Monday, October 1, 2012

Roper's Death Ruled Accidental

An autopsy has finally ruled the cause of death for the talented, young cowboy whose body was found dead July 28 during the Cheyenne Frontier Days, Broc Cresta. He was found by his girlfriend, Brittany Pozzi in his trailer late morning. At only 25, the team roping healer was sitting 14th in the PRCA. His professional rodeo career had just started in 2007 and was cut very short. In his career, he had earned a little over $350,000 total.

According to Wyoming News, the cause of Broc's death was a combination of alcohol and pain pills. The autopsy report stated that his central nervous system was suppressed by oxycodone and ethanol intoxication. His brother said, "Broc took his own prescription pain medication and combined it with alcohol and a climate he wasn’t used to and it caused the perfect storm. He went to sleep and never woke up." Broc's death is truly a tragedy. It's not only sad to lose someone so young, but in such tragic way. He left his mark on the world of rodeo and will never be forgotten.

Sunday, September 23, 2012

College rodeo season has begun!

September 14th and 15th marked the kickoff of SDSU and BHSU college rodeo seasons! The teams made a trip to River Falls, Wisconsin where they competed in the first of four Great Plains Region rodeos scheduled for the fall season. The Great Plains Region consists of 14 college teams from Iowa, South Dakota, North Dakota, Nebraska, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. Those teams will compete against each other again in a series of rodeos in the spring. Points are earned at each of these regional rodeos, both individually and for the team, to qualify for the College National Finals Rodeo (CNFR) in Casper, Wyoming, June 11-15, where qualifiers from all regions compete for a "Championship Title".

Both South Dakota schools represented the state well to start the season off. SDSU's men's and women's teams finished first and second, and BHSU's men's and women's teams finished fourth and third, respectively. The teams have a couple weeks off, but will have a full weekend of more rodeo action soon. They compete in Fort Dodge, Iowa, October 4th and 5th and then in Aimes, Iowa, October 6th and 7th.

Monday, September 10, 2012

Amberley Snyder - A Miracle Story

I was recently flipping through a Rodeo News Magazine about ready to throw it away when some of the photos in the feature story caught my eye. I flipped to the beginning and started reading a story I found amazing.

Amberley Snyder, now 21 and daughter of former Los Angeles Dodger, Cory Snyder, started riding when she was three in California. She begged her mom to let her ride until she finally found a place to take Amberley. When the family moved to Utah, Amberley said she'd only move if she could have a palomino horse. Needless to say she got that horse and from there, her rodeo journey began. She won the National Little Britches Finals All Around Title in 2009 and qualified for the National High School Finals in pole bending that same year. Since she was accepted to Oklahoma Panhandle State with a full ride academic scholarship, she decided to make a call to the rodeo coach to rodeo. She had so much going for her!

On January 10, 2010, things changed. Amberley was on her way to Denver, CO for the National Western Stock Show when she rolled her pickup. She hadn't put her seat belt on yet after just making a stop in Rawlins, WY, and was ejected, hitting a fencepost and breaking her back. She was flown to Casper, WY where she was told she broke her T12 vertebrae in her spine and would never move anything from the waist down again. However. it is possible for her to regain movement in some muscles because her spinal cord was never severed. For now, though, Amberley is confined to a wheelchair.

Aside from walking, riding horses was an aspect of Amberley's life she wasn't willing to give up. When the doctors told her she'd have to find something else to do, she replied by saying "Riding horses is not what I do, it's who I am." It was a long process getting in the saddle again, the first time being just 4 months after her accident. At one point she even told her mom just to sell the horses and went off to college. She gave it another chance, though, and decided that although riding won't be the same, it was okay. She says she's "riding on hope" and is planning to start making Pro rodeos next year.

Amberley has gone to Florida to do some therapy with the hope of regaining some muscle use in the future and is now driving with hand controls. She even has recently convinced her mom to put them in her F250 so she can pull a trailer. I think anyone, whether you are interested in or participate in rodeo or not, can be inspired by Amberley. She says the biggest thing she has learned from her accident is to "take advantage of every run- you never know if it might be our last. Feel blessed that you are there. You get to go- if anything in life goes wrong, don't let it keep you down. It's frustrating for me to see people whose lives are wasted because they are down about something. I have learned to never let someone else tell me what I am capable of... what I want to accomplish is up to me in life."  I just love this story! I can definitely take something from it and apply what she learned about her accident to my own life.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Etbauer Brothers - 2012 ProRodeo Hall of Fame Inductees

The ProRodeo Hall of Fame in Colorado Springs inducted seven new members at their annual Induction Ceremony in July. Among those seven were Ree Heights, SD natives and professional rodeo legends, Robert and Billy Etbauer. You may wonder, "Why is this such a big deal?" These brothers have truly amazing accomplishments and the honor of induction into the Hall of Fame is well deserved. Through the 1990's, the three Etbauer brothers- Robert, Billy, and Dan, dominated the saddle bronc event. Robert and Billy won seven world titles over an eleven year span. Pooling their resources and traveling together, they thought of themselves as a team, along with what they called their "fourth brother", Craig Latham. They are the only set of three brothers to qualify in the same roughstock event in the same year. They did so not once, but EIGHT times. Dan is the only of three that has not yet been inducted to the Hall of Fame.

It is the individual accomplishments of the Etbauer brothers that is truly outstanding. Now residing in Oklahoma, South Dakota can still claim the brothers as their own. Of the three Etbauer brothers, Robert was the first of the Etbauer brothers to start his endeavor on the rodeo trail. He established himself a champion on the road starting with winning the PRCA Saddle Bronc Riding Rookie of the Year in 1985. He would make a trip to the National Finals Rodeo twelve times (1988-92, 1994-2000), winning back-to-back world championships in 1990-91. In addition to those gold buckles, he was also reserve world champion in 1992 to his brother, Billy.

Billy is the better-known of the brothers and is a rodeo icon of his generation. His first appearance at the NFR in 1989 kicked off his 21 consecutive year field record of doing so, winning an NFR-record 51 rounds and earning over $1 million years at one season-ending championship alone. Billy followed Trevor Brazille as the second cowboy to ever win more than $3 million career earnings. However, what sets him apart was the fact he won that in one single event. The oldest roughstock world champion in history, Etbauer won five buckles; just one short of the event record set by two other rodeo legends, Casey Tibbs, also a South Dakota cowboy, and Dan Mortenson.

Friday, August 31, 2012

Brief History of the Sport Part 1- The Early Years

The early years of rodeo can be traced back all the way to the ranches of the early 1700s when the Spanish ruled the west. Spanish cowboys, known as vaqueros, influenced the the American cowboy with their clothing, equipment, traditions, and even language. This in turn influenced the modern sport of rodeo. Duties on these early ranches included roping, riding, herding, branding, breaking horses, and more. (The same activities that are part of ranch life today, but with modern techniques.) It was these chores that evolved directly into rodeo events like tie-down roping, team roping, and bronc riding.

In the 1800s, the cattle business began to boom. Ranchers from the Southwest started organizing long cattle drives to bring cattle to stockyards like Kansas City, where trains would carry the cattle east. At the end of the long trails, the new American "cowboys" would hold informal competitions among themselves and other outfits to see which group had the best riders, ropers, and all-around cowboy. It was from these competitions that the sport of rodeo we know today was born.