
Scott Kormos rode Justin Maasss 2007 PRCA/AQHA Horse of the Year, Flip, nearly all of 2007, most of 2008 and in nine of the 10 rounds at the 2008 Wrangler NFR, including the above run from round seven.
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There are only seven men who have done it. Brent Lewis, Stran Smith,
Trent Walls, Rich Skelton, Guy Allen, Tee Woolman and Justin Maass have won the
PRCA/AQHA Horse of the Year Award with two different horses. Woolman’s horses,
interestingly, were in steer roping and team roping.
Maass is the only cowboy to win back-to-back PRCA/AQHA Tie-Down
Horse of the Year Awards with two different horses.
It started in 2004, when Maass bought a horse named Smash Par
Fancy, with papers back to Easy Jet, from his friend and fellow Wrangler
National Finals Rodeo tie-down roper Clay Cerny. Cerny originally bought him
from a horse trainer named Mark Atkinson.
Maass knew good horses. His grandfather and father made sure of
that. While they didn’t rodeo, they raised and trained the kind of horses that
did. In fact, Maass made his first two Wrangler NFRs in 1999 and 2000 on a horse
named Ace that his grandfather, Monroe, trained and later gave to Justin.
In fact, that horse finished third in the PRCA/AQHA Horse of the
Year balloting in 1999—the year Jerome Schneeberger’s Smokey won it.
"He was a really good horse," Maass said of Ace. "I’ve kind of
always been around good horses. My dad and grandpa never rodeoed, but they
always had good horses around and roped all the time. I’ve always taken a lot of
pride in having good ones. They started me and got me on the right track and got
me used to having good horses more than anything. Then I worked for a guy named
Jerry Powell when I was in college (at Wharton County Junior College), and he
trained horses, so I got to ride a lot of horses, so he kind of finished me. My
dad and grandpa got me used to riding good ones, so I knew what a good one felt
like, then I kind of figured out a little bit more about how to make them and
keep them when I was at Jerry’s."
And in professional rodeo, horsepower is what separates the top 15
from the rest. In 2004, he missed the Finals by one hole, so in 2005 he became a
man on a mission. Riding Flip, he not only qualified for the NFR, he won or tied
for the win in three of the 10 rounds, worth $44,591, and finished ninth in the
world.
Ace had been replaced and the NFR performance looked to be a
springboard on to greater things. In fact, in February of the following year he
bought another horse, Acre Te Run, or Oz, from Richard Agan.
"He was pretty good looking to begin with," Maass said. "He’d been
to the horse shows and the jackpot ropings and stuff like that. I was kind of
looking for a horse, but I wasn’t hot and heavy looking for a horse. I already
had Flip. I went and tried him at the man’s house and he let me take him for a
week and ride him at the rodeos and I ended up buying him."
Maass came out blazing in 2006, then—with two of the best
horses in the tie-down game in his trailer—he tore the ACL in his left knee at
Calgary in July, ending his season.
As it turned out, however, Flip quickly earned his keep. Due to
Maass’s knee injury and the birth of his and wife Paige’s first daughter, Addy,
Maass decided to scale back his competition schedule in 2007.

Justin Maass primarily rode his 2008 PRCA/AQHA Horse of the Year, Oz, at the 2008 Wrangler NFR. He placed third in the third round (pictured) and won a total of $23,257 in Las Vegas. Maass is the only cowboy to ever have different back-to-back horses of the year.
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Meanwhile, while returning home after the 2006 Wrangler NFR, his
good friend Scott Kormos was in a traffic accident that injured both his good
horses.
"Justin and I had been friends for pretty much my whole career,"
Kormos said. "So that next year he was going to be out and I had nothing to ride
and he offered Flip to me. As soon as I started riding him, I just started
clicking with him. I rode him all that year. He’s not a kid’s horse. He’s spooky
on the ground. If you’re standing beside him and you make a move or reach up to
pet him, he’s going to jump away from you. He’s fractious, but when you’re on
his back, he’s calm. In the arena, he’s not as wild with me as he is with other
guys. I rope a little different and he kind of fits how I rope.
"I want a horse to stand in the corner and not move a muscle, not
move with the gates or anything until I ask him to go. He’s like that. You hold
the bridle reins and when you’re ready to go you drop them and he’s gone. He can
really, really run. I don’t like to reach much when I rope. I like to run close,
since I’m not very big, and set my go up a little better. This little horse lets
me set up my go because he runs so fast, lets me rope like I want to and when he
stops he is bellied up in the ground and heading backwards. That helps me
because I need lots of pull when I get to the calf. Since I’m not the biggest
guy, the more pull I get the better I can flank and tie. He is so fun to
ride."
The horse will even work without a bit in his mouth. While he
sometimes rides Flip in a hackamore, once, to prove how solid he was, he took
every bit of headgear off except the tie-down and neck rope and he worked
flawlessly.
While Maass was laid up, Flip carried Kormos to wins in
Ellensburg, Wash., Bandera, Texas, and his third Wrangler NFR.
"Scott rode him all that year—and he still rides him quite a
bit—he rode him at the Finals in 2008," Maass said. "Scott just made up his mind
that he wanted that horse to win horse of the year as a favor to us and he
promoted him a little bit and hustled him around and told people he was
nominated. Everybody pretty much agreed that he deserved it and he was good all
that year."
Kormos echoed those sentiments.
"It was pretty obvious, I thought," he said. "You know every year
and you watch the horses. You see the same guys and same horses all year long,
so you know what horses have been great all year, and it was pretty obvious that
year that he was as good as any horse out there."
Beating out Jake Hannum’s Scout and Mike Arnold’s Boogie Man 2 was
no small feat, and when the announcement was made, Justin’s wife Paige was the
only name on the horse’s papers, so she became the recipient. Maass caught some
flack from people telling him how lucky he was that his wife let him borrow the
horse, but the simple truth is she was the only one in the household with a
current AQHA membership when they bought him.
But while Flip was the toast of the town, Maass was discovering
just how good the other horse he had in his barn was.
"He’s a big, strong, stout horse—a lot stronger than my other
horse, Flip," Maass said. "Oz you can pretty much ride anywhere. The faster you
get running, the stronger he gets. It just kind of all clicked and I knew he was
special when I first rode him that night. I honestly didn’t know how good he
was, I just knew he was a pretty good horse."
So strong, in fact, that as Maass made his return from injury in
2008, he discovered the horse was tough enough and talented enough to make more
runs than the average horse. As a result, he began mounting the horse out.
"Joe Beaver rode him, Scott rode him, Cody Ohl rode him, Jeff
Chapman rode him, Cimarron Boardman rode him, Royce Lynch rode him," Maass said.
"Six or eight guys got on him at various times throughout the year.
"At Greeley (Colo.), we made four runs on him in the short round
and three out of the four of us placed and Cimarron was the only one who didn’t
and his calf got up to win the short round and the average."
Maass, incidentally, did win the average there and Cody Ohl won
Abilene riding the horse. Oz’s durability and strength is probably what earned
him the 2008 PRCA/AQHA award more than anything.
"Throughout the year, there were quite a few guys that rode him,"
he said. "It seems like when people get to see a horse go more times and be good
with everybody that rides him, they feel like he’s the one to vote for."
This time, by the way, the registration had Justin’s name on
it.
When it came to the Wrangler NFR, the two stable mates were in
demand. Scott Kormos rode Flip for rounds two through 10, placing third in the
second and second in the fifth. Maass rode Oz for the first eight rounds then
switched to Flip for the final two. He placed third in the third round and sixth
in the sixth. In the ninth, round he finished fourth, and in the 10th
split fifth.
"Oz was a little bit too much horse for that set up there," Maass
said. "I kept thinking I was right on the verge of really doing good on him. I
took the jerkline off of him after the first round and pretty much backed off of
everything and he was a little bit too long for those fast setups. I should have
got off him a little bit earlier, but I just kept thinking it was really close.
I tied one calf fast that I placed on and then tied a couple calves fast enough
to win good but they got up. So I just kept thinking I was so close, but it
never quite clicked."
Nevertheless, Maass’s horses won $46,514 in Las Vegas.
As he looks forward to 2009, he’s got something no other cowboy
has ever had; the past two horses of the year in his trailer and at his
disposal.
"That’s probably my proudest accomplishment, to have two different horses win
it back-to-back years," he said. "I’ve always been one of those guys who has a
lot of respect for my horses and I want to have good horses all the time."