Rodeo Life

Category: American Hat

  • American Hat: Bradi Good

    American Hat: Bradi Good

    “A great family friend of ours talked to me about switching hats,” said NFBR qualifier Bradi Good. “After talking with them, I decided to go ahead and switch over to American Hats.

    “Now I only wear American,” she added. “I am so grateful for everything they’ve done for me.”

    Bradi Good was only seventeen when the PRCA hosted the first National Finals Breakaway Roping in Arlington, Texas. The very next year, she began her career in the sport of professional rodeo.

    “I was new to professional rodeo, and so was Breakaway. It was cool to be able to learn at the same time,” she said. “It’s really picked up a lot in the last few years.”

    Good said she sees a bright future for Breakaway in the sport of professional rodeo.

    “I see so many fans and younger girls in the upcoming generation that I hope there is a bigger push for it,” she said. “But we don’t want it handed to us. We have to pay our dues and pave our way.”

    Good qualified for her first National Finals Breakaway Roping in 2023, where she finished 8th in the world. The NFBR is held in conjunction with the NFR but not during the ten rounds in the Thomas and Mac. The ladies run five head, over two days at the South Point Hotel and Casino.

    “I was so excited to go out there [to Las Vegas] and rope,” she said. “It’s a little different because we run five a day, and it’s at the South Point, but I’m used to that because I grew up watching my dad rope at the steer roping finals, and that’s how they run them too.”

    PRCA Breakaway Roper Bradi Good

    Good’s father, Shay Good, has qualified for the National Steer Roping Finals on four occasions. Similar to the NFBR, the steer roping finals run five head a day over the span of two days during the last weekend of November at the Kansas Star Casino in Mulvane, KS.

    “It’s different and not quite the same atmosphere as the Thomas and Mack, but we are still the top 15 in the world,” she said. “We still get a back number, and it’s still the coolest experience.”

    Going into her first finals, Good was sitting 8th in the world, the same spot she would finish out her 2023 year.

    “I was too far back in the standings to win the world because our rounds and averages don’t like the other events,” she said. “But coming in at I gave me the chance to watch some of the other girls go first and kind of get the feel of it all before I went.”

    Good is sitting 8th in the world again, and she said she has won more money this year. She has high hopes going into the bigger summer rodeos.

    “The ones that really come to mind are Reno, Cheyenne, the whole week of Utah rodeos, and my first time up at Calgary this year,” she said. “My horse is set up for a longer score, and that’s the way most of those big outdoor rodeos are.
    From her first year in the WPRA, Good has ridden her main horse, Rango. But she said she recently purchased a 5-year-old from Bailey and Erica Young that she is planning to haul as well.

    “I am super excited about him. They [the Youngs] train an awesome horse,” she said. “I just got him last month, so I am getting ready to start taking him and showing him the ropes.”

    -Article by Charity Pulliam

     

  • American Hat T Parker

    American Hat T Parker

    “I went through probably six or seven straw hats before I partnered with American Hat,” T Parker said. “My aunt was bugging me about finding a good hat that would look good every time I got on a bull.”

    “Now, I have a 100x Silver Belly American that I wear all the time,” he added. “I don’t wear anything but American hats now.”

    Winnie, Texas cowboy T Parker took the rodeo world by storm by winning the 2023 Resistol Bull Riding Rookie of the Year Award and qualifying for his first Wrangler National Finals Rodeo before the age of 20. 

    Parker said he felt he took everyone by surprise during his rookie year in the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association. Unlike many young rodeo cowboys, he realized his dream later in life. 

    “I watched the Houston rodeo every year since I was around 10 or 11 years old, and that was the only rodeo I wanted to ride in when I was growing up,” Parker said. “When I finally got to ride at Houston, I just ate it up. I loved every minute of it, and after that, I just wanted to keep on going.”

    “At the start, my mom was kind of against it because, you know, I’m the baby; I am a big momma’s boy,” he said. “But then she saw how much I enjoyed it, and then she just fell right in on the bus.”

    Parker said his permit year was not the smoothest ride. “I think I went to 36 rodeos on my permit and bucked off at all 36 of them, and then I finally rode my 37th to fill my permit, and I bought my card that night.”

    He said that going into his first WNFR, he had an advantage because he felt that a lot of people in the ProRodeo world didn’t know his name yet.

    The young cowboy finished his rookie year 13th in the world standings and won approximately $193,251 during the 2023 rodeo season. However, his 2024 ProRodeo season was recently cut short by a torn rotator cuff and a torn labrum in his right arm.

    “I had been fighting my shoulder injury since before the finals, and I just kept pushing it back because I didn’t want to hear what the doctors had to tell me,” Parker said. “But it finally got to the point that I couldn’t hold myself up on my bull rope.

    “It is heartbreaking because I felt like this might be the year to win the world. But I’m going to get fixed up, head back out, and hopefully do better than the time before,” he added. “I’m hoping to come back in September for the end of the 2024 season.”

  • American Hat: Shad Mayfield

    American Hat: Shad Mayfield

    Shad Mayfield can be seen wearing an American 100x black felt hat during the colder months but said he would wear a felt year-round if Texas did not reach the scorching temperatures that it does. “I have been with American Hat’s since junior high,” said the 5x Wrangler National Finals Rodeo qualifier. “They have believed in me every step of the way. “American is all I have ever worn,” he added. “Their quality is the best, for sure.”

    Son of Sylvester Mayfield, a two-time WNFR qualifier, Shad ‘Money’ Mayfield said he knew from a young age that he loved the competitiveness that rodeo brought to his life. “I have always been very competitive,” he said. “When I went to the junior rodeos, I entered every event, and I loved getting the chance to compete against everyone.”

    Mayfield’s competitive edge sets him apart from other Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association athletes. So much so that at the start of the 2020 WNFR, he led the tie-down roping by $89.479.

    “I always said when I turned 18, I was going to buy my card and rodeo,” he said. “So, that’s what I did. My dad rodeoed with me for my first year.” His start in the PRCA was slow. He said he was lucky enough to win money during the spring and early summer, but it was not until later that year Mayfield realized he had a chance at making his first WNFR.

    “It wasn’t until late summertime when I placed at Cheyenne, and that gave me a good jump in the world standings and put me in the top 20, that I realized I had shot at the finals,” Mayfield said. “I was actually up at the high school finals and Cheyenne at the same time.” Mayfield was riding the bubble in the 15th spot during the last week of rodeos before the season ended.

    Fred Whitfield and Sad Mayfield at the 2023 NFR Buckle Ceremony. Photo Courtesy of Kristen Schurr

    “It was a lot for a young kid, thinking about if I didn’t make it,” he said. “There were a lot of ‘what ifs’ in that time. So, I took that week at home to practice really hard and tried to stay positive.”
    After winning and placing at several rodeos in the last week of the 2019 rodeo season, Mayfield qualified for his first NFR. He ended the year 12th in the world standings after placing in two rounds. At the start of 2020, he won the San Antonio PRCA Rodeo and The American. He estimated this put him around $100,000 in winnings.

    “I was at the Houston rodeo when everything started shutting down,” he said. “Covid slowed down the whole rodeo season for everyone, but it really put a stop to a lot of goals I could have accomplished that year with the momentum I had.” He went on to win his first world title in Globe Life Field at the 2020 WNFR. While thankful for the win, he said it is still at the top of his goal list to win a gold buckle in the infamous Thomas and Mac Event Center.

    “I always watched the NFR there as a kid,” he said. “Watching Cody [Ohl], Fred [Whitfield], and Joe Beaver in the Thomas and Mac as a kid, that feeling of being there is like no other.”
    Since his first NFR, Mayfield has had five consecutive finals qualifications and won over a million dollars in his pro rodeo career. This year is looking a little different for the 23-year-old cowboy. “I have always been tight in my hips, but this year at the finals, they really affected me,” he said. “I went to my doctor, and he told me I’d have to have surgery on both of them due to torn labrum and impingements.”

    He originally planned to have the surgeries after Rodeo Houston this year. However, after revisiting with his doctor and surgeon, he elected to hold off until after the 2024 rodeo season and NFR.

    Mayfield said he is working to maintain his health and focus on not worsening his hip conditions. He is doing all of this in hopes of achieving his dream of winning that gold buckle in the Thomas and Mac.

    -Article Courtesy of  Charity Pulliam

     

  • American Hat: Riley Webb

    American Hat: Riley Webb

    It’s no surprise that 20-year-old Riley Webb from Denton, Texas, PRCA tie-down roper (currently ranked number seven in the world) and team roping header, is going straight to the top in his rodeo career. His parents, Dirk and Jennifer Webb run Webb Roping Productions, a sanctioned cattle producer for the breakaway and tie-down qualifiers for the Junior World Finals. Dirk is also the manager of The American Rodeo, and with Jennifer being secretary, Riley couldn’t have had a better setup to be an achiever in the rodeo world.  

    Riley’s first rodeo was in Denton, Texas, at only a few weeks old. He roped his first calf at a young age and was hooked from that point on.  At 11 years old, he began his rodeo career roping competitively. Riley was the 2020 National High School Rodeo Association Champion Tie-Down Roper. When he gets up every morning, he’s always roping and practicing with one goal: to accomplish getting better. Riley says it’s in inches and tenths of seconds they’re working with, so he has to think about things most people don’t. Everybody can rope and have a good horse, so he has to think outside the box to improve himself. Riley became a member of the PRCA in 2021, and he says his favorite rodeo is the Pendleton Roundup in Pendleton, Oregon, because of the atmosphere created by the fans. 

    Winning Reno is his favorite memory, and his favorite food on the road is Mexican. For his young age, Riley already has quite a resume of accomplishments. As well as winning many other rodeos throughout the year, including Rodeo Houston (Houston, Texas,) Rodeo Austin (Austin, Texas,) National Western Stock Show in Denver, Colorado, Calgary Stampede, Alberta, Canada, Horse Heaven Roundup in Kennewick, Washington, and The Washington State Fair in Puyallup, Washington, in 2023 (for the second time,) he qualified for the finals and claimed the number one spot and he won his first PRCA World Championship; winning $452,852, and breaking the previous season earnings record. He finished second in the average with 82.9 seconds on ten head, earning $172,447 at the finals in Las Vegas. 

    Riley’s first trip to the Thomas and Mack was in 2022, and he finished 12th in the average and tenth in the world, placing in five rounds that year.  Riley’s success this year comes from a couple of new horses he calls Boots and Rudy and a new determination to look at every single run individually, practice with the basics, not worry about the standings, and just do his very best and execute every single run. 

    Currently sitting in the top ten in the standings, he’s starting in a great spot in his 2024 ti-down roping season and is well on his way to adding to his growing list of accolades.

  • American Hat: Haven Meged

    American Hat: Haven Meged

    25-year-old Miles City, Montana native, and PRCA member since 2018, Haven Meged, should have plenty to smile about these days, as he’s not only recently married to 2023 Breakaway Champion Shelby (Boisjoli) Meged, (meeting for the first time in Junior High rodeos) but he’s making big “boots’ to fill for any future PRCA tie-down ropers.  Haven is a five-time Wrangler National Finals Rodeo Qualifier, winning the tie-down average in Las Vegas last month, and breaking the record with 77.40 seconds on 10 head.  

    Currently residing close to Stephenville, Texas, Haven and Shelby both have the work ethic that makes champions.  Along with setting this new record, a new arena record was set in round 7 as well, making Thomas and Mack history, tying his calf in only 6.4 seconds.  “It happened so fast, I had a good calf and just tried to take full advantage.”  Meged said about his historic run. The previous record of 6.5 seconds was shared by Cody Ohl in 2003, Trevor Brazile in 2015, and Shad Mayfield in 2022. Shad Mayfield was the next guy out of the box in round 7 after Meged, and tied his calf in 6.1 seconds, but the calf got up, which nullified the run. Haven commented, “It was just a great set of calves.”  

    This was Haven’s second world title, as he was first World Champion in 2019, and along with winning the average, he was also crowned Intercollegiate Tie-Down Champion that same year. Haven also recently won the Canadian tie-down roping title. Currently sitting second in the PRCA/Ram World Standings with, $309,238, (chasing Riley Webb) Haven says he’s keeping his foot on the gas and the plan is to not let off. Fast times in the first round made horse changes necessary, and in round two, Haven made the decision to run six-year-old, For Goodness Shakes, AKA, “Lil Punch,” a sorrel gelding he gives full credit to his wife Shelby, for training and letting him use, rounds two through nine. 

    Haven recalls, “My horse has been phenomenal.”  “He stood in the box every single night, hit the barrier and gave it his all, and for a 6-year-old that’s never been to an indoor rodeo, it was pretty cool for him to be able to be so consistent.”  “He’s been the biggest blessing.”  It’s been a great year for Meged in rodeo, surpassing $1 million in career earnings early on in the season, and marrying his Canadian fiancé Shelby back in May, but he’s also invested his money in cattle.  When Haven and Shelby have a few days off, you can find them back in Miles City, helping out at his family’s sale barn, or out on the family ranch.  The couple also enjoys spending time together, supporting each other in their events, and training young horses.  

  • American Hat Presents: Andre Trevino

    American Hat Presents: Andre Trevino

    [ “If you never give up you cannot be beaten” – Keith Maddox ]

    I went to the home of American Hat in 2015, in Bowie, Texas, and spent several hours visiting with Andre Trevino, the factory manager, and a few days gathering information on the story behind the company. To hear company president Keith Mundee tell it, it just wouldn’t be American Hat Company without the dedication of Andre and the other  employees. The story goes that when Andre was 12, he saw a bag in the company’s parking lot. It was a bag of money that belonged to Bubba Silver. He picked up the bag, walked it into the building, and returned it. “I don’t want a reward,” Andre recalls. “I wanted a job. He said I was too young, so I asked if I could work in the evenings.” Andre obtained permission for school to get out a little early and he was hired as a cleaning boy at .90 an hour. 50 years later – Andre retired. “He was here at 5 a.m. every day,” Keith says. “He’s the most loyal, honest guy, and he loves hats. He says, ‘I would come to work here even if you didn’t pay me.’  That’s how much he loves it.”
    It’s the power of the cowboy hat itself and American Hat’s mantra of quality that inspire that kind of devotion. But it’s a dream that nearly ended in catastrophe the year after Maddox moved the company to Bowie. On November 27, 2005, a grassfire swept through town; the blaze was so close to American Hat that firefighters used the parking lot as a command post. “The factory building wasn’t flamed out; it was smoked out,” Keith said. “The loss was devastating: $13.5 million in raw hat bodies and not enough insurance to cover it.” But Mr. Maddox kept the employees working. He ordered more hat bodies. He went into his 401(k) and second-mortgaged his house. He did everything he could to keep it alive. A lesser man would have quit. But his attitude was, I can’t quit — it’s this or nothing.
    Rodeo News and American Hat unite in that integrity and grit. To Susan, Mercedes, and Treasure Maddox and Keith and Teri Mundee – thank you for believing in this dream and may both companies be blessed and remember that none of this would be possible without God – we are honored to be the stewards. As Keith Maddox told me many years ago, sitting at his home, “It’s not the destination it’s the journey – once you get close, you need to change the goal.” Well said Mr. Positive Times.

  • American Hat Presents: Garrett Yerigan

    American Hat Presents: Garrett Yerigan

    Take care of our lifestyle. We are living the dream that most can only dream of. Our sport could go away in a moment’s notice, and we need to take care of the sport and each other – that’s what makes us cowboys.

    “For me, American Hats embodies a lot of things – the American spirit, the cowboy spirit, and a family spirit.” Garrett has worn American hats for at least 15 years. “I started as a customer and built a relationship from there.” He is proud to wear the hat – “It’s a brand and lifestyle I’m proud to ride for.”
    Garrett Yerigan was born into the rodeo lifestyle. His mom and dad, Dale and Kathy Yerigan, were involved in rodeo his entire life, as were his maternal grandparents, Bob and Barbara Ink. Dale was an 11 time IPRA world champion steer wrestler and went on to be the general manager of the IPRA for 20 years. Kathy was an IPRA barrel racer. From the age of 7, Garrett set his sights on announcing – starting with jackpots and barrel races, at the age of 10, he got his first paying gig. He learned many aspects of rodeo, including a 15,000 song playlist. Garrett was a highly sought-after tractor driver for arena work. “I was kind of a tractor nut,” he admits. “I was only about 6 or 7 when I realized being an announcer would be a cool way to be involved in rodeo without being a contestant,” he said. “I figured the announcer gets a for-sure paycheck, and he’s not tearing up his body every week. Garrett graced the cover of Rodeo News in January, 2014, the year he was selected to announce the International Finals Rodeo.
    https://reader.mediawiremobile.com/RodeoNews/issues/100160/viewer?page=14
    Fast forward ten years and the 29-year-old phenomenon from Pryor Creek, Oklahoma is the youngest ever to receive PRCA Announcer of the Year, 2021 and again in 2022 “I’m still blown away it’s happening – its surreal.” For many, it’s no surprise. Garrett has studied the sport, the contestants, and the art of announcing. “I listen and take tips from here and there – using the pipes God gave me.”
    I see little signs each day that God put me on the earth for a reason. The microphone has taken me all over the world and I never thought that I’d get that as young man. Those are signs and proof that I’m doing what I’m supposed to be doing on this earth.”
    “It’s a thrill every year,” he said of Cheyenne. “When you are there, you realize the magnitude of the history of that event, and then you understand why it’s called the “Daddy of ‘em All.” Garrett spends hours of preparation before each perf. He not only knows the contestants and latest news in the rodeo world, but he also studies the rodeos themselves to better learn their rhythms.
    He is right where he wants to be – surrounded by a family of rodeo people that love God and support each other. “I never want to grow up.”

  • “Make a good strong impression with every first impression.”

    “Make a good strong impression with every first impression.”

    Emily Stephens has a few hats on these days, but of those hats, shaping them is by far her favorite one to wear. She is one of the few female hat shapers in the nation. “It’s a dying art and there aren’t many of us left,” she said. She learned the art from an older gentleman that creased hats at NRS. “Tommy Bishop encouraged me to learn how to shape hats,” said the 22- year-old from Paradise, Texas. “I learned from him and others and adapted what I learned into my own style.”  Here are a few of her thoughts about her passion:

    • This is a true art form as it is based solely off of feel for the hat. You must have the right amount of steam in order for the fibers to loosen and then constrict as you mold the hat with your hands and the hat cools. By doing this you are locking the crease into place.
    • I find that the coolest thing about shaping a hat is that no two hats are the exact same; they are fully customizable to the person that is wearing it.
    • You can tell a lot about a person by the hat they wear upon their head and it never ceases to amaze me. You can generally tell what part of the country they are from, what discipline they participate in, and if you have been shaping hats for a long time you can even read the hat and tell a lot about the personality and lifestyle of the person it belongs too.
    • The hat industry is booming as cowboy hats are starting to expand in to the mainstream world. I believe this is because individuals idolize the western lifestyle and believe it to be a “simpler time” even though that couldn’t be further from the truth as the western lifestyle has been built on blood, sweat, and tears. It is so amazing though to get someone fitted for their first cowboy hat and see them beam with joy.
    • Cowboy hats are so special because they are with cowboys and cowgirls from all parts of the world, from sun up to sun down, carrying so many memories and stories.

     

     

  • American Hat Presents: Mackenzie Geesen

    American Hat Presents: Mackenzie Geesen

    Mackenzie Geesen is proud to be chosen as an American Hat ambassador. “I will be encouraging to the younger people and set an example. This will be part of my life for a long time, so I take pride in what I’m doing every day.”

    Mackenzie Geesen has been involved in rodeo her whole life. “My parents have been involved in rodeo their whole life too,” said the 13-year-old from Kersey, Colorado. “They started hauling me and my little pony, Poncho, when they were still competing.” At first, she was led around, and then she got to the point when she went to a little local gymkhana and started doing the events by herself. She moved up in horses as her ability increased, and each horse had a special place in her life. “Pistol was a big step up and got me where I am now.” She and her family traveled to Georgia for the National Junior High School Finals and the trip continued to family memories. “We got to go to the beach for the first-time last year – getting to go in the ocean, even though it’s scary … and collect sea shells. I made a seashell necklace out of a breakaway string.”
    She plays basketball and volleyball and for the first time this year, she did track. “I did the mile and 800 – both of those are hard because you have to figure out your pace.” She learned a lot about herself during those long runs. “If you say you can’t do it, your body will give up. By the time you are running around the track for the fourth time, you want to quit. But you have to finish, and that’s in your mind. If you say you can’t do it, then you won’t.”
    Kersey is east of Greeley by about 20 miles. “Kersey is staying small,” she said of the town. “Mom (Heidi) works at the sale barn on Wednesday. My dad shoes horses. They work for Randy Miller and we work his cows in Colorado.” The family runs through the herd often, checking for salt, water and mineral as well as rotating between pastures. “My brother and I work out there too.” As much as she loves the country, Mackenzie loves the bright lights and the travel. “Winning is fun, but getting to meet all the new people. I was working my horse in the round pen (during the National Junior High Finals), and this girl came up and we started talking. Now she’s my friend – that’s what’s fun about it.” She is like her mother in that regard. “At some of the barrel races we got to, she is talking to everyone, and we can’t get out of there,” she laughs.
    Those same people are what are shaping Mackenzie and her younger brother, Cooper’s lives. “What’s helped me the most are the people that helped me – my family and Laura Lambert and the Terrells (owner of Pistol), and Erin Johnson. The tradition of rodeo is once again being passed through to the next generation. “We always give the glory to God – I wouldn’t have any of this without God.”

  • American Hat Presents: Bronc Evans

    American Hat Presents: Bronc Evans

    [ “He’s an old man trapped in a little kid’s body,”
    – Gizmo McCracken of his grandson, Bronc Evans. ]

    “In the rope horse world, you have to get your name out there so people will want you to train their horses,” said 13-year-old Bronc Evans. “I want to get to the NFR and get a world championship. Everybody wants to do that, and honestly, you can’t mimic Trevor Brazile because he’s the greatest. But I want to train horses when I’m done rodeoing.”
    Bronc grew up with a rope in his hands. “Me and my dad were moving a set of cows,” Bronc said. “I was four. There was one little baby calf. Her mom ran into the herd. Dad told me to rope it, and it’s walking along, I roped it, and we took a picture and sent it to my mom.”
    Bronc’s mom, Mandy, realized early that Bronc has special roping talents. “This is a special child with unique talents and gifts. We need to nurture these abilities, and take this where God wants this to go,” said Mandy.
    A fourth-generation ranch in southwest Missouri is home to Bronc and his sister, Jaylen. Their maternal grandparents, Dianna and Jerry Evans, still work and live on the ranch. Along with yearlings, the family raises quarter horses and has been breeding horses for more than 20 years. In fact, Bronc raised and trained both his head and heeler horses.
    “Bronc has been going with me and gathering cows for years,” said his dad, Jimmy. “He’s my right hand. He’s better than any help I can hire. He can drive almost any piece of equipment I’ve got. If it’s getting dark and I’m busy, he will bring in the horses and he’ll put them in the trailer and bring the truck and trailer to me.”
    Now a rising rodeo star, Bronc said, “I don’t really try to get pumped up before a competition. I try to stay focused and keep my nerves under control, which keeps my horses calm.”
    Bronc’s trail from Missouri ranch hand to competitive rodeo athlete is spurring him toward the top. Spanning only six years, his long list of titles and championships includes the 2021 Junior World champion breakaway roper coming in wearing #1 for ten and under, in Las Vegas, NV. In late spring 2023 alone, Bronc snagged reserve champion breakaway and reserve champion header in the Hooey Jr. Patriot Finale, winning almost $30k in Fort Worth, TX. He has won more than 100 buckles, which currently takes up an entire wall, as well as a dozen saddles.
    “My favorite event is team roping,” he said. “In Feb. 2022, I bought my first horse using my own money. His name is Pinto, like the bean. He’s a red-and-white paint.” He uses Pinto for team roping and breakaway. “I like to go fishing on our ranch, but not as much as I like rodeo.”
    Along with ranch life, Bronc and Jaylen spent many days on the rodeo road with their grandfather, the famous rodeo clown Gizmo (Dale McCracken). Giz has innumerable accolades and awards to his credit, winning 2017 Comedy Act of the year for his popular ambulance routine. Gizmo is a member of the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA), and has worked 19 PRCA circuit finals rodeos in ten of the 12 circuits.
    With his wife Janice, Gizmo still spends a lot of time kickin’ up the road dust. As they travel, churches request their gospel music performances, and they’re happy to oblige. Also going strong for over a decade, Janice’s Power of Pink foundation has raised over $360,000 for women who are battling breast cancer in their small Missouri hometown.
    Janice and Gizmo’s lives have remained a segue for their four grandchildren – Jaylen and Bronc, and Brimley and Raeley Crouch – from ranch life to the rodeo world. All the grandchildren have been performing in Gizmo’s comic routines since they were very young. As well, their daughters, Mandy and Cassie, have followed in Janice’s footsteps, and are home schooling all the children.
    “When I was growing up, my poppy (Gizmo) would take my cousins and me to the rodeos and we’d be part of his acts,” said Bronc. “He knew most of the ropers and I got to talk to them. I liked what I saw at the rodeos. My dad was in the cutting world before we were born, and he’s a good horseman and we’ve raised horses all our lives. It takes practice to feel the different types of horses, and you learn how.”
    Bronc wants to win a saddle in a USTRC roping heeling event. And his goal, to make the NFR in calf roping and team roping, is a 24/7 pursuit. To that end, the Evans home is full of roping dummies. While sitting in a saddle on a stuffed horse, watching Cowboy Channel live-streamed rodeos, Bronc ropes and ties calf dummies. And he’s got a rope in his hand at church, the grocery store, and everywhere else.
    During the school year, Bronc finishes early each morning. His favorite part of school is when it’s over, and his least favorite subject is math. And his daily four hours of rodeo practice include working on horses and roping.
    “Jaylen and I were born on the same day, six years apart,” Bronc said. “She just turned 19. Right now, she’s working at the hospital and going to start school to be a nurse. She preaches at a lot of church services. Growing up going to Cowboy Church, Jaylen has a gift for delivering the Word of God that has developed over the years of preaching at youth rodeos. She competes in breakaway roping, team roping, running poles, and tying goats.”
    Gizmo said, “The coolest thing has been seeing my grandkids do something that my wife and I have been involved with all our lives. To watch them working with and caring for their horses.”
    “I want to train rope horses for ropers when I grow up,” Bronc said. “I just want to keep the ranch we’ve got. I like ridin’ through the pastures. My favorite things on the ranch are dragging calves and when we bring the colts in to halter break. I just want to keep ropin’ all the way through life.”
    However, the strongest roots, that run deep through all generations of this family, are their love for Jesus, and spreading that message wherever they go.

  • American Hat Presents: Jeff Askey

    American Hat Presents: Jeff Askey

    Jeff Askey is part of the American Hat team because he believes in the core values of the company. “The whole company is based in American values. From the bottom to the top of the company, everyone is someone you want to be involved with. All the core values you associate with the cowboy way of life.”   

     

    Jeff Askey started life in Pennsylvania. “My dad (Steve) was a factory worker, and he would go to the sale barn and buy three-year-old horses and bring them home,” he explained. “I’d find out if they were broke.” After the factory shut down, Steve was able to continue making a living by buying and selling horses, cows, and a load of hay here or there.  From his riding days, Jeff knew he had the ability to stay on and he took that ability to the next level. “One of my best friends started getting on bulls and I entered up and here I am in Texas, 22 years later.”

    He wasn’t sure what to do after he graduated from high school. “I wasn’t sure I was college material. School was stupid easy to me.” He got a little scholarship to go to college in northeastern Oklahoma. “The coach that was there said I needed to go to UTM – Coach Luthi. John Luthi taught Jeff how to have a positive attitude. “Mentality in general – it’s hard to pinpoint, but he would teach us how to make our thought worded positive even if it was just in our head.” He also taught his students how to set goals, very specific small goals, structured down so they are achievable. “All of what he taught us applies in all of life – if you take anything he taught and fill in the blank with your relationship, your job, your life – the positive attitude makes all the difference.”

    “Not many of them make a career out of rodeo like Jeff has – so we taught them about life,” said Coach Luthi. “He is very smart – he took anatomy and physiology for humans because the animal classes were full – he got an A the first time.”

    Jeff started a fence company after getting his degree in Animal Science, graduating with a 3.8, He went pro, and has five NFR qualifications. He married to Tianti Carter, 2017 Miss Rodeo Texas, in 2019. Tianti Askey, DVM, just opened a fully mobile equine vet clinic, Royalty Equine, LLC., serving the area around their home in Athens, Texas. Now when Jeff’s not on the road, he goes with her, helping with tech and books.

    “She’ll get on to you if you’re not a good tech,” said Jeff, who knew nothing about being a vet tech. “I hate needles and hate gore and she just tells me to suck it up. I’ve had to scrub some nasty lacerations – a couple months ago I wouldn’t even look at it – now I’m in there with my finger getting the debris out. You just do it. One day at a time.”

  • American Hat Presents Baylee Paul

    American Hat Presents Baylee Paul

    Baylee will be responsible for overseeing the company’s social media strategy, developing engaging content, and managing American Hat Company’s social media presence.
    Baylee joins American Hat Company from Outlaw Equine, where she worked for several years in all facets of the clinic including social media and marketing. “I did lots of things at Outlaw and the knowledge I gained is immeasurable. I started teching for Dr. Josh Harvey, owner and founder of Outlaw Equine; in high school when he came to Florida for tours. During college breaks and after college, I worked in Rehab as well as teching. Eventually I moved into the office where I handled all the pro rodeo athletes, clinic scheduling and tours for the vets – it was a full-time job that’s for sure. It was while I was in the office, I began to manage the Social Media accounts and create marketing videos. I will forever be grateful to Josh and Ashley for the opportunities given to me.” said the 24-year-old, who went to school for Ag Communications and Dental Hygiene. “I worked in the dental industry for two years and realized I missed the Agricultural and Western Industries. I’m the kind of person that is social and likes to be out and about, not in the same place doing the same thing every day.” She did her college work at Frank Phillips College and North Texas Dental Academy.
    Baylee grew up in the agriculture industry and has a history of rodeo all the way up to the collegiate level. Her deep understanding and passion for the western lifestyle make her an excellent fit for American Hat Company. She started competing in rodeo at the age of 6 in goat tying and barrels. In middle school, she added breakaway and team roping to the events she competed in. “I also showed pigs and steers in 4-H and FFA.” She admits the heat and humidity in Florida can be hard to handle, but she adapted. “We’d get up before the sun and get everything done and if you don’t get it done, you get used to sweating.” When she moved to Borger in 2016 for college, she has never looked back and eventually ended up in Decatur where her two brothers, Tyler and Wyatt, lived. Her parents, Bert and Tom, joined the rest of the family in Wise County in 2019.
    “Growing up in and my love of this lifestyle make me a perfect fit for this job,” she said, of her position with American Hat. “I am working with all the pro athletes and the 250 youth ambassadors as well. I get to watch the kids grow up and see who they become as young adults.” She sees Instagram and TikTok as the most popular platforms on social media, with the focus on video, movement, and interaction. She has moved closer to Bowie and is planning to be around for a while. “I like the message the company stands for – it’s a way of life.”
    “We are thrilled to have Baylee on board as our new Social Media Manager,” said Keith Mundee, President of American Hat Company. “Her experience and knowledge of the western lifestyle and rodeo industry, coupled with her expertise in social media marketing, make her an invaluable asset to our team.”
    In her new role, Baylee will be responsible for creating and implementing social media campaigns that showcase American Hat Company’s brand and products. She will also be working closely with the sales and marketing teams to develop marketing strategies that drive engagement and increase brand awareness.