
On a hot day in Saginaw, Texas, Wrangler NFR header Tommy Edens teamed up with veteran NFR heeler Martin Lucero to win the Windy Ryon Memorial Team Roping.
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Memorial Day was made a national holiday to honor the men and
women who have perished in the service of the United States Armed Forces.
While most Americans spend the weekend at barbecues, the roping
community migrates to Saginaw, Texas, on the three days prior to Memorial Day to
remember one if it’s own influential and early leaders: Windy Ryon.
Don "Windy" Ryon is named for the founder of Ryon’s Saddle Shop
and Western Store in the historic Fort Worth Stockyards. For decades it was a
gathering place for cowboys and rodeo hands. In the early days of professional
rodeo, the Ryon name was tied closely to the sport.
In 1973, after his death, Ryon’s friends held a memorial roping in
his honor and in its 35-year existence it has become an institution featuring
the best team ropers, tie-down ropers and steer ropers. Additionally, the event
plays host to a women’s team roping, celebrity washer pitch, invitational
breakaway roping, senior steer roping, double mugging, concerts and a church
service.
In fact, Tommy Edens grew up in Gatesville, Texas, and played in
the dirt at the annual roping while his father, Jerry, roped. This year, after
making his first Wrangler National Finals Rodeo in 2007, he came back and won
the roping with one of the hottest heelers going, Martin Lucero.
"I remember going to that roping when I was a little kid and
watching my dad rope out there," Edens said. "We’re from around that area so
there’s a lot of older guys who we grew up watching rope and to be able to win
that in front of all those guys is a neat feeling."
What wasn’t a neat feeling was after he found out he had won with
a 28.55-second time on four, he called his wife, Lori, who was at their daughter
Jordi’s softball game to tell her the good news only to find out she had been
getting the play-by-play from a friend at the roping.
While it took the wind out of his sails momentarily, the $12,870
check he won for the win quickly lifted his spirits.
"It was a really good deal," he said. "At a roping like that you
have to be able to draw the right steers and use them and we drew the right
steers and made good runs."
Edens made those good runs aboard his big brown horse Radar.
"That roping is kind of tricky," Edens added. "You have to score
good. Some of the steers ran really fast and some that were slow that you had to
see a little more on. You just had to watch them when they came in there and see
what you had. Luckily, we drew the same steer twice. Our first one and our
second one was the same steer and we were 6.6 on him both times [placing second
in the first round]. To get a good steer like that and be able to use him gave
us some distance from the rest of the pack and let us rope a little safer."

Although he doesnt leave Texas too often,
Michael Akins showed hes got the horse and the talent to hang with household names by winning the Windy Ryon calf roping title.
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Meanwhile, for Lucero, the win is just another in a string he’s
put together this spring. He won the Crawfish Roping in Llano as well as the Buc
Days Pro Rodeo in Corpus Christi—both with rodeo partner Jojo Lemond.
"I’ve been doing well, I’ve had pretty good luck here lately,"
Lucero said. "That roping has a lot of history. It’s one I’ve always wanted to
win, but it’s a hard roping to win. You have to draw really well. Things just
shaped up right."
What’s more, Lucero—who hasn’t rodeoed hard since his last NFR in
2002—is riding the best horse he has ever owned. Spiderman, he calls him, he
bought from his business partners about three years ago.
"He’s really solid and real easy to rope on. He can really run and
go fast and he lets me catch."
Their first three runs were so solid, there was almost no pressure
coming into the final go as the high call team.
Not that Tee Woolman didn’t try his best to put the heat on the
leaders. He and Kory Koontz turned in a 5.98-second short round time, which
bumped them to the second-place spot. Woolman also wound up fourth with Rich
Skelton. Al Bach, who was fifth call, missed one for David Key. However, Key
turned around and had a back-to-back call with Clay O’Brien Cooper and they had
a good run to finish third. Koontz had two more great chances in the top
three—with David Key and Travis Tryan—and had no luck. Steve Northcutt, heeling
for Joel Bach, finished fifth.
"We come back to the short round and had to be 9.6 to win the
roping," Edens said. "It could have been a lot faster. There were a couple of
really good teams in front of us that had some bad luck and left it open for us,
so we just drew another good steer and made a good run."
"Tommy roped outstanding," Lucero said. "He turned a really good
steer and we had a good chance to win if we caught the last one and that’s where
my horse is really good. If you just need to catch, he’ll let you, he won’t take
anything away."
While the two ropers’ careers intersected at the Windy Ryon, they
are each on a different trajectory. Lucero, who started staying closer to home
after his daughter Gabrielle was born to work in small loan brokerage, is going
to crack back out after a successful winter and spring.
"Me and Jojo roped all last summer and did well,"
he said. "So
we thought we’d try and rodeo this winter and spring. We’ve done really well, so
we’re going to go to some of the summer rodeos and see if we can make the
Finals."
Edens, meanwhile, plans to stay in Texas and hit the amateur and
circuit rodeos and develop his burgeoning metal barn and fencing business.
"I’m going to stay home this year," he said. "I missed a lot with
my little girl last summer. We’re going to go to the circuit rodeos and amateur
rodeos. I put in metal buildings and build fence and stuff, and it’s gotten
really busy in this past month, so I’ve got a lot to do this summer. I’m going
to stay at the house while business is good."

Cash Myers won the steer roping crown for the second consecutive year.
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Calf RopingIn the calf roping, local tough Michael Akins beat out world
champions and Wrangler NFR qualifiers including Joe Beaver, Blair Burk, Cody
Ohl, Stran Smith and Clint Cooper by roping three calves in 29.82 seconds.
Cody Ohl, riding his superhorse Luke, finished second with a 32.15
time.
"Any time you can beat Cody Ohl, it’s been a good day," Akins
said. "It doesn’t even matter if you win third or fourth, anytime you beat him
is a good day."
The Whitesboro, Texas, concrete contractor made two solid runs in
the go-rounds but didn’t place until a 9.2 in the short, which was good enough
to outdistance the household names for the average title.
Akins rodeoed last year and stayed in the top 20 until he ran out
of money in July. However, he managed to stay ranked high enough to garner an
invitation to the Windy Ryon.
"I’ve got the best horse I’ve ever had in my life right now," he
said. "He’s a 15-year-old Quarter Horse. I bought him from a guy named Tom
Walker. He’s a well-known calf roper and he could dang sure beat you back when
he was going. I watched the horse for four years and finally decided I needed a
better one and offered to buy him."
Akins feels that the horse, Punch, is good enough to make him
competitive professionally, but just doesn’t have the financial security to step
out and leave his wife, Jana, at home with their two young sons, Walker and
Jhett, for the rodeo road.
"It’s more of a fun deal for me, I don’t do it for a living for
sure," he said. "It’s a pretty prestigious deal to win that deal around
here."
Beating out the best in the world and winning $6,028 would be fun
for anybody.
Steer Roping
All-around hand Cash Myers repeated as steer roping champion at
the Windy Ryon by roping four steers in 53.9 seconds—including an 11.7-second
short go-winning run.
"Trevor [Brazile] was in the lead and then me and then Guy [Allen]
and that’s the way it was last year," Myers said of the call back order. "Trevor
had a little bit of bad luck, his steer wasn’t very good and his horse drug off
and then I won the short round and moved up to first and Guy was second. Trevor
won fourth with the bad luck. I had a really good steer on the last steer. He
didn’t run real hard and let me catch up quick and it was a good steer to help
me move up."
Incidentally, last year the 18-time World Champion Allen finished
second to Myers as well. The biggest difference for Myers this year was his
mount. Tarzan, the 2005 PRCA/AQHA steer roping horse of the year is battling an
injury suffered in Odessa, so Myers has been riding Chuck Ball’s horse Casino.
"He’s a real solid, good horse," Myers said. "I’ve rode him at
about six ropings and he really worked good and has been good to have."
In addition to the two steer roping titles, Myers has also won the
calf roping title there.
"It’s a good roping. I had things go my way and it was a lot of
fun to win. I’ve had a lot of luck there at that arena," Myers said. "This year
they had it back outdoors [organizers held it in a covered arena last year due
to heavy rains]. It’s sure a good roping to have outdoors and it’s a good arena
and the crowd really likes it. I drew good and had one steer that run and kind
of tried and I had my best run on him. I didn’t win anything on him, but I got
by one there."
While he didn’t win anything on that one, his total earnings came
to $7,950.
The Rest
In the women’s team roping, Laura Coe and Diana Lewis were the
only team out of 200 to catch all four—in 59.65 seconds—and won $6,976 apiece.
Wade Lewis won the senior steer roping with a 57.9-second time on three and took
$2,474 home. In the breakaway roping, Lari Dee Guy outdistanced the field with a
9.25-second time on three head. She won $2,038. Double muggers Jim and Chance
Shafer of the B&S Ranch won that event and $3,000.