
Asbury Schell, shown here heeling a steer and heading left in the team tying event, could do just about anything with a rope. Headers and heelers both tied on back in the team-tying days, and when the horses had the steer stretched the header dismounted and tied a 3- to 4-foot length of rope around both hind legs with a square knot. This shot is thought to have been taken at the rodeo in Phoenix, Ariz., which at that time was held at the racetrack. One old timer said that when you roped those big steers over the rodeo’s then
50-60-foot score, “You had to pull your hat down tight, and your number might be in shreds by the time you were done.”
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“Ever heard
of Asbury Schell?” I asked Tee Woolman one sunny May day.
Tee:
“Who?”
Me: “Asbury
Schell.”
Tee: “Never
heard of him.”
We all know
Tee. He’s the guy who’s competed at more National Finals than any other
cowboy in rodeo history—40 total between 23 Wrangler National Finals Rodeo
appearances and 17 National Finals Steer Roping qualifications. He’s the guy
who took the team roping triple crown in 1980, as the PRCA Rookie of the Year,
world champion and NFR champ. He’s the three-time champ of the world who’s
headed into the ProRodeo Hall of Fame in August.
“So, who,”
you ask, “is Asbury Schell?”
He’s the
other three-time world champion team roper who’ll be immortalized with induction
into the Hall this summer. Schell was born 53 years ahead of Tee, who’s 47
now, and would be celebrating just over a century of life were he still living.
He’d have 101 candles on his cake this very month—July 22, to be exact—if he was
still here. But at 77 he had a heart attack and died in
Cottonwood, Ariz., in 1980.
To be
honest, I’d never heard of Asbury Schell myself before the announcement
of his impending induction. So, half-embarrassed about that, I set out to
learn more about a man who by all accounts did some pretty amazing things with a
rope in his hand. I never had the privilege of knowing him, but that doesn’t
mean I can’t appreciate and respect his accomplishments.
A day or
two after that call with Tee, which my son Lane overheard, I stepped down the
stairs from my office late one night to find Lane reading Phil Livingston and
Jim Morris’ book “The Driftwood Legacy.” By pure coincidence, he was on the page
about “that guy you were talking to Tee about.”
Asbury
Schell was “one of the most fiercely competitive hands ever to pick up a rope,”
it read. “Born in the Tonto Basin of Arizona in 1903, Asbury got his start
roping at an early age. His father, Harley Edward Schell, was a cowman of the
old school, and ranched in the rugged country where often the only way to
catch a steer was to snare one blowing wide open off the side of some rocky
mountain.”
Hooked, I
read on.
“Because of
his small size (5’ 8” and 140 pounds), Asbury learned early the value of a horse
which would stop and get back, giving him control over big calves. He was
also a team roper, equally adept at either end and dallying or team tying,”
they wrote. I’ve read in a number of old articles that winning the steer roping
title at the 1939 Pendleton (Ore.) Round-Up was, in Schell’s own eyes, the
highlight of his career.
Asbury
Schell won the world team roping title in 1937, ’39 and ’52 (that last one four
years before Tee was born). Some of his regular partners included Joe Bassett
(Schell heeled for him), and 1936 and ’38 World Champion Team Roper John Rhodes
and 1930 and ’33 World Champion All-Around Cowboy Clay Carr (Schell headed for
them).
Schell had a reputation for always riding
a good horse, among them Stranger, Midnight, Cowboy and Cowboy’s sire, the
legendary Driftwood. Schell bought Driftwood—he called him Speedy—for $1,000
from friend George Cline, and headed, heeled, roped calves, tripped steers and
hazed bulldogging steers on the bay bomber, who also won many a cowhorse race
back in the day.
According
to Livingston and Morris, Schell sold Driftwood to Californians Channing and
Katy Peake in 1943, after being “faced with gasoline rationing due to World War
II and the curtailment of rodeos.”
Schell
bought another Driftwood horse, Maestro, for his son, Eddie. Heeling for
two-time World Team Roping Titlist Dale Smith, Eddie won the 1954 world
championship and is the only left-handed world champion in the event ever.
Smith’s Hall of Fame horse Poker Chip Peake was a son of Driftwood, too, by the
way.
In the
words of former PRCA President Smith, Schell “stayed horseback, had the best
partners of his day and never claimed to be a good loser. He was quite a
competitor.”
“My dad was
just a cowboy,” added Eddie, now 75, retired and living in
Peoria, Ariz. “He ranched all the time, and went
to the rodeos to make extra money.”
Early in
his career, Asbury Schell—his friends called him Raz—stayed close to home and
rodeoed exclusively in Arizona. He won his first checks at the
rodeo in Payson, where Schell was once quoted saying, “All the action took place
down the main street of town. There was a big wire pen on one side of town. The
stock was turned loose, ran down the street and out of town on the other side.
The men, including my dad, who roped steers and goats there years ago were at a
disadvantage when the animals would run up on store and hotel porches. They
just couldn’t get to ’em.”
According
to longtime, legendary rodeo writer Willard Porter, Schell sold his ranch on the
Agua
Fria
River in 1934 due to tough times brought
on by draught and the Depression. That’s when his travels started covering the
country coast-to-coast, including trips to the rodeo at that time held at
New
York’s
Madison Square Garden.
“My dad
rodeoed all year long, especially in the summer,” Eddie remembers. “When I
was a kid, we’d leave Salinas and have to drive day and night
to get to Cheyenne before it
started.
“My dad was
very strict about his roping and everything he did. Everything had to be
done just so. Being right-handed, he had a hard time teaching me to rope
left-handed. But he never did try to change me over. He did train me to
flank and tie calves right-handed, but I roped them
left-handed.”
Asbury
Schell took great pride in his horse herd.
“Of all the
attributes a horse should possess to be a first-class roping pony, speed is
foremost,” Schell told Porter back in the ’40s. “Without speed, a man cannot overtake the fast crossbred Brahman calves that are roped in most of the big
rodeos today. Before a man buys a rope pony prospect, he should see him run
or at least know what he can do when it comes to
running.”
A
competitor to the core, Asbury Schell headed and heeled his way to the
winner’s circle in many a big-ticket team roping match. Schell and Carr
defeated 1936 World Champion Team Roper Rhodes and John Bowman, and Del Rey and Bowman, among others. Besides Bassett and Carr, Schell also traveled
with Buckshot Sorrels, Olan Sims, six-time World Champ-ion Calf Roper Toots
Mansfield and Jake Barnes’ great uncle and 1930 World Champion Calf Roper
Jake McClure.
In the late
’40s and early ’50s, heelers came in from the “hoop and scoop” left side. They
called it “The California Side.” According to Smith, Schell and his
Arizona heeling contemporaries started
taking their shot from the right, and “just beat ’em and moved ’em over. Nobody
ropes from that (left) side now.”
Asbury
Schell is a legend in this sport, and legends never really die. He carried card
No. 42 in the original Cowboys’ Turtle Association, and PRCA gold card No. 182.
“I loved to
rope, and I got that from my dad,” Eddie said sentimentally. “I think he
deserves to be in the Hall. He was one of the best.”