
Clay Tryan and Walt Woodard proved mixing a little youth with experience is the recipe for success after winning the U.S. Open at the National Finals of Team Roping produced by the USTRC in Oklahoma City.
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The U.S. Open of the National Finals of Team Roping is among the
Big Four of open ropings. Along with the Bob Feist Invitational, the George
Strait Team Roping Classic and the Wildfire Open to the World, the U.S. Open
gives pros their best shot at a one-day big payday. In fact, the average winners
collected $50,000 per man.
The 2007 winners, Clay Tryan and Walt Woodard, surprisingly, have
never had much success at the Oklahoma City event.
"I’ve never won anything in the average there," Tryan said.
"I’ve roped good there before, but never really done good for the
big money," Woodard added.
So this year, their first roping together day in and day out at
the rodeos, their strategy changed.
"Before every roping, I draw a plan out of what I want to do and
it never works," 2006 runner-up and 1981 World Champion Woodard said. "At these
big ropings, these guys are so tough and they rope so good that everybody just
doesn’t want it to get away from them. Nobody wants to let the leaders get too
far out in front of them, so everybody has it in their minds to start fast. I
decided not to do that. I decided not to take all day long, but take a good
shot, rope two or three steers and then see where I was."
Across the chute, Tryan was on the same page. The 2005 world
champion decided to rely on his 2005 AQHA Horse of the Year, Thumper.
"I just let my horse do all the work, he’s real good at the
jackpots," Tryan said. "I made sure I scored deep enough, let him run and get
close and catch them, try to handle them good and let my partner rope two feet.
At those ropings, if you rope sharp enough and just rope good, you’re going to
win at least third and third pays quite a bit."
After three steers, Tryan and Woodard saw that they were right in
the mix for the lead, so decided to stick with the plan.
"After three, there were two or three guys right with me, so I
thought, ‘Well, I’m not too far behind, I’m kind of right with everybody, so
I’ll do it again.’ I did it again and everybody roped a leg. So now I’m out
there by myself and I thought, I’ll just keep catching now."
That’s exactly what they did, entering the final round as the high
team. As it turned out, the second high call team legged up, and Tryan and
Woodard only had to be 8.6 to win it. In the end, they roped six steers in
44.82 seconds.
"You want to be good on those days when you’re out here trying to
rope for a living," Tryan said. "Rodeo’s hard to make a living at, except for
the National Finals. So that’s why you put a lot of pressure on yourself at
those jackpots to do well."
That, plus a little experience and good fortune, led the teammates
to their first-ever U.S. Open Championship.
"You’ve got to rope good and you’ve got to be prepared, but you
need some luck to win a major event because these guys are so talented," Woodard
said. "And we were lucky, we drew the same little steer in the first go round
and the fourth go round."
U.S. Open Average
1. Clay Tryan and Walt Woodard, 44.82 seconds on six,
$50,000 per man;
2. Jake Cooper and Jimmie Cooper, 45.84, $28,650;
3. Turtle Powell and Travis Graves, 46.51, $22,600;
4. Rance Gantt and
Nick Rowland, 47.05, $15,600;
5. Ty Blasingame and Ryon Tittel. 47.86,
$7,600.