
Kollin VonAhn and his horse, Five, at the San Antonio Stock Show and Rodeo. Five has carried VonAhn to a top-10 spot in the PRCA world standings in 2009.
|
Iowa is better known for its cornfields than it is its cowboys.
Nonetheless, team roping’s phenomenal growth over the past 15 years has even
made inroads in the Midwest.
Kollin VonAhn, the 2005 College National Finals Rodeo heeling
champion, grew up in Sac City, Iowa, among the first generation raised with team
roping as a legitimate pastime.
"I grew up in Iowa and my family has always had horses," VonAhn
said. "My dad [Gene] is a banker now, but he’s always rode horses. At one time
he rode reiners. We’ve done it our whole lives and everybody in our family does
something horse-related. My dad and my uncles buy and trade horses; that’s kind
of the way I grew up, we rode every day. In Iowa, there was no such thing as a
finished team roping or calf roping horse, so we never could buy one. My dad
knew enough about horses—not necessarily about calf roping—but he knew how to
train a horse. We made everything we’ve had."
And as a youngster, he craved the sport. In Iowa, Jake Barnes and
Clay O’Brien Cooper were as foreign to VonAhn as movie stars. He bought their
instructional videos, and as a family, they devoured the information therein.
Then, they would apply it to the arena. As VonAhn progressed through the high
school ranks, he became one of the few young ropers to study the sport with the
intent of making it more than a hobby.
"There are guys that rope, but it’s not a way of life whatsoever,"
he said. "You’ve only got a few months before snow’s on the ground. I was
fortunate enough to have a barn—just big enough to rope in. We studied
roping."
And they applied their horsemanship skills to the arena. The
VonAhns would trade and train horses from what seemed like an endless supply.
The horses they would come up with were raw.
"My dad shops around and buys horses and we’ll ride a bunch of
them and kind of pick through and when we get something we think is good we
spend a little extra time and try to get them finished out to where we can use
them," he said.
In that process, they developed horses that fit them and their
environment. On the heeling end, the horses were athletic and cowy.
"For the most part, I grew up riding my horse a lot closer to the
steer because the barns in Iowa are a lot smaller," he explained. "I always had
their nose tipped in a little bit. I don’t know what the correct term is, but I
call it patting their feet, when the steer goes through the corner, I want the
horse to hover and wait and read the cow before they make their entry."
And through the years, he and his family developed some good ones.
His first solid mare—the one he used in high school—was a Doc’s
Prescription-bred mare he called Bunny. In the trading game, VonAhn wound up
with a yearling Gay Bar King stud horse. By accident, the yearling bred VonAhn’s
top horse.
The result is what Cesar de la Cruz would later dub, "a freak of
nature." Snoopy, as VonAhn called him, carried him to the CNFR title in 2005.
VonAhn sold Snoopy to Randon Adams’s Western States Ranches and when de la Cruz
was shopping for a backup horse for Little Johnny Ringo in 2007, Adams sold him.
Later that year, de la Cruz rode the horse he renamed Cimarron to a second-place
finish at the Wrangler NFR.
"From the moment I stepped foot on him, I knew I was going to like
him because he had the same moves and the same stop and everything was almost
identical to my good one," de la Cruz said.
VonAhn also sold a mare he called Momma Joe to Kory Koontz.
"Kory Koontz rode a mare that we trained and had for a while,"
VonAhn said. "It was a mare he rode at the Finals a few years ago, she’s got an
MJ brand on her hip. That mare’s a mare that’s not great in all situations, but
those little short set ups she’s really good. He’s won a pile of money on her at
the Finals and holds her back for the Finals."

Kollin VonAhn and Five—named for the freeze brand on his left hip—weren’t a match made in heaven, but VonAhn changed his approach to let the horse shine.
|
With some money in his pocket and experience under his belt,
VonAhn was ready to hit the rodeo trail. The only problem was, now he didn’t
have a horse.
"That’s my downfall, I sell a lot of them," he said. "We get a
whole bunch going and riding them and my dad’s a firm believer that there’s
always another one."
The horse he hoped to ride went lame, and couldn’t stay sound
enough for the rigors of the rodeo road. But, as always, he and his family had
plenty of up-and-comers.
"I really needed another horse," he said. "I had a couple of
younger horses coming on, but I really needed something if I was going to rope.
My dad’s a hard guy to talk into spending very much money on a horse. But I
called him one day and said, ‘Roping is no fun riding these colts.’ I basically
explained to him that it’s not even a competition if I’m riding a four- or
five-year-old and I’m going against Mike Jones riding Jackyl that’s 18. I don’t
stand a chance. He told me to go find a horse."
The only horse he knew of that was for sale at the time was a
five-year-old Missouri-based trainer Eddie Root was shopping around.
"I went over there and tried him," VonAhn said. "I told Eddie
right away that I could tell he wasn’t the most talented horse I’d ever
ridden."
But VonAhn wasn’t worried. He had done much more with much less.
Within a few months, he would have the horse he calls Five doing exactly what he
needed him to do.
"I’ve always had a set pattern the way I wanted my horses to work
and that’s the way I trained them, to fit me," he said. "Five did not work that
way. I thought, ‘It isn’t a big deal, I’ll go home and get him kind of where I
want him.’ The horse, truthfully, would not do what I wanted him to do. It
opened my eyes as far as horsemanship goes. My dad’s saying is that the first
guy that tells you he knows everything about horsemanship is the biggest liar
you’ve ever talked to. There’s always a better way and a different way."
Accustomed to short, quick horses, the first problem came with
Five’s build. He’s big, heavy and long-strided for a heel horse.
"When I got him in a tighter position, he couldn’t make the corner
without running into the steer or covering him up. It was real frustrating for
me," he admitted. "A lot of heelers ride real wide position and get up there
real high. I never roped that way and was more back and in tight and would let
my horse make up the difference. When I was narrower through there, his stride
was longer and if I had a decent throw, he was so uncollected and out of kilter
with himself, he couldn’t stay with the steer."
Something had to give. Either the horse would go down the road or
VonAhn would figure him out.
"So there I was sitting there with this horse that I paid more
money for than my family’s ever paid for a horse and I just started playing with
it," he said.
As the consummate horseman, VonAhn began tinkering—trying to
understand the best way to make a run from the horse’s point of view.
"I actually started pulling him out wider to where he had more
time and he could start gauging the steer as they came through the corner," he
said. "By me moving that position out and getting a little wider and giving him
a lot more room to make his corner, that horse actually is talented enough to
make that happen. I’ve owned this horse for two years and for the first year I
didn’t ride him at very many jackpots because I couldn’t get him to work the way
I wanted him to. As soon as I figured out how to step him a little wider and
give him a little more room, it was like the light came on.
"That was something about all the guys who want to say they train
horses, that’s maybe their downfall: they pick out a style that they want to
work for them that they’re used to roping and they don’t want to change. That
was real hard for me."
But the journey to learn how to work with Five brought VonAhn to a
new level in understanding his horses.
"I just figured out there’s more than one way to make your heel
horse work and to get him where you want him," he said. "As soon as I woke up to
that realization, this horse is a good horse. He knows where he’s supposed to
be, maybe not the feel that I really love, but when you actually start talking
horsemanship and getting to a spot where you want to be considered a horseman, a
guy should be able to get on any horse and figure out what way the horse works
best and you should be able to adapt somewhat to that horse to have him work the
best he can."
Once VonAhn and Five were on the same page, their discoveries
spilled over into benefiting the rodeo partnership he and header Nick Sartain
formed.
"What’s made a big difference this year is I’ve got a great
partner," VonAhn said. "We went to the drawing board and set up a rhythm and a
style that worked for our horses. His horse is equally important as mine.
"He says that his horse is a little forward and doesn’t pull as
strong, with that said, my horse isn’t as athletic as I’d like him to be and
can’t do all the stuff I’d like him to. So we made a run where the steer was
going to move through the corner slower and stuff was going to happen slower
than what I was used to and that would enable me to step wider. Basically we
made a run that both of us could get maximum potential out of our horses and
make us a competitive team."
So competitive, in fact, that at press time, both VonAhn and
Sartain sat third in the PRCA word standings.
"We tried to set up a run where we never exposed their weaknesses. By dong
that, it’s been a great year and I think it’s going to continue on. If guys can
get the most potential out of themselves and their horses, you can have a
winning combination."