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rodeo: rodeo news
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| Reigning World Champ Matt Sherwood Will Sit This One Out |
| Story by Kendra Santos |
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’Tis the season when the Wrangler National Finals Rodeo is the talk of the team roping town. As we head for the Super Bowl of our sport each season, I stop and think about the guys who barely made the cut and barely missed it; the Finals freshmen and those who, voluntarily or not, have graduated to the next chapter of their lives—at least for now.
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’Tis the season when the Wrangler National Finals Rodeo is the
talk of the team roping town. As we head for the Super Bowl of our sport each
season, I stop and think about the guys who barely made the cut and barely
missed it; the Finals freshmen and those who, voluntarily or not, have graduated
to the next chapter of their lives—at least for now.
As we went to press with this issue the first of November, the
2007 NFR team roping roster had yet to be finalized, pending the Wrangler
ProRodeo Tour Championship presented by the Texas Stampede in Dallas, which was
set to run November 9-11. Here’s what we did know for fact: Finals freshmen Dean
Tuftin, Brandon Beers, Keven Daniel and the Cooper twins were in for the first
time. Heading brothers Jimmy and Tommy Edens were ranked 13th and 16th, and both
had Dallas to look forward to. The toast at the Edens family dinner table lately
is, "Here’s hoping three sets of brothers rope at NFR ’07 (think Tryan
Times)."
When I scan the standings right now, two names jump off the page
for all the wrong reasons. Seventeen-time NFR heeler and eight-time World
Champion Team Roper Rich Skelton is 16th in the world. And with no Dallas in his
day timer, he’s done making heel shots for the year. But Rich still had a
rainbow to rope at, because he qualified for his first-ever National Finals
Steer Roping. The 2007 NFSR rolled into Hobbs, N.M., Nov. 2-3, just before we
went to press. Rich placed in two rounds for $3,750.
Therefore, the guy who gets my vote for the most noticeably absent
at this year’s NFR is reigning World Champion Header Matt Sherwood, who sat on
the sidelines in the 17th spot with nowhere left to go. It’s not a complete
reversal of last year’s rags to riches tale, in which the star of the show was a
humble husband and father of seven who laid tile and carpet for a living one
day, and not so many days later was fitted for the world team roping crown.
Still, it’s tough to take for a guy with such high expectations of himself.
I picked up the phone for a visit, and found Matt running errands
with his family. He was as friendly and upbeat as ever, despite the
understandable disappointment. I spent the first five minutes convincing him
that I was serious about wanting to talk about his season and his life. After a
year that was darn near devastating relative to the last one—I reminded him that
classic Cinderella stories are difficult to duplicate—he actually kind of
figured he was forgotten and that nobody cared. Hey Matt, give your friends and
fans a little more credit than that. We’re not that fickle.
Here are outtakes from my conversation with the guy who wears the
2006 gold buckle. He’s 38 now, and he and wife Kim have a For Sale sign on their
home in Queen Creek, Ariz. They just built a house in Pima, which is an hour
east of Globe. It’s three hours from the Phoenix airport instead of 45 minutes
but, they figure, it’s a small price to pay for the small-town atmosphere
they’re looking for.
"How can you put a price tag on that big a benefit for your
family?" he noted. "I expect high morals and great things out of my kids, and I
hope this lifestyle change will really help them. I know how people around here
are raised, and I like it. Pima is an area settled by the Mormon pioneers in the
1800s. Around here, people irrigate and chop cotton. Where we used to live, all
the kids want to hang out at the mall. Here, the kids will play sports and rope.
I have 50 acres of cotton right now. I’m going to grow some hay, too. That’s how
I was raised, and that’s how I want my kids to grow up."

Matt Sherwood and his PRCA/AQHA Horse of the Year Nickolas proved an unstoppable combination to the team roping field in 2006.
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Kendra Santos: Tell me about your life before
2006. Matt Sherwood: I was a
typical small business owner (of Sherwood Flooring). I got up every day, picked
up supplies, met my guys and worked my jobs. I roped a couple days a week, and
went to the circuit rodeos and the bigger ropings. Trying to make the Dodge
(National Circuit) Finals (Rodeo) was the big deal (he’s not about to mention
it, but Sherwood won the 2005 DNCFR in Pocatello heeling for Rube Woolsey). It
was a big deal to get to go to a big rodeo. I was a circuit cowboy, so I went to
all the circuit rodeos. Being a husband and father of seven is impossible to
explain. I have great kids, and there are kids everywhere. I have a great wife
and a great life, but it does get interesting. At any given time, there are kids
who need help with homework, some who want to play catch, others who want to go
ride, and one who wants to be read to. You come home and all the kids say,
"Dad’s home!" There’s nothing else like that. I wanted a big family. I believe
in it.
KS: After all those years as a weekend warrior, what made you take
the big plunge and set your sights on making the Finals? How tough a decision
was that? MS: It was a very tough
decision, but I had made a few good financial investments, so it wasn’t going to
kill me if I didn’t do great. I had confidence in myself and my partner (Walt
Woodard). But if I didn’t make it, I wasn’t going to go broke. I wasn’t waiting
on every check so I could go to the grocery store, or I wouldn’t have done it. I
hadn’t done it before, because I never had that level of confidence in my roping
until then. A lot of people try it, but they don’t rope good enough. I finally
felt like I did. I had confidence in my horse (2006 PRCA/AQHA Head Horse of the
Year Nickolas), too. I finally felt like I had a chance, and my wife was behind
me on it. I lived my whole life thinking it would never happen. It’s really hard
to do this when you’re winning, much less when you’re not. There’s a lot to
sacrifice.
KS: Who ran Sherwood Flooring while you were on the road? Did you
sell it? MS: There wasn’t a whole
lot to sell. I turned over a few contracts to my father-in-law, and pretty much
walked away from it. There are two flooring companies in Pima, and I’m trying to
buy one of them now. If that doesn’t work out, I’ll probably start up a new
company. I’d like to teach some roping schools and ride some horses,
too.
KS: Do you have any regrets about putting your previous life on
hold? MS: I won a world
championship, and I still can’t say for sure it was worth it. The time away from
my family is tough. I’m happy to have achieved something I never thought was
possible for me to do. What ended up happening wasn’t even a dream. One day, it
was hey, I want to try to make the Finals. Honestly, I can’t even tell you when
I thought I had a chance to win the world championship—maybe halfway through the
Finals. Walt was saying way back in January that we both rope good enough to win
a world title. I was thinking, "Hey, you’re 50, it’s been 13 years since your
last Finals and I’ve never headed good enough in my life to even think about the
Finals." I appreciated his positive attitude, but at the time it didn’t look all
that probable. Possible yes. Probable no. I had $33,000 won by Reno in June, and
needed about $7,000 more with half a year left to do it. I was in a panic
worrying that I couldn’t win enough to make the Finals with another 40 rodeos to
go. I remember thinking, "Please don’t let this end." Then we won $14,000 over
the Fourth (in fact, Matt and Walt were the winningest Cowboy Christmas team in
2006). After the Fourth, we had $52,000 won. Having the Finals made changes your
mentality. You don’t quite have the same pressure, so you can relax a little,
change your focus and think a little bigger.

Before 2006, Matt Sherwood lived a contented life as a family man and circuit cowboy. Finally feeling worthy of a National Finals attempt, he took the full-blown PRCA plunge. It paid off in the form of a gold buckle.
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KS: What do you do to pass the time on the
road? MS: That’s what I hate the
worst—the down time. I’ll enter rodeos some other people won’t, because if I’m
gone I want to stay busy. I don’t watch much TV. I read a lot, and rope the
dummy a lot. I like to stay busy, because sitting around makes me feel like I’m
wasting my life.
KS: Describe the thrill of making the Finals for the first time
last year. MS: It was a fantastic
feeling. We had the Finals made after the Fourth, so I was excited way back
then. I was super excited, but it started in July, so the emotion was spread out
over a few months. I never thought I’d get to do it. My oldest brother, Steve,
always told me I roped good enough; that all I needed to do was go and I could
make it. I never thought that was true. Having it spread out like that took away
that overwhelming feeling of if I’d barely gotten in at the last minute, and let
me get to the point where I actually felt like I belonged.
KS: And, looking back on it all, what about winning the
world? MS: Looking back on everything that
took place for me to win the world championship makes me feel like there was a
hand of God involved. It’s amazing to me how everything happened. After Walt and
I won Omaha, we flew to Poway and San Bernardino. I borrowed Chad Masters’ horse
(a notable twist, since Chad’s the guy Matt barely beat for the title). There we
were at one of last rodeos, we’re 4.6 and the announcer says, "Plus 10." Then they realized that the guy working the chutes was standing on the
neck rope, so they reversed the call. We won $1,600 on a questionable call, and
I ended up winning the world by a little over $800. There were so many little
things like that. I also unofficialed two of the biggest one-headers of the
year, so I could be eligible to make my circuit finals. I unofficialed over
$5,000 from Norco (Calif.) and Fort Collins (Colo.) to count Williams (Ariz.)
and the little fall rodeo in Tucson (Ariz.). So I didn’t get to count that
$5,000 as official. Instead, I got to count the $1,300 I won at Williams and
Tucson. That cost me $3,700. But remember, my mindset was still stuck on the
circuit finals. It seems kind of silly looking back on it. I’d have felt pretty
bad if that had made the difference. KS: This is probably pretty obvious, but what do you consider the
high of 2006? MS: Winning the world
championship. I started crying. My wife and kids are what are most important to
me, but that was one amazing experience. Riding in to rope our last steer, I
needed fourth in the day money to win it. We needed to be 4.2, so we backed in
there to go for it. It was the toughest round all week, and we were the last
team out at the whole Finals. It was storybook. We’ve all pretended to be in
that position. Talk about surreal. I’d roped that steer on the dummy quite a
bit. And there I was. I looked up at the clock, and I knew. The fastest Walt had
ever been in his life was 4.2. His son, Travis Woodard, and I were 3.9 at San
Bernardino in 2005. But I’d sure never been in that spot before.

Kim and Matt Sherwood's family includes, biggest to littlest, Megan, Cody, Logan, Jessica, Porter, Aubrie and Ashlie. These are the people Matt misses most when the rodeo road calls.
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KS: And the low of 2006? MS: January. We went to
three big rodeos and won $800. It was a little bit of a panic for me. Guys who
go every year wouldn’t panic that early. But I was looking at guys who’d already
won several thousand dollars. Walt was the veteran, so he kept his head on
straight, we went home and practiced, and tried to do better. I didn’t have the
wisdom not to worry.
KS: Tell me something about Walt Woodard. MS: I’ll never take away
from what a great opportunity it was to rope with Walt Woodard. I’d like to do
it again sometime. He was great to be around, always positive, and he always had
so much faith in our team. KS: And what about that sorrel horse of yours? MS: Nickolas is a great
horse. He allowed me to win a world championship. I could never have done it
without him. When I get on that horse, I know I can win. I now own his mom,
too.
KS: Talk to me about 2007—your partners, your roping and how
it’s gone. MS: I started with Walt
through Houston. Then I roped with Brad Culpepper through the end of July. Then
I finished the year with Randon Adams. This was a lot more of a learning
experience for me than 2006. Sure, there were times my partners could have roped
a little better. But I felt like I roped poorly.
KS: Which is more shocking for you—making the Finals in 2006, or
not making it in 2007? MS: Not making it in 2007.
I’m extremely disappointed in the way I roped all year. I didn’t deserve to make
the Finals. Generally speaking, I roped poorly. I hate to say I roped great last
year, but I turned a lot of steers for money. My roping this year was way too
sporadic. I take full responsibility for it. Being home in December is not going
to kill me. But it’s very disappointing.
KS:
Has winning
the world changed your life in any way? MS: Winning the world did
affect my roping a little. Last year, I just backed in there and took my shot. I
started out this year letting expectations of a world champion affect my roping
a little. I felt like I had to turn every steer to be 4, instead of turning the
bad ones to be 6. I felt like I had to do something great every run. Pretty
soon, it was the middle of July and I was barely in the top 15. For everyone who
does good, someone has to do bad. I’m not happy about my year, but I do love to
see some of these other guys going to the Finals and so excited. KS: What has rodeo taught you about life? MS: I’m disappointed in
some of my decisions, like doubting people when they’re not doing their best.
I’ve learned I need to show more confidence in people. There are more important
things than winning every time. You just need to do your best and have more
faith in others. I’ve learned to try to do better within the team instead of
just changing teams.
KS: We all know it’s a jungle out there. What’s the key to making
it in this game? MS: What really helped me
a lot toward the end of this year is knowing I’m not going to make the Finals by
what I win at Denver or San Antonio alone. You don’t win a world championship on
any one single steer. I’ve found myself trying to do huge things on every steer
this year, instead of taking my best shot on what I draw. I found myself trying
to win $10,000 on one steer, because that’s how much I was behind. Winning
consistently makes the National Finals, and you can’t make the National Finals
on one steer. The key is not trying to force things to happen every time the
gates crack. Going into it next year, win, lose or draw, I’m going to go do my
best on every steer and rope him for what he is. KS: You beat Chad Masters for the world championship by $848.72
last year. Who are you pulling for this year? MS: I’m pulling for anyone
who has not won a world title. It’s a great group of guys and I like them all.
The guys who’ve won one have gotten to experience that feeling I got to
experience last year. I’m not pulling against anyone. They only crown a champ
once a year, and whoever wins it will have roped the best and will deserve it.
But it won’t mean the same to someone who repeats as someone who hasn’t gotten
to do it. I’d love for everyone to be able to experience it one time. Guys like
Daniel Green and Kory Koontz have deserved to win a world championship. Anyone
who ropes that good and tries that hard deserves it. KS: What’s the plan for 2008? MS: My plan right now is to rope with
Randon Adams. I have confidence in Randon’s roping and mine. The plan is to rope
my very best all year long. I’m not going to California in the spring or the
Northwest in the fall. If I can’t make the Finals without that, so be it. You
have to be gone too long during those stretches. They’re great rodeos, but being
gone for a month to go to four or five rodeos doesn’t work for a husband and
father. I hope the rodeo business will work together to make this make more
sense for all of us. I’m excited to start next year. I have confidence in my
roping again. I’ve learned a whole lot from this year, and hope to have success
in this sport. I’m not going to do this forever. I’m going to head one more
year. Then I might try to win a world championship heeling and be done. That
would be the coolest thing—to be the only person to win a world title heading
and heeling and walk away. I know it’d take a miracle, but me winning one
heading was a miracle. So if a guy’s going to dream, he might as well dream
big.
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Stumble It!
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Reigning World Champ Matt Sherwood Will Sit This One Out
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