Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Wrangler National Finals Rodeo: Round Five

Miss C & Mr. Johnson

It was a match made in Wyoming. A great bucking horse and a great bronc rider. Chet Johnson wanted nothing more than to somehow have the luck to draw Wyoming’s Miss Congeniality, the pride of the Powder River Rodeo Company string out of Riverton, at the national finals. And he did. They paired last night for a beautiful, and classic, rock down the Thomas & Mack Center arena in Las Vegas. I saw Chet before the ride and his eyes actually shone. He looked like a little kid who found his first gift left on the pillow by the tooth fairy. He walked at a trot. I am quite sure the ankle pain that had been annoying him disappeared. If you love riding bucking horses you want nothing more than to have a shot at an animal like Miss C. Not that there are many like her. Actually none. No horse her size can get the air under it she does. She is so big in the chutes it can be very difficult for the rider to fit his legs down her flanks. The chute help has to pull in her rather large head at a 90 degree angle and then slowly let her even out before the gate can be opened. We are talking one big girl with an even bigger heart. “People don’t realize how strong she really is because she seems to move in slow motion. She’s a powerful horse and I was really excited to ride her,” said Johnson. “It’s a lot harder than it looks.” Chet handled her last night but it wasn’t easy. “She’s just ripping stuff away from you buck after buck. Judges don’t usually mark her as well as the faster and flashier horses but she is twice as hard to ride,” Johnson said. He rode to a share of third and fourth place, scored 85.5 and took home $8,500. “I won some money so it gets better from here,” bets Chet.





Still Standing

Halfway through the national finals all of the bull riders are still standing. So physically abused, it is a wonder to me how they manage to stay in one piece. But the even bigger game is upstairs. “Anybody who knows anything about bull riding knows what a head game it is,” says Hal Burns, stock contractor from Laramie. Burns can’t do anything to get in the head of Wyoming bull rider Seth Glause but if he could, he would. Seth can ride any of the bulls here but so far he’s been unable to get a score. We are all encouraging him every day and night. He will do it. Getting past the first one is the hard part. The lanky Rock Springs bull rider is at the finals for the first time. It can be overwhelming even for us duffers. We are talking about a 19-20 year old person. Come on. How did you handle Vegas at 20? And you didn’t have to get on a large, horned, bred to buck and spin animal. I know you’ll join me in sending good karma this way for Seth Glause.

Wyoming’s other two bull riders encountered interesting nights in Round 5. Kanin Asay had a great ride but a bad “get-off.” He is fine though. Just a horn to the right hip for a stinger. That’ll leave a mark. Kanin got a check for $10,000 scoring 87.5 and took the ending in stride. “I felt like I was moving a little too fast on him. I heard the whistle and I was going to go one way but he came up to me,” he recalls. Happily though the riders all walked out and that’s what counts.




Bobby Welsh made the whistle on a bull that sent him all along the chutes and to the other side from where they started. “He had a bad trip but made me work my tail off,” Welsh said. The score was a 53 with an option for a re-ride that Bobby chose not to take. “I just feel in my spirit I needed the score. It worked out two years ago. I was 62 and everybody but Donnie Gay thought I should have taken the re-ride. I have the same feeling I did then and it all worked out in the end,” Bobby assessed. He is fourth in the average, a slot ahead of the overall leader, Chance Smart. Welsh is now in second place in the world standings just $30,500 out of the top spot. Every scored ride, no matter the score, is of extreme value from now on out. Watch that average, or aggregate points, race. The totals there are very likely to crown the next world champion in bull riding.

Check Please

A couple of other Wyoming contestants were in the money last night. Steer wrestler Jason Miller began to get back on track finishing fifth with a 4.4 second run to win $4,300. And bareback rider Kelly Timberman also garnered a fifth-place check.

1 comment:

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