
Cool customers Keven Daniel and Jhett Johnson roped their final steer in the Omaha Ariat Playoff’s championship round in 4.3 seconds to distance themselves from a more distinguished field.
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When Jhett Johnson pulled into the Qwest Center in Omaha on the
last week of ProRodeo’s regular season for the Ariat Playoffs of the Wrangler
ProRodeo Tour hosted by the River City Roundup, he had a couple things pressing
on his mind.
First, he was 19th in the world standings—four holes out of a
Wrangler NFR berth. It wasn’t crunch time because he would more than likely
qualify for the final playoff stop in Dallas. Nevertheless, the faster a cowboy
gets off the bubble for qualifying for the Finals, the better.
The second thing on his mind was the fact that he and header Keven
Daniel—an Altha, Fla., native who finished in the crying hole (16th) last
year—hadn’t roped together inside at a quick, NFR-type set up.
After Johnson spent the winter roping with other partners and
battling through an appendectomy, he and Daniel didn’t begin roping until the
spring, outdoor rodeos.
"We practiced for it, but you don’t really know how good your fast
run is," Johnson said.
To be fair, Daniel had some heavy stuff weighing on his brain,
too. After coming so close in 2006—and winning the PRCA Resistol (header) Rookie
of the Year title at 27 years old last year—he wanted his first qualification
badly and he wanted his heeler in Vegas with him.
Entering Omaha, he was ranked 12th in the world standings, safely
in with only one weekend of rodeos left and most of his competition in the
playoff pipeline (Omaha and Dallas) already ahead of him. However, he had
developed quite an affinity for his Wyoming heeler and wanted Johnson, who he
trusted and built his confidence with, heeling behind him under the bright
lights.
"It was the most important thing," he said. "I told my girlfriend
earlier in the week that I really wanted to do good here because it’s just the
confidence of roping with him all year."
From the beginning, things shaped up in their favor. The building
ropings—especially in a pressure-packed elimination-style playoff
environment—can be unpredictable in the team roping. The rounds can be extremely
fast and leave good solid 5- and 6-second runs out of the money. Or, they can
fall apart.
In the first round in Omaha, the latter happened. Half of the runs
included penalties. And one team, Tommy Edens and Coby Jones, had their steer
fall down and heeler Jones had to wait for him to get back up to heel him, 22.4
seconds later.
Daniel and Johnson had the benefit of watching all this happen and
simply made an under-the-radar 5.3-second run. David Key and Kory Koontz won the
round with a 5.0.
"I’ll tell you what helped us out, and it’s just a testament to
team work, we drew up at the end of every round, so we had a pretty good idea
what it would take to place the first night and we executed a good run, a 5.3,"
Johnson said. "We came in third the next night and got to go at the end again.
We knew what would do good and were 5.1. In the semifinals, it kind of looked
like it was opening up and Speedy went 4 flat and I thought it might get a
little tougher and we just made a real solid run, 5.1."

The victory in Omaha punched Jhett Johnson’s ticket for his third trip to the bright lights of Las Vegas and affirmed his confidence in his partner in the fast set ups.
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In the second round, Speed Williams and Dean Tuftin tied a
three-year-old arena record set by Shain Sproul and Kinney Harrell with a
4.4-second run to win the round. The next night, in the semifinal round,
Williams and Tuftin shattered that mark with a 4 flat. Instantly they became the
favorites heading into the round of four.
Jake Barnes and Clay O’Brien Cooper had also quietly qualified to
the final round—much like in Puyallup—so there would be stiff competition from
the veterans. Additionally, the reigning world champion heeler, Allen Bach, and
reigning NFR champion header, Chad Masters, had also made the final round. Bach
and Masters
reunited in Omaha despite having other partners for most of the
regular season since their respective partners didn’t qualify for the
rodeo.
Facing that competition, it was instantly easy to count Daniel and
Johnson out. There were 22 world titles and 7 NFR average titles in that final
round spread among the three other teams.
In fact, Daniel and Johnson played the whole rodeo that way:
overlooked, yet calm and confident. As it turned out, that calm confidence was
the key.
"I rodeoed at home for a long time," Daniel said. "Me and Chad
always roped together and coming out here and being around him has kept me real
calm. Between him and Colter Todd, both the Tryans and knowing Speed, it just
keeps you real calm. This year hasn’t been that much different, I won at the
right places. To have Jhett, an older guy who knows the ropes, is the main
thing. He knows what we need to do and when we need to do it and it makes a big
difference."
In the final round of four, Daniel and Johnson first watched
Barnes and O’Brien Cooper go out of contention when Barnes waved off the first
loop and they used three to turn in a 16.7-second run. Masters and Bach followed
that with a 4.6-second run.
When it all comes down to the Final round, we were a team about
it," Johnson said. "We said, ‘All right, it’s going to get fast, we’re in a
gunfight,’ and we did it."
A little luck on the draw in the gunfight didn’t hurt either.
"We came back tonight and had the same steer that we had in
Albuquerque last week," Daniel said. "I had it on him pretty fast and when I
turned him and Jhett heeled him I had no idea how fast we were. When I looked up
it was just great.
"At home all the short scores and stuff, we’ve been fast. Me and
Jhett have been fast a lot of places this year, but to be that fast here when
you have to be 4.3, it’s one thing when you’re 4.3 and just do it, but Chad and
Allen were 4.6 and I knew I had to be 4.6 before Speedy goes, it was the best to
do what we did when we did it."
That put the pressure on Williams and Tuftin. Their steer tried
and Williams took a chance on a bomb—the kind that usually work out for him—but
he split the horns and the team took a no time.
"This event has been really great," Daniel said. "Last year I was
in California during all this and I was calling up to see who’s doing what and
they’re winning and I’m trying to win. To be at this deal, words can’t explain
it, to win that much money here and our draw was really good all week. We got to
go at the end, we just caught our steers and made good runs and had good steers.
To win this and make that much money now is just great."
Precisely, that much money was $16,876. In addition to winning the
final round, they were second in the semifinal round, second in the average and
third in both of the first two rounds.
"I have that confidence making my first Finals and going there
knowing that we did really good up here," Daniel said. "We’ll go to Dallas and
make some more good runs together and then get to go there. It’s just awesome
being secure and not having to go anymore. It’s great."
For Johnson, who had such a rough start to his season, the feeling
is especially sweet.
"When I got home and was healing up from my appendix surgery, my
friends were asking me, ‘Can you do it?’ and it even went through my mind,"
Johnson said. "And I just headed back out there hoping. I was roping with Turtle
Powell and he lost his good horse, but we won decent. Then I ended up roping
with Keven and it was the same deal. Started out hoping to do good and it picked
up right there midsummer and I realized I had a chance and knew I had to keep
banging at them. I drove into this rodeo this week needing to win. I knew if we
won anything we’d make Dallas, but I wanted to be done and when we drove out of
here and have the Finals made and going to Dallas, just winning to win. After
this week, it’s made me really confident with him."
Barrel Racing
At a major rodeo, the 40-percenting phenomenon is a rarity. Forty
percenting means winning all rounds and the average, which equals 40 percent of
the prize money. In the rough stock events, it happens occasionally. But in the
timed events, with more than one round and a short round, it almost never
happens.
In the barrel racing, it’s happened twice on the Ariat Playoff
series. In Puyallup, Sherrylynn Johnson won both long rounds, the average, the
semifinal round and the finals.
In Omaha, it happened again. Lindsay Sears, from Nanton, Alberta,
won everything. She started in the first round by setting a new arena record
with a 13.55-second run, breaking Sherry Cervi’s two-year old mark of 14.32.
Then, en route to winning the second round, she broke her own record with a
13.31. Obviously, she won the average. Then, in the semifinal and final rounds,
she ran 13.34-second round-winning runs.
"It’s a tough barrel race every day," Sears said. "Sherrylynn did
it at Puyallup and I thought there was no way. To do it this week, I can’t
believe it."
All told, she won $22,500 and easily moved into second place in
the world standings, $30,000 behind Brittany Pozzi-Pharr.

Lindsay Sears dominated in Omaha. Not only did she win every round and take $22,500 home to Nanton, Alberta, she set a new arena record, 13.31.
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What’s remarkable is that her horse, Martha, never ran well
indoors.
"I had trouble with her indoors going to the right so about half
way through the year I started taking her to the left," she said, referring to
which barrel she approached first. "This was the first rodeo indoors to take her
to the left and I had absolutely no idea what was going to happen."
With this level of success indoors, suddenly, Sears had a difficult decision to make. She’s slated to attend the Canadian Finals
Rodeo instead of the final stop on the Ariat Playoffs in Dallas. But with Martha
running so well, she has a legitimate shot at closing the gap between her and
Pozzi-Pharr heading into the Finals.
Her decision may well determine who wins the world barrel racing
title.

Cody DeMoss made 2007 a repeat of performance of 2004 when he rode Miss Congeniality of the Powder River string to win the event. This year, he scored 91 points and set an arena record.
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Saddle Bronc Riding
Where do you start with Cody DeMoss and Omaha? DeMoss, who has
been runner-up to the world title for three years running, won the Omaha rodeo
in 2004 aboard Powder River Rodeo’s Miss Congeniality. Then he went on to finish
second in the world to his hero Billy Etbauer. The writing on the wall seemed
clear enough: DeMoss would win a world title before long. Then, the next year he
fell short to upstart Jeff Willert. So close. No doubt, 2006 would be his year.
He dominated the regular season, but in Omaha a Korkow horse called Big Ugly
bucked him off and severely tore his groin.
He never fully recovered and then at the Finals was injured even
further, couldn’t compete in the final round, and Chad Ferley won the world.
"When I got hurt out there it took a while to get back into the
swing of things," DeMoss said.
Indeed, he missed RodeoHouston, where Cody Wright took a $50,000
lead, but by early summer was back in the hunt.
By Omaha, DeMoss was back to his prime form. He breezed through
the qualifying rounds and in the final round, drew none other than Miss
Congeniality, the PRCA 2005 Saddle Bronc of the Year.
"I won Omaha on her last time I had her," DeMoss said. "Tonight,
she didn’t want to leave there. I’m really happy with the way it went."
The way it went was a 91-point arena record—eclipsing his hero
Billy Etbauer’s 2005 90.5 mark. At the end of his ride, the big mare ran DeMoss
along the arena railing where he jumped into the stands and sat down.
"I didn’t actually get thrown in there," he said. "I saw my way
out and I was wanting off of her anyways, and it just so happened that there was
a seat right there. It was a crowd pleaser."
While that pleased the crowd, the $11,250 pleased him. Plus it
threw him into a more familiar spot: contention for another world title. And
this time, he’s healthy.
Tie-Down Roping
Barry Burk of Ponca City, Okla., no relation to Blair or Barry
Burk of Durant, surprised the field of tie-down ropers in Omaha at the River
City Roundup when he jumped up to win his first-ever major rodeo.
Then he surprised the crowd at the Qwest Center when he doffed his
hat, revealing a Mohawk.
For Burk, though, it was the lack of surprises that catapulted him
to the title.
"I actually had [the calf he had in the final round] in the first
round," he said. "I knew he’d run a little bit on me, he got a good start on me
the first time, but I knew he was good on the ground, Jake Hannum tied him in
7.7 in the second round, so I knew I had to get a good start and it just worked
out."
It worked out to be the fastest run of the rodeo: a 7 flat that
earned Burk $14,064.
As for the Mohawk, it might have just been the good luck charm he
was looking for.
"I lost a bet with two of my buddies, team ropers Jake Long and
Coleman Proctor, and it was a card game gone bad," Burk said. "The deal was I
had to leave it until Omaha was over then they said if I did good I might ought
to think about leaving it for Dallas so I think I’ll have it for Dallas."
He might need it. Ranked 20th in the standings, he’ll need another
performance in Dallas like the one in Omaha to crack the top 15 and see the
bright lights of Las Vegas.
Steer WrestlingStockton Graves had an almost unfair advantage at the Ariat
Playoffs in Omaha. The Newkirk, Okla., cowboy was riding Rodney Burks’s
three-time PRCA/AQHA Steer Wrestling Horse of the Year, Zan—and he was the only
one.
At most rodeos, Zan carries four or five cowboys—and he usually
carries them to the pay window, but in Omaha, Graves was the only one.
"It’s great, it really doesn’t matter that I’m the only guy riding
him," Graves said. "That horse usually gets four or five runs everywhere he goes
and scores good and it’s really no big deal to him whether it’s one or five. I
thank Rodney Burks for letting me ride him because he’s made the difference in
my year."
Graves won the first round and Shawn Greenfield won the second.
Joey Bell, Jr. won the average. In the semifinal round, Graves, Greenfield and
Josh Peek were 3.8. In the final round, Greenfield and Graves tied with
3.6-second runs, however, the tiebreaker went to Graves since he had a faster
time coming in.
Graves wound up with $15,626 and catapulted himself right in the
thick of the tight world-title race in the steer wrestling.
"I hadn’t really thought about that," Graves said. "I had the
Finals made before I came here, so I just wanted to come up here and pad my
pockets. Once we get to Vegas, we’ll see what happens."
Bareback Riding
If there’s one overwhelming success story of the Ariat Playoffs,
it’s Tom McFarland. He entered the first stop in Caldwell 25th in the world
standings. He won that event, which propelled him to Puyallup, where he had a
decent showing, earning him enough money and momentum for a trip to Omaha.
With that opportunity, he capitalized.
He coasted through the qualifying rounds and drew New West Rodeo’s
Black Gold in the finals. The horse’s style seemed to fit the wild and woolly
McFarland perfectly and the judges awarded him 88 points.
"I had her in Idaho Falls and won second on her there," he said.
"So I knew she’d do her part. She’s a lot of fun to ride."
With the $12,655, he had the Finals made.
"That’s rodeo, a guy can’t ever quit," he said. "About a month
ago, I was 25th but I just kept entering and started drawing good. The Lord
works in mysterious ways so we’ll just hope it keeps going."
Bull Riding
The bull riding was the one low spot of the entire weekend. In the
semifinal and final rounds, no bull rider posted a qualified ride.
The title ended up going to Ted Bert of Modesto, Calif., who had ridden both
his bulls in the first two rounds for a combined score of 174 points. He won
$8,438.

Stockton Graves and Rodney Burks’s super horse Zan teamed up to take the steer wrestling title under tie-breaker conditions. Graves won $15,626 after his final-round 3.6-second run.
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