
Header Nick Sartain hit the rodeo road again when reigning National High School Rodeo Association All-Around and Tie-Down Roping Champion Rhen Richard asked for his help. The duo won the biggest rodeo of the summer, Reno, which was only their fifth rodeo together.
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Nick Sartain and Rhen Richard didn’t have lofty goals for the 2008
season. Sartain, who went to the Wrangler National Finals Rodeo in 2006 with
Shannon Frascht, was afoot. After winning the George Strait Team Roping Classic
last year with Jhett Johnson, his good horse got hurt. At the beginning of this
season, he and Frascht tried again, but trying to win on a subpar mount wasn’t
worth the trouble.
Then along came Rhen Richard. If the name sounds vaguely familiar
it’s because Richard is the reigning National High School Rodeo all-around and
tie-down roping champion. As a friend of Matt Sherwood, Richard, who just
graduated from high school this spring, had expressed interest in making a run
at the Resistol Rookie of the Year title. Sherwood was familiar with Sartain’s
situation and recommended to Richard that he give the Oklahoman a call.
"I didn’t have a good winter and didn’t have the horses I wanted,"
Sartain said. "Then I got the opportunity to rope with Rhen Richard, but still
didn’t have the horses to. Turned out his dad has a good horse that his brother
rides and they let me ride him."
That good horse the Richards just bought from John Stafford was
originally intended for Rhen’s younger brother, Kaden.
"He’s a phenomenal horse," Richard said of the 15-year-old they
call Big John. "The week we got him, my little brother won the (Utah) high
school state finals on him and then we hauled him to Reno and won it."
The Reno win was worth $10,909 each for Sartain and Richard, who
roped three steers in 17.6 seconds.
The interesting horsepower doesn’t stop there. Rhen Richard, who
was heeling for his brother to win the Utah State High School Rodeo Finals,
rides a five-year-old bay stud called Uno his family raised—Travalena on the top
side and Peppy San Badger on the bottom. In addition to making the National High
School Finals in the team roping, Richard will represent Utah in the tie-down
roping in Springfield, Ill. That is, depending on how the month of July goes on
the rodeo trail.
After making two good runs in the rounds in Reno, Sartain and
Richard came back as fourth high call. True to their game plan for the season,
they didn’t see a chance to win the rodeo with the Cooper twins and Matt
Sherwood and Randon Adams ahead of them.
"We both had $8,000 or $9,000 won," Sartain explained. "If I’d
have had $30,000 won I’d have tried to win the rodeo on that steer, but where we
were at we just had to do something and start getting on the board a little bit.
Rhen’s trying to win rookie of the year, so I was just trying to win some money
to help him out. Plus, I was just going to make sure I could win enough money
this year to get into the buildings next year. That was really our game plan:
make a good run on the last one and win something. We were fourth high call and
that’s such a good rodeo, we didn’t want to make a mistake there. I came across
the line and the steer was better than I thought and my man made an awesome
shot."
They stopped the clock in 5.6 seconds—third in the short
round—satisfied they had executed the plan to perfection.

Wade Sumpter continued his dominance in the steer wrestling. By winning both RodeoHouston and Reno, hes got a nearly $40,000 lead on the field. After Reno, he went on to win the Cody (Wyo.) Stampede.
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Then, things got interesting. First, Ty Blasingame’s head loop
went
awry for Ryon Tittel. Then, Jake and Jim Ross Cooper’s steer cut in front
of Jake and he missed. Finally, the high call team, Sherwood and Adams,
went
just long enough that it moved Sartain and Richard to the top
spot.
Suddenly, instead of just chipping away at a rookie of the year
title, the race is on for a Wrangler NFR qualification.
"It was crazy," Richard said. "It’s hard to appreciate never being
there before. It’s turned around fast and we have a chance to make the
Finals
now."
What’s more, the duo went on to win more than any other team over
the Fourth of July with $14,475 each—including a win in Livingston,
Mont., and a
second-place finish in Cody, Wyo. At press time, both were
in the top 15.
The only hitch in the plan being a potential conflict for Richard
between the NHSFR and the ProRodeos in Salt Lake City and Salinas. At
press
time, he was hoping to be able to trade around in order to make
all the events
and defend his titles and maybe win a new one with his
brother.
"If we do good this next week, I’ll turn out the high school
finals
if I have to," Richard said, making his priorities crystal clear. "I’ve
roped my whole life and I’ve always wanted to go [professionally]. I
just went
to the circuit rodeos last summer and made circuit finals and
wanted to try to
win rookie of the year. I just couldn’t wait. It was
something I wanted to do
and it’s always been my dream to make the
Finals. I felt like I was ready to
go."
After winning the Wildest, Richest Rodeo in the West, it appears
he’s right. But it takes a season to see the bright lights of Las
Vegas, and
Sartain knows that.
"We’re going to get a little wind in our faces here for a few
weeks
and see how it goes," he said.
Steer Wrestling
In steer wrestling, Coloradoan Wade
Sumpter built on the lead he
started in Houston with a $10,966 Reno win
after throwing three steers in 12.8
seconds.
Riding Wick, the horse he bought from Birch Negaard, Sumpter
finished second in the first round, made a solid second round run and
came back
to the short round as third high call.
"There were a lot of steers that I thought would be better than
mine, but then the short round started falling apart," he said. "Jason
Miller
was 7.7 on two and I was 8.3, so he just had to be some sort of
four, but he
didn’t get a very good go at his steer. Then [high call]
Stockton Graves went
long, missed the barrier and ran him down there
too far."
Part of Stockton’s troubles may have been that at the last minute
he
had to borrow a horse. Rodney Burks’ great horse, Zan, who Graves had been
riding all summer, came up hurt just before the short round.
Interestingly,
Sumpter lent him Wick. Maybe karma was on Sumpter’s
side.
After winning the highest paying winter rodeo (Houston) and now
the
highest paying summer rodeo (Reno), Sumpter explained it as simply a
necessity of the business.
"With five dollar-a-gallon diesel, you have to win," he said.
"There’s no choice. It’s like having a 96 percent calf crop or an 85
percent
calf crop. You don’t have a choice if you want to make money.
Luck is a lot of
it. I do better when there’s a lot of pressure. I
don’t know why."
But with a $40,000 lead on the field at press time, the pressure
is
seemingly off. Sumpter, however, has found a way to give himself the
motivation he needs to get the job done.
"I figure if you have $80,000, you’ll make the Finals pretty
easy,"
he said. "My goal is to have $130,000 because I don’t want anybody to say
I made the Finals just because of Houston. I want to have a $50,000
lead on
everybody going in."

Josh Peek, like Wade Sumpter, built on his RodeoHouston win with a victory in the Silver State.
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Tie-Down RopingIn the tie-down roping, Crusher
Rentals World Standings leader
Josh Peek—like his fellow Coloradoan
Sumpter—built on the lead he started in
Houston by winning $11,057
after roping three calves in 27.5 seconds. Not only
that, he won an
additional $701 in the steer wrestling to claim Reno’s
all-around
title.
At press time, that put him about $30,000 behind Trevor Brazile in
the all-around race. Brazile, however, works three events to Peek’s two
and has
a Tiger Woods-esque ability of keeping his competition at bay.
In the tie-down roping, however, Pueblo, Colo., cowboy Peek has a
nearly $23,000 lead on Brazile.

Reigning World Champion Bareback Rider Bobby Mote won his first-ever set of Reno spurs.
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Bareback RidingFor reigning World Champion Bareback
Rider Bobby Mote, Reno was a
mixed bag. The team roping didn’t go so
well, but in his signature event, it
couldn’t have gone much
better.
Mote, who entered the team roping in the rodeo with fellow
bareback
rider Josi Young, missed their second steer. He also entered the Perry
DiLoreto Invitational, where his heeler missed their third and fourth
steers.
On the roughstock end of things, however, it was a different story
for the Prineville, Ore. cowboy. He won the first round, placed in the
second
and short round and won the average with a total of 255 points
on three head.
"I rode a horse called Sundance of Flying Five’s," Mote said. "I’d
seen him in the bronc riding quite a bit. He’s normally not a bareback.
Ryan
Gray had him at San Antonio this winter and that was the first
time I’d seen him
in the barebacks and he was pretty good. With me, he
just went straight out
there and jumped and kicked then circled around
to the left."
The judges scored him an 85 and the secretary wrote him checks
worth
$11,364.
"I never have won Reno, it’s pretty cool," he said. "It’s one of the more
prestigious rodeos we go to all year. It’s good to win there, not to mention it kicks
off the Fourth of July run."
The win put him right in the thick of the leaders in the world
standings.
"I’m not too far out of it, especially if I have a good run over
the next couple of weeks," he said. "I feel great, my elbow and my neck are all
good. I’ve been home all spring so I haven’t been anywhere. I’ve been working
out and hanging around home. I took the family with me to Reno and had them all
with me during that week. It’s a lot easier to stay fresh going like that."
The Rest
In the saddle bronc riding, Jesse Kruse of Great Falls, Mont., set
a new Reno Rodeo arena record by spurring Flying Five’s Spring Planting for 91
points. He won $9,983 in the Silver State and after finishing second to Reigning
World and Collegiate Champion Taos Muncy at the College National Finals Rodeo
last year, Reno is his first big win.
2006 World Champion Barrel Racer Mary Burger of Pauls Valley,
Okla., showed she’s still got what it takes after posting a 51.1 second average
time on three runs in Reno. She won $10,776.
Six-time Wrangler NFR qualifier Fred Boettcher won the bull riding by
covering two bulls for 176 points, including a 90-point ride on Flying Five’s
Firewater to tie for the top spot in the first round. He pocketed
$13,984.