Obviously, this is a jackpot. I try to run closer and the steers
were pretty fresh there. It looks like that horse is trying to drop just a touch
and I’m pushing him forward and holding him up. That horse is owned by Jackie
Gillespe and they call him Hippie. I try to stay square with my saddle. I try to
keep my body still so my horses can’t read it. I just ride with my left hand and
my legs. I want my buckle to stay even with my saddle horn—as far as my lower
body—and I try to ride my horses with my legs. For my upper body, I try to frame
myself with the buttons of my shirt between my horse’s ears, going down his
neck. Especially jackpotting, you can keep your body posture a lot better than
when you’re trying to be 3.5.
Round 10 at the 2008 National Finals RodeoThis is my main horse, Bull. That steer came left pretty hard and
I was pushing forward. I was really lined up there, but I was still having to
push my horse out and get him away from the steer. A lot of times I have a lot
of rope out, but I want my horses driving forward, almost like a bulldogging
horse. Bull is so broke that anytime I put a foot in him or touch him he reacts
to it. I try to keep him really free and moving forward so he never takes my
throw away. If I put my left foot in him and hold him up, he never wants to drop
back. Some guys, like Trevor [Brazile], he wants his horses to drop and really
tear the ground up and get ahold and step over themselves. Bull’s a little bit
smaller and I think if I got to doing that on him, I could tear him up pretty
fast.
I really want to keep him pushing forward and rounding—almost like
Viper, Speedy’s [Williams] horse. He was the first horse that would do it. He
was so free and flat and then he’d just round and the steers would just hit and
follow him right around there. That’s what I try to pattern my deal after. Speed
pioneered that and everybody else was so far behind him. There were no mixed
motions, everything was forward momentum. There was no pulling off or stepping
out. It was just a lot faster. A lot of guys still want a horse to drop and flex
out. I feel like the more you do that on a horse, the faster he’s going to learn
to take your rope away from you.
Second Round Win in San Angelo, 2009In this picture, I’m riding Bull, and he is really free, so I have
to put a lot of right foot on him and really pull on him. With some other
horses, like in the first picture, I can push forward.
That steer actually checked up a lot, I wanted to reach for him a
pretty good ways. I gave him a tick further on the barrier. I was trying to get
away from that steer, so I’m driving and pushing forward and ahead. I’m really
trying to get him away from the steer. It looks like that steer is low-headed
and he’s trying to set up a little. I’m trying to get away to make the
separation happen.
I’m kind of leaned out and cueing him. He’s really free so you
have to cue him more than you would other horses. I’m still pushing him
forward—or pushing his head in toward the steer.
Randon rides so much higher that I have to get the steers to hit harder and
switch in front of his horse. For Martin, I always drove past the steer and had
forward momentum the whole time and never let my horse drop back. For Randon,
you have to get some more set and get those steers to switch just a touch harder
so he can pick them off.
Tying the World Record (3.5 seconds) in Corpus Christi, 2009That was a really good steer. I was a little bit rocked back with
my throw and so I was just pulling and trying to get that steer to hit. Randon
[Adams] and I had been at home working on getting those steers to hit in front
of him a lot harder. I was dropping right there. I was wanting my horse to come
back in that little building and step over himself. I felt like at the Finals I
got the steers running around in a big circle and running up the rope. There was
no corner. So here, it looks like I’m drawing him back, really hard, got his
head down and trying to get that steer to hit. Everything is straight and I’m
lined up. I’m a little bit rocked over in my lower body.

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This horse is really, really droppy. I thought he’d be good to
ride at the Finals. He’s a calf horse/heel horse that Kent Youngblood owns named
CD. He’s kind of like Trevor’s horses. He drops and comes back. I was just
trying to stay up over him and keep him moving forward to keep from washing
those steers out. I’m lined up pretty good, and I’ve got my feet in him driving
him forward.