
After winning the 2007 Resistol Heeling Rookie of the Year, Broc Cresta is looking for bigger and better awards in Las Vegas come December
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Here’s the scenario: The goal is the Wrangler National Finals
Rodeo in Las Vegas this December. The winter rodeos were good—not great, but
good. Good enough to go home during California’s spring run. You’re partner,
meanwhile, did go to California—his home state—to rack up circuit points and is
much higher in the standings than you. The Fourth of July cost you a ton of
money in fuel, and you didn’t win a dime. Salinas came and went without a check. It’s time for the Daddy of ‘Em All: Cheyenne. What do you
do?
Well, that was Logan Olson’s situation. He, for one, responded by
roping his first steer in Cheyenne in 7.2 seconds—fastest in the first round
and, as it turned out, the rodeo. He didn’t let up, there, though. He and
partner Broc Cresta, the 2007 Resistol Heeling Rookie of the Year, split seventh
in the second round with an 8.6-second run.
O.K., you think, you’ve broken the slump. You’re high call at
Cheyenne, don’t get greedy, right. Then your steer breaks and he’s trying—you
drew a runner. Just safety up, stay in the average and take what your steer
gives you. That’s the strategy, right?
"We were high call, we had like .7 over Derrick Begay and Victor
Aros," Olson said. "If I ever try to safety up and just catch, it backfires on
me. That’s when I make a mistake. I’m better off just trying to be as aggressive
as I can. That way, when I do see my shot I take it, rather than second-guessing
myself. I’ve been in a few situations where I second-guess myself and I stubbed
my toe."
So, watching a steer with a 30-foot head start what did he do?
"The short round was pretty tough," Olson said. "The steers were
trying pretty hard. Derrick and Victor came out and they were 10 something. I
figured I had to be around 11 flat to get them. Our short round steer, when I
nodded, he left. I was like, Oh boy. He took off and went to the right, which is
really good, but we went down there quite a ways and felt like we were getting
close to the back end and he was running off to the right, but he kept stepping
away from me. I didn’t want to reach at all, I was hoping I could run right up
in the middle of him, and I took a little gutsier shot than I wanted to. I felt
like we were getting to that point where we needed to be getting something
caught."
Cresta came around the corner and stopped the clock at 10 seconds
flat.
"You can only be so fast on some steers, but I knew right there where Logan headed him we had a chance to win it," Cresta said.
"We had to come back and be a long 10 or so and I knew we were right there in
that range. I wasn’t in a hurry, that steer ran fast enough I knew we were going
to finish quick and be alright."
In sum, their success at Cheyenne meant $17,403, a 16- (for Olson)
and 10- (for Cresta) place jump in the Crusher Rentals World Standings and new
hope for the season.
"The Cheyenne we had, to win the first round, split 7th in the
second round and win the short round and the average, that’s kind of unheard of
in Cheyenne to place in every round. It’s like making the NFR, it’s one of the
rodeos at the top of the list you want to win. That’s a huge win for us right
now," Olson said. "They pretty much skunked us over the Fourth. That was the
first money we’ve won. We haven’t done anything from Reno until now. Haven’t
drawn very good and haven’t gotten anything good going. It was kind of a crucial
win for us.
"I was probably 30th and only had $20,000 won when Cheyenne
started. We dang near doubled it these past two weeks. We placed over there at
Ogden and at Nampa we got a little there. It really, really helps."

Lindsay Sears has won almost every major rodeo this year including RodeoHouston, Calgary and Cheyenne on her mare, Martha.
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What’s more, while Olson went home to Flandreau, S.D., for the
month of May, Cresta went home, too. The difference was, Cresta’s home is in
California, where all the major rodeos are happening in the spring. He teamed
with both Wade Wheatley and Tyler Magnus and won $10,000 on the west
coast—including a win in Sisters, Oregon.
"This rodeo here made it a lot easier on us," Cresta said. "Logan
didn’t have as much money won as I did coming into Cheyenne, but this will jump
us both up there pretty good. We both have a shot at the Finals now."
Olson, who made the Finals in 2005 with Cody Hintz, missed the
last couple of years but remained in the top 30. He and Kinney Harrell roped
together last year, but decided to part ways for 2008.
Harrell, however, is good friends with Cresta and recommended the
two give it a shot.
"I got to know Logan really good last year," Cresta said of his
rookie-year campaign when he roped with Spencer Mitchell. "Kinney had told me he
wasn’t going to rope with him and it just went from there. It all turned out
where we clicked pretty good and we’ve been winning. It’s cool having a guy
who’s rodeoed enough to know what it takes to win. This being my second year,
having someone like that heading for me makes it a lot easier."
Another thing making it easier for Cresta is his 14-year-old
sorrel stick, Lynx.
"I’ve rode him for so long, he knows what I’m going to do and
I know what he’s going to do," Cresta said of his silent partner for eight
years. "I know every time we back in the box that he’s going to give me
everything he’s got."