Night crept
toward morning in the Texas hill country, and Clay Walker’s
tour bus hummed softly, its darkened windows reflecting folks who were
slowly—reluctantly—putting an end to a night of revelry in the adjacent
rodeo arena. A yellow moon teased from behind the clouds now and again, and a
nearby fire pit seemed to energize a silly gaggle of kids despite the late
hour.
For
Walker—music star, Texan, budding
roper—this must have been the end of a perfect day. After spending his night
singing to and laughing and dancing with a clearly appreciative crowd, he sat in
his bus—snuggly parked next to a rodeo arena—and talked about another of his
great passions: roping.
For a
singer who loves roping, this had to be at least pretty close to as good as it
gets. Walker was feeling especially blessed on
this night, and why not? He had performed for nearly two hours only minutes from
his future home, and now he sat in a leather chair on his bus, chewing the fat
about roping, golf and growing up on a farm in south
Texas.
It was
nearing midnight, and Clay Walker was wide
awake.
The
37-year-old has had his share of good days since growing up as the oldest of
five children in Beaumont, Texas, and certainly this was one of
them. He had just performed as part of the grand opening of the real estate
development Estancia at Thunder Valley in Boerne, where the 1st Annual
Rich Skelton Team Roping would be held the following day. He was surrounded not
by music critics or media photographers, but rather by the people around whom he
seems most comfortable: his family, his friends and dozens of the greatest
ropers in the world.
“I love
being here,” said Walker, his black hair still sweating
after the raucous set. “I’m from Beaumont, but I love this part of
Texas.”
And clearly
he enjoys being in the realm of ropers. But before he linked into the world of
rodeo, Walker staked his claim to a dream that
was born soon after his dad placed a guitar in his hand at the age of nine. He’s
the first to admit that he’s not riding around in the tour bus—graced with
leather chairs and a flat-screen television—because of his roping
skills.

Amateur roper Tom Cusick, who is developing an equestrian community north of San Antonio, and Walker have become friends after Walker bought a home site in the development.
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No,
Walker sits in the bus because of his
music. After graduating from Vidor High
School in 1987, he began his trek to
stardom in the tradition of his fellow Beaumont native and country music legend,
George Jones. He wrote songs and played his guitar in local clubs, and worked
plenty of honky tonks in Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana and various parts of
Texas.
He
ultimately became the top draw for Beaumont’s club, Neon Armadillo, where he
was seen by producer James Stroud, who ultimately helped
Walker gain a contract with Giant Records.
His debut album went gold, then platinum, featuring his number one hit, “What’s
it to You.”
His second
album became a top seller as well, with videos that placed in the top 10 on
Country Music Television and CMT Europe. Neon Armadillo was a long way away. He
scored big with “Live Until I Die” and “Where Do I Find the Picture?,” and in
1993 he was named Top New Artist by Radio and Records.
He has been
described as “tireless” and “energetic,” and both adjectives fit him well. His
seventh album, “A Few Questions,” included another single (by the same title)
that landed in the Top 20. The second single released from the album, “I Can’t
Sleep,” soared into the Top 10.
But though
his life and career have obviously risen to great heights, he has also
experienced great lows both professionally and personally, giving him some
perspective that will serve him well as he matures as a roper. Having been with
the Giant record label his entire career, his album “Say No More,” had been
released for only two weeks before the label folder.
Personally,
he was rocked with his diagnosis of multiple sclerosis in 1996. In 2003, he
founded the Band Against MS Foundation, a non-profit organization that raises
money for research into a cure for the disease. The University of Texas Medical
Center in Houston received a $150,000 grant from the
foundation. In 2004, he performed in a 15-city “MS Road Trip” to bring
awareness to the disease, and to raise even more money for
research.
The disease
is now in remission with Walker, yet another reason for the joy he
obviously felt in Boerne. A physically active man, Walker stubbornly refuses to
yield to the disease, and might love golf as much or more than roping. And he
quickly—and easily—compares the two sports.

To kick off the grand opening of the Estancia Ranch development at Thunder Valley, Walker performed for prospective home owners and many of ProRodeos top team ropers, in town for the Rich Skelton Annual Rope For the Gold held the next day.
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“You know,
I love golf, and roping is a lot like golf,” Walker says. “It can be so frustrating.
The last time I roped, the horse would put me in perfect position, and I would
just flat-out miss. When you aren’t doing well, it’s more frustrating than fun,
and that’s exactly the same thing with golf.
“With golf,
I was a 15-handicap with a homemade swing. But I worked with a guy, a great
teacher, and he had me down into single digits real fast. But he told me, ‘You
have to forget everything you thought you knew about the golf swing.’ So he
broke me down, re-taught me, and now when I’m in some pro-ams, the T.V. guys
will break down my swing because I’m improved so much.”
He’s hoping
to have the same success with roping, though he’s also realistic enough to know
that becoming a top-notch roper takes more than simply getting good teaching. To
say the very least, Walker is hanging around the right people,
in regards to roping.
He counts
singer/roper George Strait among his good friends, and has
also spent time getting to know—and watching—a number of other roping talents.
The roping bug bit him early, and it continues to trail him, to call to him,
especially when he is on the road.
“Some
friends of mine roped, and I just enjoyed it,” Walker says. “The first winter we were in
Hempstead, we stuck some horns in a hay bail
and just roped, starting from the ground up. I always had horses. I grew up on a
farm in Beaumont, and we always were playing around
with goats and sheep when I was a kid.”
He’s
wanting to increase his roping time now, no easy task for a performer with label
commitments, fans to see and songs to sing.
“When I met
Joe Beaver, that really made me want to start doing it more and more,”
Walker says. “With the music business, and
being on the road, I haven’t been able to spend the time with it that I’d like.
But I’ve built a good arena, and I’m passionate about it.
“And I feel
like I’m pretty good at it, though I’m not nearly as good as George. I’ve
watched the last couple of NFRs from George’s box, and I’ve just loved it. And
there are so many good people involved in roping. Matt Tyler is just a wonderful
human being, and I’ve enjoyed getting to know Rich (Skelton) and Speed
(Williams).”
Roping, and
rodeo, has been and will continue to be a big part of
Walker’s life.
“I’m a huge
rodeo fan,” Walker says, stating the blatantly
obvious. “There are really just two sites that I go to when I’m on the
compute—the ESPN ProRodeo site and the PGA golf site. I love them both. And I’m
a big tie-down roping fan, too. Cody Ohl, Trevor Brazile, Roy Cooper…I just
think the world of all of those guys. And Joe, he’s such a good
man.”
In addition
to his time constraints, Walker is also handcuffed by horse
limitations.
“I lost my
roping horse, Brandy, a couple of years ago, and I’ve been on the road quite a
bit,” Walker said. “I’m so competitive that I
want to make sure I get a horse that will work for me, so I’ve had some time off
from roping. Plus, I got my arm hung in a coil, so that was kind of scary. I’m
just not going to rope with any horse, and a good roping horse is hard to
find.
“The
lifestyle just makes roping so hard,” says Walker, who also likes to play
pick-up basketball. “But there will come a time when I’ll be able to settle down
and do more of the things I want to do. I want to spend time with roping, really
lay a foundation and build good skills. You can get into so many bad habits, and
that’s the last thing you want to do. The last few times I’ve roped, it just
hasn’t gone well, and I don’t want to get into any bad
habits.”
So now
Walker will slowly “re-introduce” himself
to the sport, at a pace that will ensure success. There will come a time, after
all, when he’ll want to park the tour bus a little more often. He’ll want to get
off the stage for awhile, off the road and out from in front of the crowd. He’ll
want to come home.
When that
time comes, he’ll be here, in Central
Texas.
He’ll be the small, yet strong, man on the back of a good roping horse, running
steers. And instead of a guitar or a microphone—or a Sharpie—he’ll have a rope
in his hand.
And a smile
on his face.
“I need to
start all over, break down my mechanics, get a good horse and practice,”
Walker says. “Now, instead of getting
frustrated, I’m going into it with my mind fresh, and that’ll give me more
happiness than just trying to fit roping into my schedule, then end up getting
frustrated because I’m not giving it the time it deserves.
“The first
time I roped was probably 12 years ago, and I was foolish enough to think that
it would be easier than it turned out to be. I’m looking forward to getting back
to roping a lot more often. And I’m so competitive…I want to do it the right
way.”