It’s
not often that a tipped barrel helps a contestant win.
The
five seconds of penalty time it adds is like an eternity in a sport where runs
are measured to the hundredth of a second. But for 2005 World Champion Kelly
Kaminski, the dropped can in the second round of the Wrangler NFR did more to
improve her chances of taking her second-straight title than anyone could have
imagined.
It
was a tough year for the defending champ. A close friend of Kelly’s was killed
in a motorcycle accident in the spring and Kelly herself nearly died from carbon
monoxide poisoning while staying in Idaho in the fall. Her horse, Rockem Sockem
Go “Rocky,” was kicked by her daughter’s horse and for a time it was thought he
might never run again.
Coming
into this year’s Finals, the champ had dropped to third in the world after
struggling down the stretch. Rumors were circulating that Rocky had started to
lose some of his legendary speed, and virtually no one had picked her to repeat;
not even Kelly.
“I
just went in to make as much money as I possibly could,” she said. “If I could
make some good checks here that would be great, but I couldn’t ask for more than
one world title.”
To
make things even more challenging, Kelly battled flu-like symptoms at the start
of this year’s Finals, making it difficult to deal with the spate of public
appearance that go along with a Finals qualification, much less run barrels. She
took a check in the first round, but the duo just didn’t seem to have the same
snap in their stride as they did when they marched to the title last
year.
And
then came round two’s tipped barrel. As they were rounding the second turn, the
normally unflappable Rocky came around the backside of the barrel a touch too
sharp and knocked it into the dirt of the Thomas and Mack Arena, eliminating any
chance of Kelly taking the average title.
If
she had been holding out any hope of defending her championship, it had rested
on taking the $40,000 average prize at Finals’ end. The delicate balance she had
trying to strike between aggressive runs that would yield round checks and clean
runs for the average no longer mattered.
In
the end, being free from the pressure of the average race would be the key to
Kelly’s second world title. It would be all or nothing in the rounds, and it was
time for the reigning champ to go for broke with each and every
run.
Rounds
three and four yielded two more small checks, but Kelly and Rocky really came
alive in round five when they took their first round win. The difference between
their first four runs and round five was apparent as Rocky zipped through his
turns with the fire of old.
In
round six, Kelly posted yet another quick time to take second in the round and
pull within $11,000 of then leader, Linda Vick. Her Finals was turning from a
nightmare into fairytale, one round at a time.
Round
seven was when she finally broke through and took the lead in the world
standings, a spot she had not occupied since before the Fourth of July. In her
second round win of the Finals, the new leader still was hesitant to think
another title could be hers. ‘One round at a time,’ was still her
mantra.
Kelly
sealed her second-straight championship in round nine, where despite dropping
her reins as she rounded the third barrel, Rocky fired his way to their third
round win of the Finals.
Round
ten’s run was just a formality, but it didn’t stop Kelly from taking a fourth
place check to improve to fourth in the average and bring her NFR earnings total
to over $107,000.
“I
always tell everyone one of my mottos is dream big and believe,” explained
Kelly. “I was writing it down one day signing autographs and I thought,‘Yeah,
remember that. Dream big and believe.’ I’ve been very blessed by God. He’s
really allowed me to do things that I personally never thought I’d get to
do.”
Sometimes
bad things happen for a reason. The tipped barrel in round two could have been
the beginning of a terrible Finals for Kelly. Instead, it was the start of
something beautiful, and it reminds us all that we can do anything, as long as
we have the courage to believe.