
Matt Tyler and Patrick Smith won the 10-head team roping average at the 2003 Wrangler National Finals Rodeo in 62.3 seconds.
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Matt Tyler and
Patrick Smith were men on a mission at the 2003 Wrangler National Finals Rodeo,
and by Finals end it was mission accomplished.Eighteen-year
NFR veteran Tyler and 2003 PRCA Rookie Heeler of the Year Smith roped 10 steers
in 62.3 seconds to come within striking distance of icons Jake Barnes and Clay
O’Brien Cooper’s 59.1-second NFR record, which they set back in
1994.
“I do this for
a living, not to break records,” said Tyler, 39. “It’s really tough to win this
rodeo. It’s so tempting to run over yourself here with so much money up every
night. Once we had things going pretty well in the middle of the week, I tried
to use my head and be smart.”Smith showed no signs of freshman jitters, and
stayed solid throughout the 10-day marathon. In fact, he was flawless less a leg
in round five. Take off that one piddly penalty and you’d have had a new
57.3-second NFR record. “This is awesome,” said Smith, 23. “I’m just going to
give glory to God for my whole year. He set everything up for me. I started off
the year with Tee (Woolman), then I roped with Jason Stewart toward the end of
the year and God just had his hand on me all through the year. I’ve got one of
the best partners to have at the National Finals. Matt roped awesome all
week.”
Tyler and Smith
hooked up almost by process of elimination at regular season’s
end.“Patrick and
Boogie (Ray) were the only two heelers available, and Patrick called me first,”
said Tyler, who lives in Dennis, Texas, with his wife, Staci, and
daughters, Mattye, 3, and Torrye, 1. “It was meant to be.“Other than a world
title, this is something you dream of. It’s taken me 18 years to finally get it,
and I just praise God for the opportunity and being with me all week. I had a
great partner who roped consistent all the way. This is his first time here, so
that says a lot about Patrick.”Tyler roped with Britt Bockius most of
the regular 2003 season. He also shifted gears on the equine side just before
the Finals.“I bought a new horse at Dallas (the last rodeo of the regular
season),” he said. “I’d been looking for a smaller horse that works good in
little buildings, and finally found one.”Jack’s 13 and sorrel. Smith rode his
sorrel sidekick, Jaws, 8. The Finals was actually Tyler and Smith’s first rodeo
together. It was also the first rodeo Smith won in his professional rodeo
career. “This is the first rodeo I won all year,” said Smith, who lives in
Midland, Texas, and gets a lot of support and
encouragement from his girlfriend, Christi. “I won second 10 or 12 times this
year, but never first. If I was going to win one once a year, this is the one
I’d want to win. It’s just overwhelming. I’m loving it, and can’t wait to be
back.”Smith, who’s heeling for Tyler Magnus in 2004, was wiped out when it was
all said and done on Round-10 Sunday.“I feel like I could go to sleep,” he
smiled. “I love the National Finals, but I’m glad it’s over. This is
overwhelming—to win my first one. I’m pumped.“Matt’s as good a partner as you
can have here. He made my job easy. I didn’t really know what to expect. My game
plan here was two feet, regardless of whether it was for the round or the
average. My job was just to rope two feet.”
Tyler’s ringing in the new year with his
old friend Kory Koontz. But he’s not about to discount Patrick’s part in sending
last December out with a bang. “This is the biggest thing I’ve ever
accomplished,” he commented. “I give my wife and family a lot of credit for
encouraging me to continue my career. This is a big shot in the arm. God will
use this in a mighty way in my life.”The Steady Eddie that he is, it’s hard to
believe Tyler hadn’t won the Finals already. This
guy’s about as consistent as they come.“You always think about winning the NFR,”
Tyler beamed. “It’s something I’ve wanted
to do my whole career. We didn’t have any room for error with Jake (Barnes) and
Allen (Bach), and Speed (Williams) and Rich (Skelton) right behind us from the
seventh round on. I just tried to stay with the same thing we did all week, and
that’s ride the barrier as good as I can and give
Patrick the best chance to win. They let us draw good enough steers, and I had
a great
partner. Nine out of ten steers by two feet says a lot about his ability,
especially for a first-year guy.”“I was very pleased with my first Finals,”
added Smith, who thanked his entire family for all the support and won the
Finals on his grandma’s (he calls her “Dean Granny”) birthday, with her looking
on from the stands. “This really makes me look forward to next year, and I get
to start over at my hometown rodeo (in Odessa). This is as big as it gets other
than a world title, which I hope to get someday. I love it.”