
Roping schools may be a great way for a roper who has hit a wall to take his roping to a new level. The NRS Training Center is one option for private lessons or group clinics.
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As the recreational team roping industry continues to grow
steadily, so does the roping school scene. More professional cowboys—looking to
either avoid the road altogether or offset the rising fuel prices—are offering
clinics.
One of the more recent trends is the roping camp, where students
can spend an extended, intensive training session at a facility with some
luxurious extras. This concept originated with David Isham and the National
Ropers Supply Training Center in Decatur, Texas.
The facility has everything you’d expect, a big, nice covered
arena, stalls, trailer hook-ups, cattle and bunkhouses in which to stay.
But when it comes right down to it, the real product they’re
selling is their expertise. Krece Harris is the NRS Training Center Events
Director, a job that requires him to host clinics and share his roping
expertise.
One student, Dr. Denee Thomas from San Antonio, had ridden horses
most of her life, but came to roping later. As the Dean of Students at Dental
Schools of San Antonio, she knows a little something about teaching.
"I can’t say enough good things about them," she said. "I have
been to two of Krece’s clinics and I’ve also been to the Walt Woodard clinic. I
have taken several private lessons with Krece and his staff. I had a great
experience there. I am an educator and I’m aware that not everyone who is good
at something is good at teaching something, but Krece is."
Harris’s teaching philosophy is pretty simple and, he says,
applicable to just about everyone who darkens the Training Center’s doors.
"It doesn’t matter who we’re teaching, whether a true beginner
comes in here or an advanced roper comes in here, you’re always teaching
fundamentals and basics," he said. "That’s what everybody goes back to. Whenever
you run into road blocks, you have to go back to the fundamentals and the
basics. Number one, being able to ride position on your horse. We’re probably
more geared toward that than anything: how a person rides their horse. More and
more we’re seeing people who can pick up a rope and swing it, the problem is not
being able to sit in the middle of the horse’s back and still be able to swing
their rope. Working hand in hand with Walt Woodard and Tyler Magnus like we have
over the years, we’re going to teach the fundamentally correct swing and past
that we’re going to teach the fundamental basics of horsemanship. That’s what
keeps this deal going in my opinion. We can break it down to the level of being
a true beginning and that same method of teaching goes all the way to a
pro-level roper."
Harris limits the clinic participants to 14-15 students at most.
He can give four private lessons each day, however, most days it’s just two. The
beginner clinics are the most popular—usually selling out for the entire year by
February.
"Private lessons are up and horse sales are up and clinics are
up," Harris said. "As far as what’s going on here, it’s amazing to me with
everybody carrying on about the economy, we haven’t seen it yet."

Tyler Magnus, who recently won Sisters, Ore., heading for Broc Cresta, has a full slate of private lessons and group clinics at his new training facility near Llano, Texas.
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Gerry Sheppard, from Norman, Okla., was also a true beginner who
cut his teeth at the NRS facility and went on to develop a long-standing
relationship with Krece. When Sheppard started, he was so bad he had to pay
entry fees for himself and his partner in order to compete at the local
ropings.
"They set up a plan based specifically for me," he said. "I felt
like I got the most honest responses from them. I felt safer there than anywhere
else. They bring people along at the speed they need to go. From David Isham on
down, they take the student at the speed they need to go.
"I bought two horses from them. They were smart enough to tell me
that I was only as good as my mount. I’ve been offered more than I gave for them
several times. I feel like I got a bargain.
"I’m to the point now where people ask me to rope with them. I get
to pick and choose."
If you’re not a beginner, Harris’s best advice for one of his
clinics or anyone’s clinics is to approach the situation ready to learn.
"Prepare yourself to be open-minded," he said. "The thing that is
hard for all of us is change. The students who run into the biggest problems are
the ones who have been swinging a rope for two or three months trying to get
prepared for it. The ones who are the easiest to teach are the ones who say,
‘No, I’m going to this beginner clinic and I’m not even going to pick up a rope
and learn any bad habits.’ Those are the easy fixes. It’s the guy who grows up
on a ranch and has kind of done some ranch work, roped a few calves in the
branding pen and stuff like that who wants to get serious about his roping who
has already developed muscle memory and habits with his swing that are hard to
break. On the other hand, those are the people who can ride the best, too."
Beyond the beginner, the program stresses horsemanship.
"Once a person can swing a rope the correct way and catch the
dummy consistently, it’s no longer a roping game, it’s a horsemanship game,"
Harris said. "Whoever rides their horse the best or is mounted the best is going
to be the winner. That’s what we teach when people show up here and want to fine
tune and tweak their game."
The other extras that NRS provides include a pro shop, where
participants can try different products to see which they like best. Every
clinic starts with a saddle-fit seminar that helps ropers understand how to fit
a saddle to their horse as well as a how to fit a saddle to themselves. Everyone
walks away with a new rope courtesy of Classic and they always have horses for
sale.
"I could see very easily that through the course of that three- or
four-day clinic I gained in confidence and skills. I think it’s because they
teach the fundamentals and horsemanship," Dr. Thomas said. "That’s a place where
I can do it safely and in a controlled environment. I’ve seen all kinds of
people progress there and develop a lot of confidence. It is a heaven on earth
for a lot of people and a great social gathering."
Pro’s ClassroomWhile Harris and the staff at NRS are professional instructors,
some ropers crave instruction from someone who has made his name rodeoing. Of
course, there are a couple of guys who rodeoed at an elite level and have turned
to teaching as a second career. Three of the most prominent instructors in that
category are Rickey Green, Tyler Magnus and Walt Woodard. Each has his own
strong points, so as a roper you need to determine who’s strengths match up with
what you want to learn.
Green is perhaps currently the most focused on teaching of the
three with clinics scheduled for three weekends out of every month across the
country. Headquartered out of Morgan Mill, Texas, Green teaches a style of
roping he calls Power Team Roping.
"The most important part of Power Team Roping is body position,"
he said. "Proper body position lets you get the rope to an angle that has the
most power. It also opens up your roping area to encompass a greater range of
shots you can make. Your options are open to how fast, slow or what distance you
want to rope."
Check his website, www.rickeygreen.com, to learn more about his
philosophies and to see his schedule.
A recent trend in the industry is the more intensive semi-private
clinics. Green hosts a handful of these, as do many other professionals. Tyler
Magnus’s program at the Little Bear Ranch and Rich Skelton’s Get Rich Roping
program both incorporate the idea of a total team roping immersion process.
Think of the schools as a fantasy camp where you learn something.
"These schools give me the time, and the number of ropers I
prefer, so I can help each student meet their maximum potential," Green
said.
Magnus, who has modeled his program at Little Bear Ranch in this
mold as well, is known for his emphasis on horsemanship. While he still hits the
rodeo trail some, this fall he has a full schedule of clinics on tap.
"Good horsemanship is the key to successful roping," Magnus said.
"Many ropers focus too much on their rope and not enough on their horse. You
might catch, but you’ll never achieve consistency without sound
horsemanship."
Visit www.tylermagnus.com to see what he’s got going on.
Walt Woodard, meanwhile, is carrying a full-time rodeo schedule
and fitting in clinics where he can. In addition to some at NRS, he’s got his
own schedule and starting in September, he’s quite busy.
Woodard is known for his outstanding teaching ability, and for
over 20 years made a nice living doing only that. Thomas, who attended one of
his clinics at NRS this year after auditing one last year, sees him as someone
who can take people with a little more experience to a whole new level.
"Walt Woodard can teach anybody to rope," she said. "But people
who have a grounding can really get a lot more from him."
Most of the rest of the top 15 cowboys in the professional rodeo
also give lessons and host clinics. Rich Skelton has developed an intensive—yet
all-inclusive—luxury clinic series called Get Rich Roping
(www.getrichroping.com).
Most pros are willing to give private lessons that work around
their schedule as well. If you admire someone’s particular style or feel they
would be a good match for your style, find a way to get in touch with them—the
rodeo world is truly small. Further, consider laying the groundwork for
something like this prior to when rodeo season is in your part of the country.
You may be able to schedule a lesson while your favorite pro is in your region
rodeoing. Bobby Harris (www.bobbyharrisropingschools.com), Mike Beers
(www.mikebeers.com), Speed Williams (www.speedzoneroping.com), Tee Woolman
(www.teewoolman.com), Jerold and Leo Camarillo (www.camarrilloteamroping.com),
Charly Crawford (www.charlycrawford.com), Chad Masters (www.chadmasters.com),
and Allen Bach (www.proroping.com) all have websites you can visit to see a
schedule of upcoming clinics and contact information to schedule a private
lesson.
Youth ministry roping camps are also on the rise. Because of many
of the top professional’s personal faiths, top pros such as Allen Bach, David
Key and Kory Koontz are giving their time to local ministry partners to teach
roping and share their beliefs.
Allen Bach’s month long camp last October was a huge success and
recently a ministry called Equine Champions For Christ held a Christian Team
Roping Camp for thirty young ropers in Salado, Texas.
Kenny Hague, Jo Goertz and Michael Goertz started the ministry to
honor God while allowing kids the opportunity to learn from world class team
ropers.
"Everyone from participants to the workers came away knowing that God is
great and through him all things are possible," Jane Campos-Cisneros, a
volunteer for the organization, said.