It was a $9,800 night for Brandie Halls to end the halfway mark of the Wrangler National Finals Rodeo. She and trusty steed Slim gracefully maneuvered the barrel racing run in 14.02 seconds, finishing third in the 15-person field. Brandie, her husband and daughter, avoid the lights of Las Vegas. They stay pretty much to themselves here except for dutifully meeting obligations to sponsors. Brandie is shy but not around horses. She is a skillful trainer continually turning out quality animals from the family property east of Cheyenne. The Halls’ lead a faith-based existence and publicly exhibited their Christian beliefs at a horse-trough baptism during Cheyenne Frontier Days. While admittedly wont to avoid public engagements don’t for one minute doubt Brandie’s toughness and determination. She is performing this year with newly-engrained neck problems and came to Vegas in need of rotator cuff surgery. If you’ve felt the shoulder pain that comes with that injury imagine what she is going through in the arena every night.
Another tough customer of the strongest order is Powell bull rider Kanin Asay. He is bucking out every night with a left arm wracked in injury based at the elbow. He wraps his left hand on a massive bucking bull each night and did it twice last night – his second re-ride night of the finals. Asay scored a qualified ride (81 points) in that second tilt to finish fourth and win $6875.00. Oh, to be 21 again. Can you say invincible? Kanin is also a member of a deeply Christian family and was home-schooled his last two years of high school.
Turns out you can change horses in the middle of the stream. Casper team roper Jhett Johnson felt he had to make the switch and did so last night. “Sometimes you have to make a little change for the better,” said Johnson who ran a different horse, Pancho, for the first time at the national finals. Prior to that move, Jhett has always run steers in the Thomas & Mack Center arena on his gray horse, Smokie. “He just didn’t feel like he wanted to run in that building. He’s been there for more than twenty runs so he knows it’s fast. Either he can’t or did not want to give me 100 percent,” Johnson assessed. He rode the other horse in a lot of rodeos this year and decided the time was right to salvage the best possible finish. The strategy paid off enough to give Jhett and partner Keven Daniel a fighting chance down the stretch. They made a 5.3 second run and got fifth-place money totaling about $4,200 a piece.
Photos: Brandie Halls, Kanin Asay and Jhett Johnson each qualifying in round five of the finals. Credit: Mike McCrimmon
Burch Buckle
Wyoming won a go-round buckle last night by way of the bucking skill exhibited by Burch Rodeo Company’s (Rozet, WY) Pinball Wizard. The seven-year-old gelding carried bareback rider Will Lowe to a winning ride of 89.5 points. “He’s been a good horse ever since we started him,” said owner Matt Burch of the ranch-raised animal. This is his first national finals. “When you get one out here all you want him to do is have a good day and buck as hard as he can,” Burch notes. Lowe liked the result: “I had never been on that horse. I’d seen him at Caldwell, Idaho and knew he was an outstanding horse. I knew he was going to buck and be something exotic. You don’t know exactly what, but he’s going to do something.”
Adios Doc
A long, illustrious, career in pro rodeo came to a stand-up conclusion last night with the retirement of Dr. J. Pat Evans. He is the man responsible for the Justin Sports Medicine program without which a lot of good cowboys would have been home mending fence long before their careers had the chance to come to fruition. The good doctor told us he knew he could help rodeo when he first started attending events and saw that the contestants were without medical assistance of any kind. “Heck, in Texas even the high school football teams had trainers and these pro athletes had no one,” Dr. Evans said. He revolutionized medical care for rodeo athletes. His name, and contribution to the sport, is of immeasurable value. He gave renewed health and vigor to thousands of contestants over the last 30 years and money was never a part of the equation.
Photo: Wyoming fans demonstrate their support.
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