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Published by admin on 01 Apr 2008

Road To The Horse™ 2008 Champion COX IS TWO FOR TWO AT ROAD TO THE HORSE

Chris Cox 2008 Road to the Horse ChampionMURFREESBORO, TN –Defending champion Chris Cox (Mineral Wells, Texas) emerged victorious at his second Road to the Horse competition with his win Sunday, March 2, 2008, at the Tennessee Miller Coliseum, making him the only competitor other than Clinton Anderson to win back-to-back championships. Along with taking the title, Cox also received a $15,000 donation toward his charity, The Imus Cattle Ranch for Kids with Cancer from Quest and Fort Dodge Animal Health. The winning horse was WR Shinosmoke by Shining King Cody out of Alamosa.

The competition was neck-and-neck until the moment the winning envelope was opened. Top judges Robert M. Miller D.V.M., Jack Brainard, James Gholson, Terry Crofoot and Toni Warvell took in the action both days, and even into the last minutes of competition felt it was any man’s game.

“None of us knew where it was going to go,” said Warvell. “It was so close. The clinicians were spectacular in the short-go. I was just very impressed.”

The Arkansas-bred Wood Ranch horses proved to be the challenge Boss Wrangler Thomas B. Saunders V was looking for. Competitors Tommy Garland, Ken McNabb, Mike Kevil and Cox tested their knowledge and horsemanship skills on four three-year-old American Quarter Horse geldings. The exhibitors and competitors enjoyed this year’s selection of horses. Garland even bought his colt. McNabb and Kevil, a former judge, had two of the most impressive turn-arounds going into day two, and both clinicians left the arena to standing ovations after the obstacle course round.

“It is absolutely amazing the feel that these gentlemen have developed over the years,” said celebrity host Larry Mahan. “They are a great group of clinicians. It was a beautiful thing.”

According to host Rick Lamb one of the main aspects of Road to the Horse is learning to stay flexible and adjusting to fit the situation. This year learning to adjust played a big part in the clinician’s tactics. When day two began Cox was the underdog and adjusted his program after the judges instilled a 10 minute time penalty at the beginning of the second round because he did not rest his horse for the required time during round one.

“The thing about horsemanship is that you have to learn how to adjust,” Cox said during his obstacle course round. “This colt has come a long way.”

Entertaining, exciting and educational are all words to describe the 2008 Road to the Horse competition. The American Cowgirl Chicks, the clinicians, the Extreme Mustang Makeover and the Rutherford County Sheriff’s Department added a thrilling touch to opening ceremonies. One of the weekend’s biggest surprises was the announcement of John Lyons, “America’s Most Trusted Horseman,” as a competitor in 2009.

Published by admin on 01 Apr 2008

Road To The Horse 2008 Mystery Competitor…

The 2008 Road to the Horse Mystery Competitor is well-known trainer and author Mike Kevil of Scottsdale, Arizona. Kevil has judged the event for three years and now moves inside the pen to train rather than judge. He’ll compete with returning champion Chris Cox (Mineral Wells, TX) March 1-2, 2008 in front of a packed house at Murfreesboro’s Tennessee Miller Coliseum. Trainers Tommy Garland (Powhatan, VA), Ken McNabb (Cody, WY) also join in the competition—a chance for bragging rights and prizes totaling over $15,000.

Kevil’s identity was secret until today, though a clue was released each month from June to February to help audience members make their best guesses. We sat down with Kevil to find out how he was preparing for the show and how being a competitor was different than his long-time stint as a judge for the competition.

About the Competition

Q: When did you first hear about Road to the Horse?

A: About five years ago. Owner/Producer Tootie Bland called me one day, introduced herself and told me about her competition. I love watching other people train, especially at this level. I couldn’t wait to be a part of it. As a judge, I got to watch top trainers work––and I had the best seat in the house.

Q: What makes you want to join in the competition?

A: This competition is fun, exciting and challenging. Who wouldn’t want to be a part of something like that? Every year I’ve judged I’ve stood outside those round pens dying to be inside. This year I get that chance. Win, lose or draw it’s going to be fun.

Q: What will you do to “study up” and prepare for this year’s show? Will you pay attention to your competitors’ shows or DVDs? Will you practice within the Road to the Horse time frame? Will you plan some jokes or crowd-pleasing moments? What little sneak peek can you offer?

A: Tootie asked me one day if I had watched these other guys’ shows. I told her I didn’t have cable TV. She chewed me out and told me to get it. I’m glad I did. Thank you Tootie. I’ve watched their shows and gotten a sense of who they are–but not exactly what they’re going to do in the Road to the Horse format. Of course––as a judge––I saw Chris Cox work last year for the first time and was very impressed. I’m wondering if I can slip something in his food the night before I have to compete with him—totally teasing.

As far as a sneak peek––I plan to use a teeter-totter in the free style. I’ll stand at one end and my horse will jump on the other, I’ll do two flips and land (hopefully facing forward) in the saddle and ride off. Of course––I could change my mind between now and then. At this point, it’s just a working plan.

Q: Is there something you’re looking forward to the most at the 2008 event?

A: Just being in that round pen with the clock ticking away––knowing that the very next thing I do could help me win or lose––the adrenalin rush from competition.

Q: What’s the most difficult part of competing in Road to the Horse?

A: For me, remembering everybody’s name. If you mean the actual competition, I think it’s just sticking to your game plan and not changing because of what somebody else is doing.

Q: What do you enjoy most about the Road to the Horse setting?

A: The people. They must only sell tickets to great people. The best crowds I’ve ever seen have been at Road to the Horse. I’ve met and visited with some of the nicest people at every one of these events I’ve judged.

Q: What’s the biggest difference in training a horse back at your ranch and training a horse at Road to the Horse? What will you do differently in the time and space allotted?

A: Well the time is the biggest factor. I don’t think I’ll do anything different at Road to the Horse, but if I were at home I’d spend more time at each step before moving on to the next. For this competition, you always have to keep two things in balance––the horses’ state of mind and how he’s doing compared to the other horses. Under normal training conditions, you have to wait until your horse is ready before you move on. Waiting on the horse with the Road to the Horse clock running is tough.

About You

Q: Did you ever want to be anything except a horse trainer? What was it?

A: I never had plans to be anything. I just took advantage of opportunities as they came along. At one point, I was broke and in between jobs. I’d ridden a lot of colts so to feed myself, I started one for a guy who liked the job I did and told his neighbor about me. When the neighbor gave me a couple to ride, I thought WOW all I have to do is ride horses for people and they give me money. So I put an ad in the paper, and I was in business. I told myself that if I was going to do this I’d better learn all I could. So I went to work for some trainers. The more I learned the more I wanted to learn. And that’s right where I am at today, still learning, still enjoying the job and the process.

Q: Who are your top mentors—from when you were young, high school age, young adult, and now?

A: I’ve had help from a lot of people, but the top five are:
Keith Hagler
Gene La Croix
Shorty Freeman
Don Dodge
Matlock Rose

Q: What did you learn from each?

A: Keith Hagler taught me how to get around a bad horse and pay attention to the little things. How to shoe, how to drive a team, pack a horse––just too may things to list. Without Keith and the foundation he gave me, I wouldn’t have
learned as much as I did from everyone else.

Gene La Croix taught me timing and feel and how important it is for a horse to go forward properly. Gene has the best hands I’ve ever seen––and I’ve seen a lot of good trainers.

From Shorty Freeman, I learned the art of waiting, and of how to let a horse learn from his own mistakes. Shorty taught me that doing less is more.

Don Dodge was a great horseman who excelled in a variety of disciplines. He was an excellent judge of horses and a smart man with a sound program. Don taught me to have a reason for everything I did on a horse. He used to say, “Training horses is a process that takes time. Just keep doing the right thing and wait for the process to unfold.”

Matlock Rose is another Top horseman who could read a cow and a horse as well as anyone. Matlock was a tough competitor who could most often find a way to win. He was a wealth of knowledge for me.

Q: As a professional trainer, what horse gave you the biggest challenge?

A: No single horse has been more challenging for me than all the rest. Over the years I’ve had several that were challenges. I am thankful for all of those horses because when you finish with one of the really difficult ones, you’re just a little bit better than you were when you started. That kind of education is priceless.

Q: What’s one piece of advice about horse training you hope to share with Road to the Horse audiences?

A: People should know that they can find principles of good horsemanship in every good method. Styles and methods may vary or change, but the basic principals of how a horse learns always stay the same. No single person has the “only” way. This contest has proven that to be true. We’ve seen different trainers approach this contest in different ways, but the things they all share are good basic training principals, the ability to teach the horse in a low stress, humane way, allowing the horse to figure things out rather than forcing him. Road to the Horse is a must see for anybody that is a student of horsemanship.

Q: What do you hope people will see in you?

A: Oh, man I don’t know. You know I’ve always worked very hard at what I do and I’m still very passionate about learning more about the horse. But on the other hand I try not to take myself too seriously. I have a sense of humor that just spills out sometimes. I try not to look too silly in public but sometimes …

Q: Any final words for your adoring Road to the Horse fans?

A: To my one adoring fan I want to say “love you mom”.

More About Mike Kevil:

That single statement quite nicely sums up the way Mike Kevil thinks. Often referred to as “the thinking person’s cowboy,” Mike has made a remarkable career observing, identifying, reasoning things through, then teaching what he’s learned to both horses and their owners.

Before the modern day term “Horse Whisperer” and the training practices that terminology denotes came into vogue, Mike was a master practitioner of this art. His style of patient, steady training, with an emphasis on understanding the horse, rather than forcing it to blindly yield, sets him in a class by himself. Today, in a world where more and more horse trainers and amateur enthusiasts are using methods similar to Mike’s, this horseman remains at the head of the class, beside the very best in his field.

Born in Arizona in 1953, Mike was a rodeo competitor during high school. He earned a college scholarship, but only stayed in school for a semester and a half because, “I was having more fun out of school than in… so I quit and headed for Colorado.” Although he regrets not staying in college for a formal education, Mike’s travels and the acquaintances he’s made along the way have provided him with valuable learning experiences.

In the early 1970’s following stints as a guide and outfitter in the Colorado Rockies and a colt starter and exercise rider for an Idaho based racehorse trainer, Mike returned to Arizona to look for a job “doing anything. I was flat broke. One day a friend told me about a guy who needed a horse started. I guess he thought I did an all right job, cause he recommended me to his neighbor. Pretty soon I was riding three horses at $5.00 a head, every day. It was the first time in a couple of months I’d been able to feed myself. I thought it was a pretty good way to make a living so I put an ad in the paper to get more horses.” Before long, Mike had to cancel the ad. He had more horses than he could ride. “I kept my saddle in my pickup all the time. I didn’t have a place of my own, so I made house calls. I started horses in back yards, barbed-wire arenas, open desert, plowed fields … whatever was available.”

In the winter of 1976, Mike went to work starting colts for Gene LaCroix (for many years the leading trainer of Arabian horses in the world). From there, he moved on to starting colts for two legendary cutting horse trainers, first, Shorty Freeman, then Matlock Rose.

Following those experiences, Mike went into business for himself, primarily starting colts for top trainers including his former employers and adding the likes of Don Dodge and Al Dunning. After two years, Mike was able to buy his own facility near Cave Creek, Arizona. Since then the only thing that has kept his business from growing too big to handle is Mike’s self-control and the same good sense about business that he has about horses.

Today, although Mike rides a lot of horses for individual owners, seventyfive percent of his business still comes from other trainers who send him colts to start and problem horses to fix. The types of horses that Mike rides cover the spectrum. It’s not unusual for him to step off an Arabian park horse, then onto a rope horse to heel a few steers, then to a young cutter or reiner that some top trainer thinks has great enough potential to warrant being started by Mike.

Over the years, Mike has given a good number of clinics around the world, from elegant farms in Italy, Ireland, and all over the USA, to Arizona prisons where he teaches detainees the art of gentling Bureau of Land Management (BLM) mustangs. At this juncture, however, he finds himself hard pressed to travel because of all the horses he continually has in training.

“It’s just not fair to the owners and trainers who’ve put their trust in me to run off and leave their horses in somebody else’s care,” he says. “That’s really why I’ve started trying to put everything down in writing and on video tape… so that I can share as much information as possible with as many people as I can without leaving my horses behind.”

Published by admin on 01 Apr 2008

ROAD TO THE HORSE 2008 TO FEATURE WOOD RANCH HORSES

When Road to the Horse 2008 competitors Chris Cox, Tommy Garland, Ken McNabb and the “mystery trainer” pick their individual horses to start under saddle March 1–2 at Tennessee Miller Coliseum in Murfreesboro, they are selecting more than just a weekend project. They are choosing to work with one of several Western legacies.

The 10 3-year-old geldings that will be featured in Road to the Horse this year were bred and raised by the Wood Ranch of Heber Springs, Arkansas. As if being a part of Wood Ranch’s more than 180-year-old program isn’t enough, the geldings also have the blood of some of the greatest performance horses in modern history running through their veins.

The 3-year-olds were sired by Wood Ranch stallions: Shining King Cody, BP Smart Little Pep or Blue Diamond Hancock.

Shining King Cody is a palomino who was sired by National Reined Cow Horse Association and National Reining Horse Association $2 Million Sire Shining Spark. An eye-catching golden palomino and grandson of the legendary cutting horse Doc Bar, Shining Spark has sired 51 American Quarter Horse Association World or Reserve World Champions—and that list continues to grow with every passing year.

BP Smart Little Pep is a buckskin whose bloodlines include Doc O’Lena and Doc Bar, in addition to one of the most revered performance horses of all time, Peppy San Badger. Peppy San Badger, or “Little Peppy” as he is affectionately known in the horse industry, was a three-time National Cutting Horse Association World Champion. His offspring have won titles with nearly every major horse association, including the National Reining Horse Association and, of course, the National Cutting Horse Association.

Finally, Blue Diamond Hancock, a gray stallion, is a champion reiner who was bred to be the ultimate ranch horse. Sired by Hesa Eddie Hancock, the stallion’s bloodlines include the Quarter Horse favorite Eddie Eighty, as well as the American Quarter Horse Association’s leading sire of world champion performance horses, Zan Parr Bar.

“There are a few geldings from every bloodline for the clinicians to choose from,” said breeder and owner Joe Wood Jr. “There are palominos, sorrels, grays and buckskins, so they’ll be quite the variety. But they’re all good-minded. They’re a nice group of horses.”

Normally, Wood Ranch horses are halter trained during the fall of their weanling year and then broke to ride when they are 2-year-olds. The geldings that will be used for Road to the Horse, however, have only been halter trained, per the competition’s specifications.

“They’ve just been turned out and the only times we’ve touched them is to doctor them if they needed it or to worm them,” said Wood.

Wood said his “whole family” will be in Murfreesboro for Road to the Horse 2008 and that they are all extremely excited to join the festivities.

“We’re really looking forward to it,” he said. “It’s going to be interesting to see the clinicians working with our horses and see which ones they pick and how they get along with the horses we bred.

“We feel honored to be selected as the ranch to furnish these horses. Everything I’ve heard has been positive, and we’re looking forward to getting there and being part of the program.”

Published by admin on 01 Apr 2008

Road To The Horse 2008 Webcast!

HorseCity.com is proud to present Road To The Horse 2008 Pay-Per-View webcast LIVE! Live coverage of all the action from the arena floor in Murfreesboro, TN will be webcast using HorseCity.com’s tested and dedicated web feed service system! HorseCity.com webcasts to over 1 million users each year, so you can trust that this year’s event will be awesome!

Road to the Horse has become one of the largest and most sought after events in the equine industry. Premier seating sold out in May, and the remaining seats in early January. This event is international, drawing enthusiasts from all over the world, and almost every state is represented.

Defending his title, Chris Cox will take on Tommy Garland, Ken McNabb and a yet to be named mystery clinician, showcasing their talents in gentling and starting colts. Join us to be educated, entertained and witness world class horsemanship.

Log on to www.horsecity.com/rtth/ for more information about the live webcast and to sign up beginning February 12, 2008 at 1 pm EST. .

Published by admin on 01 Apr 2008

Free Admission to Road to the Horse’s Shopping Extravaganza Sponsored by Prime Performance Nutrition, February 29, 2008

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

MEDIA CONTACT
Road to the Horse
Owner/ Producer Tootie Bland
Ride the Remuda Productions
tootie@roadtothehorse.com
325-736-5000

Free Admission to Road to the Horse’s Shopping Extravaganza Sponsored by Prime Performance Nutrition, February 29, 2008

MURFREESBORO, Tenn., January 29, 2008- It’s time to shop, stock up and discover Road to the Horse secrets. Road to the Horse Owner and Producer Tootie Bland (of Noodle, Texas) opens the doors to Murfreesboro, Tennessee’s Tennessee Miller Coliseum Friday February 29, 2008 (4 to 7 p.m.) for a night of horse-themed shopping open to the public, sponsored by Prime Performance Nutrition (www.primeperformancenutrition.com), and loaded with more than 100 booths. Road to the Horse tickets not required; Shopping Extravaganza admission is free. Bonus: The fourth Road to the Horse clinician-a mystery until the day before the event-will be revealed during the free shopping night. The four competing clinicians (Chris Cox, Tommy Garland, Ken McNabb and the mystery contestant) will be available to sign autographs.

“We’ve pumped up the shopping experience once again,” Bland says. “Jewelry, art, conversion trucks and trailers, custom hats, top western clothing, horse health supplies–everything for horse lovers.”

Bland works with expert trade-show coordinator Ronda May (of Early, Texas) to create a fun-filled environment where Road to the Horse attendees can shop before and during the colt-starting event.

The official Road to the Horse booth will be larger than ever and offer logo wear such as crew and hooded sweatshirts, embroidered ball caps, hat and t-shirt combos, fleece outerwear, bandanas, bracelets, shirts for the competing celebrities to autograph. Adult and youth sizes will be available.

Directions:

The Tennessee Miller Coliseum is located at 304B West Thompson Lane in Murfreesboro, Tennessee.

I-24 East from Nashville …Take exit 76, turn left at the stop light onto Medical Center Parkway. Turn left onto Thompson Lane. Drive approximately 5 miles; Coliseum is on left.

For more information about Road to the Horse 2008, visit http://www.roadtothehorse.com, or call 325.736.5000. Road to the Horse is owned and produced by Tootie Bland/ Ride the Remuda Productions. 2008 sponsors include: Charity Challenge Sponsor Fort Dodge Animal Health; Presenting Sponsor Horse & Rider; and sponsors Absolute Innovations, Wick Buildings, Wahl Clipper, Cinch / Cruel Girl, Gist Silversmiths, Martin Saddlery, Horse Media Group, Horsecity.com, Rockin J Horse Stalls, W W Livestock Sales, John Deere, American Cowboy Magazine, LubriSyn, Valley Vet, Samson, Prime Performance Nutrition, American Spirit Manufacturing, John’s Ariat Country, Horse South, Horse Exchange, and Hoofbeats.

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