gary Leffew school and he helped me out a lot with the mental side of bull riding and keeping a positive mental attitude.” Sam’s preparation for nodding his head and opening the gate means staying loose and relaxed. “One of my buddies always told me to have fun with it. If you’re not having fun, why even do it? I think that’s the biggest thing for me; and that holds for everything you do in life. I am thankful for being able to do this, I don’t take it for granted.”

    When it comes time to bare down in the arena, Sam has a competitive spirit that comes to life. “If I see one of my buddies put up an 85 score, and I know I have just a good of bull as he does, then I’ll go out and try to get that 86 or 87 score. It’s like, ‘Watch this. I’ll one-up ya!’ I have always been competitive since I was a kid.”

    Sam, 28 makes his home in Newman Grove, Neb. where he was born and raised. His parents are Eugene and Jonell and he has a younger brother, Seth. During the week Sam works construction jobs. After hours, he and his dad are working the cows that they run together. Leisure time is spent hanging out with friends or going hunting or fishing. Goals for the future are to continue to ride bulls and develop his own string of bucking bulls to haul to rodeos or bull ridings. “I would like to win a Mid-States bull riding title once or twice before I’m done.”

  • Reagan Humphries

    Reagan Humphries

    At just 11 years old, Reagan Humphries will enter the 2014 Junior Southern Rodeo Association (JrSRA) season as the youngest competitor within the senior age division. Fear is not something that enters her mindset, instead, eagerness and determination has set her goals for the year. “I’m so excited to compete at the next level and want to make the finals in my first year as a senior,“ she said. “As the youngest senior, I think it would be really cool if I could make it.“

    The quadruple event contender completed her final season in the junior age division with a fourth place finish in the pole bending, fifth in the all-around and a top ten finish in the barrel racing. “I like how the JrSRA is so competitive, you have to ride hard and be tough to succeed. It teaches you how to better yourself by competing among those who are better than you,” the third-year member said of why she likes the organization.

    A barrel racer, pole bender, breakaway roper and goat tier, Reagan says that it is a toss-up between the barrels and poles for her favorite events to compete in. “I’ve recently got a new barrel horse [a nine-year old dapple gray – Frosty Ted, who she refers to as “Ted“], and although, I’ve only had him for a little while, we have found a chemistry together. At the same time, I use my old barrel horse to do poles on [a 15-year old bay, “Bonnie“]. She is very automatic and we just work really well together as a team,” explains Reagan. In the goat tying, Reagan uses her dad’s roping horse and has found a two-event horse in Ted, whom she will breakaway on this year. “We are new together, but I’m excited with what we can come up with,” she said.

    Reagan is a third generation rodeo athlete, starting with her granddad (Leonard Atwell), who competed in the tie down and team roping within the Southern Rodeo Association (SRA). The family tradition continues through her dad (Clint), who is a current team roper and finished in the top 20 of the 2013 SRA standings. But like most athletes, Reagan has already experienced a huge setback, when she broke her femur while getting off in the goat tying during her second rodeo of the 2011 season. After three surgeries and a six-week recovery period, Reagan was back in the saddle. “It was a big rebound, but I started riding as soon as I could walk again,” she said.

    A straight-A fifth grader at Lincoln Charter in Denver, N.C., where she says that science is her favorite subject. “I want to be a vet and science really interests me,“ she said. Reagan is the example of a true student-athlete, setting the bar high for herself, she plans to attend North Carolina State University and major in veterinary medicine. Outside of rodeo and school, she is a member of the Gaston County 4-H Blazing Saddles, where she won the county, district and state level with her presentation on Diving Horses. “It’s a five minute presentation with posters and props,“ explained her mom, who included that Reagan was also the high-point winner in the junior and senior divisions. Furthermore, Reagan is a former three-year competitive gymnast, but quit in order to focus on rodeo.

    The accomplished youngster is the only child of Clint and Amy Humphries and the family resides in Lincolnton, N.C. While Amy does not compete, she takes on the many roles to support Reagan. “I’m the rodeo mom and tack girl,” she said. Amy is a dental assistant at Hills Orthodontics in Huntersville, N.C., Clint is a fire fighter on the Charlotte Fire Department and the owner and operator of Humphries Landscaping.

  • Justin Pendry

    Justin Pendry

    Southern Rodeo Association (SRA) saddle bronc rider, Justin Pendry, may be a man of few words, but he lets his actions do the talking. After closing out with a first place 77-point ride in the first-round and grabbing second in the average at the SFR-40 to finish sixth in the year-end standings, he has already come out guns-a-blazin’ to rank in the top three in the 2014 standings. “My goal is to win the year-end,” he declared.

    While riding in his fifth year, Justin’s roots reach far beyond his own competition within the organization as his dad (Kelly) is an alumni SRA member, where he competed in the bareback riding and dabbled in the steer wrestling for approximately 15 years. “It’s a good association that carries on the cowboy tradition from generation to generation. I know everyone, because of my dad,” he said. Although, his mom (Cheyrl Michalec) has never competed and is not fond of him riding rough stock, Justin says that she wants him to do the best he can.
    Justin and his younger brother (Dillon) have followed in their dad’s footsteps through their own competitiveness.

    While Dillon climbs on a different style of buckin’ horses in the bareback riding and finished the 2013 season ranked in the top ten of the SRA standings, Justin got his start in the bull riding at about 18 years old and rode for approximately seven years. “The injuries caught up with me, and because I always rode horses and colts, it made the most sense to go to an event that was more natural to me,” he said of the switch. But the 29-year old does not cling to just one event as he also plays in the tie down and bareback riding. His associations also include the Professional Armed Forces Rodeo Association, where he competed for about three years while serving as a E4 Corporal in the United States Army. Last year, he expanded his recent competition to the International Professional Rodeo Association. “I can’t explain it. It’s just something that I do that I love,” he said of why he likes to rodeo.

    The father of two has already begun to pass along the family tradition to his six-year old daughter (Alaina) and his two-year old son (Dayton). While Alaina likes to ride horses and enjoys her daddy’s sport, Dayton has started riding in the mutton bustin. “It’s a small step, but it’s how everyone gets their start,” said Justin of his youngsters.

    When he is not rodeoing, the Smith Mountain Lake, Va., resident works as a cowboy jack-of-all-trades – shoeing horses, helping his dad and picking up day work when he can. But his busy schedule is worked around his own education as he has recently finished his first semester at Virginia Western Community College in Roanoke, Va., where he is working toward a major in Early Childhood Education. “I just want to make a living and survive,” he said.