Rare Fred—Ron Martin’s sleek gelding that won the 2006 WPRA world
championship for a little grandmother by the name of Mary Burger—is still in the
thick of things despite an injury he sustained about seven months after his
world-title run.
The 13-year-old sorrel has won nearly every aged-event, breed
association, divisional race and rodeo championship possible, but he appeared to
have lost confidence after he sat out the latter half of 2007 with a pulled
suspensory ligament.
However, Burger, who trained "Fred" a decade ago for Martin, of
Seal Beach, Calif., got her superstar back on his game after the lackluster
winter in time to put a stomping on all takers at Reno, Nev., St. Paul Ore., and
Molalla, Ore.—including clocking two 16-second runs on standard patterns.
That little $22,126 haul pushed Burger back to Las Vegas into her
second Wrangler NFR; her first having come in ’06 when she won the world title
by the closest margin in 25 years and accepted Fred’s honor as that year’s
AQHA/WPRA Horse of the Year.
The difference last summer may not have just been the good ground
and cool weather. Thanks to her horseshoeing husband, Kerry, Burger temporarily
conquered an ongoing battle with Fred’s tendency toward crushed heels (he has
flat, slow-growing feet). And after Fred was found to be allergic to pine dust
and several other triggers, Burger last year began using a vet-recommended
herbal bronchial dilator to ease his respiratory symptoms.
In Las Vegas, the duo uncharacteristically hit barrels in the
first two rounds, but ended the season fifth in the average and seventh in the
world. And this winter, they were ahead of their ’08 pace after raking in $9,722
at Odessa, Denver, Fort Worth and Lake Charles for another top-15 ranking
through February.
It would be hard to find equine ancestors with bigger hearts or
more speed than those of Fred, who is by Jet Radar. The stallion is double-bred
Jet Deck—on the top through the Depth Charge/Go Man Go-bred Rare Jet, and on the
bottom through Easy Jet mixed with a Lady Bugs Moon daughter. Even more
impressive is that Fred’s mother, Sleek Glass, is an own granddaughter of both
Secretariat and Johnny Dial.
And Fred’s jockey has a story almost as rare.
Besides qualifying for her first NFR at the tender age of 58,
Burger is an Indiana native and as a young child had Perthes disease in both
hips that rendered her unable to walk. This prompted her father to buy her a
pony, from whose back she virtually grew up in 4-H.
Mary, an eventual nine-time AQHA world champion, moved with Kerry
and their kids from Ohio to Oklahoma in the mid-1980s, where Mary began to rodeo
in addition to training futurity horses. They now live on 28 picturesque acres
and own B&B Machine Shop near Pauls Valley, adjacent to their close-knit
extended family members.
Burger trains without any arena fences, and always starts her
barrel horses on the pole bending pattern, too, to help teach them to elevate
their shoulders. She trains her horses to allow themselves plenty of room in a
turn and to learn a style that is fundamentally to drop and run around each
barrel.
"I want them automatic," she said. "I want them using that inside back leg
and for it all to be very fluid. And I go with them. It’s not just ‘drag and
pull.’"
Winning St. Paul (Ore.)This picture is what I consider a great example of good position.
This is the long reach and the form I look for from a horse in a great run. You
can see Fred’s stride around this barrel, and the way he has his head down and
tipped to the inside.
I am just sitting there letting him do his thing. The ground at
St. Paul was Fred’s kind. It had a clay mixture that would hold him in a
turn.
Even though the barrels were in the center of a football field, Fred loved
it. The entrance to the barrel pattern came from under the bleachers on the side
of the field. He zeroed in on the first barrel and continued the pattern in
perfect form. Leaving the arena exiting into a dark tunnel was a trick, but he
handled that well, too.
Placing third in the NFR's fifth roundFred’s form and stride in this picture aren’t really what he
needed for it to be a really fast run [it was a 14.01]. He is more gathered up
in his turn in this photo, and his stride is short.
Also, he shifted past his turn and lost valuable time. The ground
was shifty in Las Vegas, and in that kind of ground he has a tendency to safety
up. I am positioned in the "gather up" mode to help him regain valuable time and
still leave the barrel standing.
Fred always runs in the same medium-shanked slider bit. I rarely wear spurs,
but do encourage him to run out of the arena with an over-and-under type horn
rope.
Winning Reno (Ev.) by half-secondThe Reno Rodeo is in a large arena with the barrels set far off the walls. This makes it a challenge for horse and
rider to get three good turns and do it consistently in order to win. I am proud
to say that Fred did his very best to make that happen.
The ground is a clay mix and somewhat firm. Again, this is Fred’s
kind of ground, and his reach around the barrel here is long and hard.
I had a slight slip in this picture that put him a tiny bit past his second
barrel. As you can see, I was focused on getting out of that turn as quickly as
possible. I am looking at our forward motion getting off the turn, and I’m
thinking of trying to pick up speed to barrel three. After a slip, staying
focused on shutting the clock off is a must.