There are a lot of different variations at every roping and rodeo on the angle at which
different headers get the steer’s head in the corner. Some team roping
headers are
straighter behind the steer, some are a little further to
the left, and
some are
real wide in the corner. The general
theory is, wherever
you’re comfortable
roping the steer from
is where you’re going to get
the steer’s head. But in
actuality, before you change the direction of
the steer you
need to move up and
to the left of the steer before
starting
the corner.
If a header ropes straighter behind a steer, then as
he's widening and moving further to the left and up into the corner
it's going
to take him two or three strides to get from straight
behind the steer to
over where he needs to be. If you start into
the corner too early when you're
straight behind the steer, you kill
the steer's momentum in the corner and have
to go two or three strides
before you pick up that momentum and start moving
that steer again. The
heeler usually ends up running the steer over, because
tere's no
momentum.
If a header has a hard time with heelers coming in
all
over the place, then
big separations between the steer and the
heeler, that’s probably what’s
happening. The header’s losing
that
momentum in the corner, and the steer’s not
making a
fluid change of
direction.
A lot of times people think that in order to start the steer
around the
corner from the right position you have to rope
from that
position, which is
wider than they’re comfortable
with. That’s not
necessarily true. You can rope
the steer from
a tighter position, then
move to that wider position before you
actually change the momentum of
the steer. That allows you to
make a smoother
transition in the corner,
and allows your
heeler to have a better, more
consistent throw.

Speed (Williams) does this as well as anybody. No matter how close
or far
away he ropes the steer from, as he’s dallying and
making the
transition into
the corner, he’s starting to get
the steer’s head while
at the same time riding
wider and
forward, to where at the point where
he gets the steer’s head, he’s
almost beside the steer. That makes the
corner round and
smooth, where the steer
almost never quits hopping and
the
momentum never changes. The momentum goes
from running down the
arena to across the arena in one smooth motion, and makes
the
heeler’s
job as easy as possible.

Clay and I have discussed this a lot going down the road. That’s what
sets up
their run, and why Speed and Rich (Skelton) look like
they make the
exact same
run every single time. It doesn’t
matter whether they’re at
Salinas, a jackpot
or the NFR. Rich
gets the same look every time,
which is what builds
consistency. I’ve been trying to copy that for a
year now, and
finally feel like
I’m starting to give Clay the same look
every time. My goal is to give Clay a
smooth corner every run,
and it’s
shown in our consistency at the rodeos.
Some horses are harder to do this with than others, but if you make a
conscious effort every time you rope, while you’re pulling your slack,
of making
that horse move up and wider to the left, it makes
it easier
for you to dally
and stay in control of the run. And
if something
happens and you bobble your
slack and things
don’t go just right for
you, that forward momentum makes it
easier for you to maintain control,
and fix and overcome your
mistakes. If
you’re keeping your horse moving
forward and
widening to the left while you’re
pulling your slack, your
horse is moving in the same direction as the steer. You
can
easily
close the gap back up and fix things. If your horse is ducking,
things
separate way too fast.
Once you’re beside the steer and are getting his head, you have to be
starting to slow the steer down in the corner. Don’t let your horse and
the
steer drift down the arena. Make sure your steer and horse
are
going across the
arena. If you let them drift down the
arena, the steer
will be going so fast
that the heeler can’t
catch him. You don’t have
control of that steer. When I
say
beside the steer, I don’t mean next
to him. I’m talking about a step
back,
where your horse’s head is about
at the steer’s hip, not
head-to-head.

Find out more about David Key, visit: http://keyteamroper.com/