9 - National Cutting Horse Association
Transcription
9 - National Cutting Horse Association
FLOWMASTER/NCHA SUPER STAKES Daily Chatter D a i l y C h a t t e r s p o n s o r e d b y We s t e r n B l o o d s t o c k A P R I L 9, 2 0 0 2 AN OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE NATIONAL CUTTING HORSE ASSOCIATION King Keeps Cool 208 advances to second round TODAY’S NEWS J eff Chase, who scored 217 yesterday, kicks off today’s action as the first rider in the first bunch, on Caltrona. Hope Justice takes on the third bunch riding her multiple champion Freckles Boon Lena. Justice is up again in the fifth bunch riding Little Moria Red, who marked 222 points to win the first round. Amy Welch King and Little Dixie Mac work late in the fourth bunch, and Dean Sanders, who tied King with 219 points in the first round, rides CDs From Heaven in the sixth bunch. Sanders is back in the eighth bunch on All Jazzed Up DS, along with NCHA Non-Pro Futurity champion Chad Bushaw riding Jerryoes. NCH A Fut u r it y Non-Pro reserve champion Gail Hamilton is the last rider in the last bunch, on JR Smart Smokin. TODAY’S SCHEDULE Beginning at 8:00 a.m. 2nd go-round Super Stakes Non-Pro TOMORROW’S SCHEDULE Beginning at 8:00 a.m. 1st go-round Super Stakes Amateur Classic 134 entries • 9 sets THURSDAY’S SCHEDULE Beginning at 8:00 a.m. 1st go-round, cont. Super Stakes Amateur Classic 15 entries • 1 set 1st go-round Super Stakes Amateur 125 entries • 9 sets Amy Welch King and her mare Little Dixie Mac prevailed with 219 points on the final day of Super Stakes Non-Pro first go-round competition. A my Welch King, of Baird, TX, posted the high score yesterday to conclude Super Stakes Non-Pro first goround competition. King’s score of 219 tied Dean Sanders’ first-day performance on CDs From Heaven for the second-highest mark of the go-round. Hope Justice won the first go-round with 222 points marked Sunday on Little Moria Red. Justice also rode Freckles Lena Boon to earn 218 points and tie for third with Chad Bushaw, Dixie Purselley, and Linda Mussallem. King, granddaughter of cutting legend Buster Welch, drew fifth in the first bunch, riding Little Dixie Mac. “The first cow was pretty tough,” noted King. “It had me right up against the herd and wouldn’t let me get off. I had to cut it for what seemed forever. “I cut my second cow in the middle,” she added. “It was a good cow and I worked it to the buzzer. I had quite a bit of working time and my little mare just got better every turnaround. It was fun.” King purchased the Quixote Mac daughter as a yearling at the McGehee Ranch dispersal during Western Bloodstock’s Futurity Sale. “She just had a real cute Continued on page 2 Today’s second go-round contenders include, left to right: Don Bussey, on Playguns Gin Fizz; Jarred Abney, on Docs Stylish Acre; and Spunky Hawkins, on Lenas Playote. Continued from page 1 look about her and I took a gamble,’ said King. “You never really know (when they are yearlings). She didn’t have really powerful breeding, but she certainly has the cowhorse breeding.” It is the cowhorse in Little Dixie Mac that came to the fore on Monday. “She is gritty,” King pointed out. “She is so tough, she does not want a cow to beat her. She would take it personally, if she ever lost a cow. She’s a little mare with a big heart.” Little Dixie Mac was trained by King’s husband, Josh. Amy rode her in the NCHA Futurity, but flushed a cow in the first go-round. Her next event was the Bonanza, where she was a non-pro finalist. King, who won the 2001 NCHA World Championship Non-Pro Finals on CJ Sugar Lena, in February, qualified for Saturday’s Super Stakes Classic Non-Pro Finals on Thorn Doc Whiskey, a Paddys Irish Whiskey son. King’s father, Ken Welch, who manages Silverbrook Ranch in Baird, TX, had purchased the gelding at John Scott’s Production Sale and planned to make him a ranch mount. But Josh King, who trained the horse, thought he would make a nice cutting prospect, and Amy was able to persuade her father to sell him to her. “I told him that if he’d let me buy him and show him for three years, I’d sell him back to him for a ranch horse,” said King, who has earned nearly $60,000 riding Thorn Doc Whiskey. One good mama Jarred Abney, of Maysville, OK, is still getting mileage out of his first show horse, a mare he purchased in 1992. Yesterday, Abney scored 214.5 on Docs Stylish Acre to qualify for today’s second round. Abney’s Super Stakes mount is out of Stylish Oak Susie, a full sister to Docs Stylish Oak. When Abney, who works for an oil company out of Lindsey, OK, first started cutting, it was Stylish Oak Susie who carried him to earn $20,000 at weekend cuttings. Later, Abney bred the mare to SR Instant Choice and got Susies Star Choice, who has earned $91,000 for her owner, Alice Walton, of Mineral Wells, TX. Walton liked Susies Star Choice so much, she also purchased her dam. But Abney still has Docs Stylish Acre, by Bob Acre Doc, and a threeyear-old half brother, by Shorty Lena. You say it’s your birthday! These NCHA members are celebrating their birthday today. J C Bonine........................Rising Star, TX Abbey Marshall .................. Burleson, TX Jim Brown............................... Napa, CA Dave Martin ......................... Lincoln, NE Jack Coe .......................... Lewisville, AR Jeff McCaa ................... Wynnewood, OK Ruth Cogswell ............... Weatherford, TX Harold Merick Jr............. Bloomfield, MO Phillip Cooler ......................Clemson, SC Maxwell Neal ....................Springfield, IL Benjie Christian Neely............. Lyons, GA Diane Crawford ......................Eyota, MN Kelsey Peoples ............... Weatherford, TX Richard Emert .......................... Troy, MO Harry Roberts ................... Ninnekah, OK Dwain Felton ........................Artesia, NM Latham Ryan ................. Weatherford, TX Wayne Gorko.............................. Canada Andrew Sligh.................... Hueytown, AL Roger Greer ........................Santa Fe, NM Nataly Tatone .................... Roseburg, OR Curt Hawkins .....................Magnolia, TX Lynn Thompson .............. Clemmons, NC Jill Henderson ............................ Canada Sherry Wallace............................ Canada William Jouenall................... Transfer, PA Bill Willis ......................... New Bern, NC Richard Manney .................. Monroe, WA High marks for Merritt By Alan Gold he baseball season and the Super Stakes both got underway last week, and you’ll find one man who has excelled at both sports in the judges’ box at Will Rogers Memorial Coliseum. Merritt Ranew of Lake City, Florida played ball for 16 years, including stints with the Chicago Cubs and Milwaukee Braves. He got his start when a crowd of major league scouts flocked to his high school graduation in 1957. The man from Milwaukee signed him up for $4,000—the highest bonus allowed at that time “That was the most money I’d ever seen,” Ranew recalled. “You could buy a new car for $2,500.” Ranew broke into the big leagues in 1962 as a catcher with the expansion team, the Houston Colt .45s. In 1964, he racked up a .338 batting average and led the National League with 17 pinch hits. “The major league ballplayers, like Stan Musial, Mickey Mantle, Hank Aaron and Ted Williams, were idols of mine,” he said. “I got a chance to play with them and play against them. It was just a boyhood dream. “To play in Yankee Stadium for the first time was just a dream come true —it’s a different atmosphere altogether when you first walk down on that field.” The first time his parents saw him play in the majors, Ranew hit a home run in Yankee Stadium. Ranew grew up in the country in Georgia. During baseball’s off season, his older brother introduced him to cutting. “I’d go to some of the shows,” he recalled. “One day, he let me ride one of his horses, and I got the bug. I got interested in it and started practicing.” In 1970, his team was at spring training in Tempe, Arizona, and Ranew would visit ranches in the area after the day’s workout. That’s where he met Buster Welch one afternoon. Welch invited him to go along to a cutting. Ranew got along well with his manager, Hall of Famer Bob Lemmon. “So I thought I’d give it a whirl,” he said. “I told him, ‘Bob, yesterday, I T Trainer Joey King is temporarily out of the saddle with a fractured pelvis. Four-legged Trainer Joey King, of Haleyville, AL, watched from the sidelines yesterday as Don Bussey, of Guin, AL, qualified Playguns Gin Fizz for the second goround of non-pro competition. King trained Bussey’s Playgun daughter, but was grounded by a kick three days before the Super Stakes. With three hairline cracks, it will be at least six weeks before King is back in the saddle. Meanwhile, Scott Brewer stepped in to work Playguns Gin Fizz. “She’s had her plans changed a little bit,” said Bussey, who has been an amateur finalist and a non-pro semi-finalist in Fort Worth. King, 38, got his start in rodeo, but switched to cutting when a colt purchased for roping showed an affinity for cow work. A local cutting horse trainer advised King to “keep a cow in front of him and don’t let him go to the cow.” The colt, Surely Royal, went on to win top AQHA Junior honors in Alabama and qualified for the World Show, as well. “If I had eight hours to chop down a tree, I’d spend six hours sharpening the axe.” Abraham Lincoln NCHA judge and former ballplayer, Merritt Ranew met the Babe Ruth of the cutting horse business and he invited me to go down to Tucson and watch them cut next weekend. Would there be any chance that I could go?’ “It really surprised me, but he told me, ‘okay, I’ll let you off Saturday and Sunday, but you just keep it quiet.’ “I went down and Buster and John Carter, Matlock Rose, Stanley Bush—all the great trainers were showing. I was really excited, like I was watching my first major league ballgame.” Ranew has been equally adept at knowing when a curve ball or a cow is about to break. “That ball moves a lot faster than that cow,” he laughed, “but it’s the same principle. “You travel a lot to different places. You have a lot of great competition. You meet a lot of great people. So basically, it’s the same type sport, just a different scenario. “In baseball, you watch all the better ballplayers play, and you learn from them,” Ranew pointed out. “So I learned by watching all the good cutters. I just kind of emulated them. “When I finished playing baseball, I used to dream about playing baseball every night for a long, long time. Seems like the more I got into cutting, and the more I showed and trained and all that, it kind of got me away from it. “I think it was a good thing that I could get into something else that was similar to what I’d done all my life. It’s worked out great for me. The Lord’s really blessed me.” ★ Cartoonist Jerry McAdams, “that cow art guy,” is publisher of the Hico News Review and a nationally recognized artist whose favorite subjects are horses and cattle. The Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo is the host of the John Deere/NCHA World Finals. Houston is the home of the largest Livestock Show and Rodeo in the World, held each February. So plan to visit Houston and take in the World Finals. Home of the John Deere/NCHA World Championship Finals. Putting you in the second-best seat in the house! For ticket info call: 1-713-791-9000. Get your Cinch jeans and shirts at better western stores across the country. For the retailer nearest you, call: 1-888-882-4624. Daily Chatter sponsored by: Daily Chatter ★ Editor: Sally Harrison Contributions, comments, and suggestions welcomed. sallyharrison@hotmail.com 4704 Highway 377 South • Fort Worth, TX 76116 (817) 244-6188 • Fax (817) 244-2015 Daily Chatter proudly sponsored by Western Bloodstock 8:00 a.m. – Cutting Demonstrations 10:00 a.m. Sales Begin Pick up a catalog at our booth. Supplemental consignments accepted through April 12. (817) 594-9210 • Fax (817) 596-0430 www.westernbloodstock.com Ben Emison • Milt Bradford • Jim Ware The winning caption for yesterday’s Mystery Photo is: “I just LOVE this new trampoline!” submitted by Barbara Crumpler Runner-up: “Sire: Mexican Jumping Bean Dam: The Flying Wallendas Proof that breeding matters” submitted by Pamela Kay Reeder Nobody guessed that the horse is Walter M, owned by Jerry Windham, whose brother was the late Fort Worth Police Chief, Thomas Windham. Identify these three men (seated) and win a special prize. Submit your answer in writing to Carolyn Crist in the show office. The winner will be named in tomorrow’s Daily Chatter. Barbara Crumpler wins a copy of Matlock Rose, The Horseman.