
Riley and Brady Minor won their hometown open Roping, the WestStar Invitational, by roping five steers in 31.9 seconds.
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For the sixth year in a row, Scott and Jo Repp hosted the best
open roping in the Northwest with the WestStar Open Invitational Team
Roping/Calf Roping. It’s the only jackpot of significance during the fall, and
because it’s the day before slack at the Ellensburg Rodeo, all the top ropers,
or as the Repps tout, The Best of the Best, come to rope.
And since it’s inception, local heeler Brady Minor has been trying
to get a piece of the $90,000 pie. Brady and his younger brother/header, Riley,
are headed to their first Wrangler National Finals Rodeo together this year
(Brady roped with Garrett Tonozzi there in 2006).
Still, neither had ever had any luck at the Northwest gem until
now.
"I’ve been winning after three the last two years and I messed up
last year, I can’t remember what happened the year before, and I was winning
after three again this year," Brady said. "So I was really trying to pull
through and I’m just tickled that it worked out."
The brother team stopped the clock in 31.94 seconds on five head
and took home $10,000 apiece, custom leather chinks and tooled day planners, as
well as John Deere vests. Speed Williams and Allen Bach were second with a
32.78-second time.
Wade Wheatley and Randon Adams turned in the fastest time of the
team roping with a 5.36-second scorcher in the second round. The Minor brothers
won round three with a 5.51-second tie.
"I’m sure everybody there knew me and we were high call so there
was more pressure there than anywhere else," Brady said.
Still, it was only fitting for hometown boys to win a roping that
has such a hometown feel. The Repps open their home to anyone and everyone
coming through town for the rodeo. In fact, many ropers stop in on their way to
and from other rodeos scattered throughout the Northwest.
For years, the Repps’ open-door policy has come with stalls for
cowboys’ horses, hookups for the living quarters trailers, a private shower,
washer and dryer and even the occasional basketball tournament.
What’s more, the roping has caught the attention of local business
owners who have stepped up more and more over the years to provide sponsor
dollars and make the event pay. Anderson Hay Company, for one, sponsors both
Minor brothers, as well as the roping. Mark Anderson, who owns the company that
sends it’s sought-after hay to horse farms as far flung as Louisville, Kentucky
and Japan, is a shirttail relative to the Minor brothers. He provides each
competitor with four or five bales to get down the road.
"It’s really nice," Brady said. "It started out just like any
other roping, paying three or four thousand, then over the years Scott just adds
a few new sponsors. It works out good because everybody’s there for Ellensburg
slack the next day so Scott lets everyone come out there and park in the
pasture. He’s got a real nice place."
In addition to the team roping, Repp hosts a 16-man match calf
roping. Two-time Wrangler NFR tie-down roper Nate Baldwin bested the likes of
Matt Shiozawa and Stran Smith to win the $3,200 top prize.
In the Pro-Am, David Key and ACTRA National President Clyde Saunders roped
three head in 37.81 to win one half while Dan Powell and Kinney Harrell roped
four head in 29.82 to win the amateur header side.