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rodeo roundup

Keith Martin with Outhier and AC’s Kendra Santos.
Keith Martin with Outhier and AC’s Kendra Santos.

More Cowboy Than Most
By Kendra Santos

Buckle up & hold fast - it's the greatest show on dirt. Only an elite few excel at both ends of the Arena

The concept of the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association’s Linderman Award intrigues me. It honors competitors who win not just in roughstock events, but in timed events as well—a rare accomplishment as rodeo competition trends toward single-event specialists.

I had the honor of presenting the 2007 Linderman Award buckle to Mike Outhier at the 2008 San Antonio Stock Show and Rodeo in February. The recipient must win at least $1,000 in at least three different events, including one or more from each end of the arena. It’s awarded in memory of late World Champion All- Around Cowboy Bill Linderman.

“Guys who’ve won it in the past were the toughest in the game,” Outhier said with a grin when I spoke with him behind the chutes at the event. “I wouldn’t dare say I’m in the same class as them, but it’s a real honor to be on that list.”

Outhier’s a Wrangler National Finals Rodeo saddle bronc rider. His rodeo repertoire also included bareback riding and tie-down roping when he won his first Linderman Award in 2004. This time around, he rode broncs, roped calves, and team roped.

Outhier mentions Phil Lyne and Ace Berry as two of his Linderman-like role models. We both presumed that they were both past recipients but, as irony would have it, two of the most impressive versatility feats in rodeo history both occurred at the 1972 National Finals Rodeo. That’s the year Lyne, who won three-straight Linderman Awards from 1970 to 1972 and another in 1976, won both the tie-down roping and bull riding titles at the NFR. Berry topped the bareback riding (for the second consecutive year) and team roping events that year, but Lyne took home the award.

Horse Sense

“Horses are the same from the day they're born to the day they die. They are only changed by the people who train them.”
Tom Smith

Just how amazing is it to excel to that degree at both ends of the arena? I called in two of the sport’s all-time greats (and two of my all-time favorite cowboys), ProRodeo Hall of Famers Joe Beaver and Ty Murray, to weigh in.

“What Phil Lyne was able to do at both ends of the arena makes him the best allaround cowboy of all time in my book,” says timed-event sensation Beaver, who’s won three world all-around crowns and five tie-down titles.

We all admire those who can do things we can’t, and Beaver’s the first to know that his 230-pound stature would not suit him in any of the roughstock events.

“Winning at both ends is a rare and amazing feat.”

“I’m not taking anything away from Ty [who won a record seven world all-around crowns at the roughstock end] or Trevor [Brazile, the reigning and four–time world champion all-around cowboy in timedevents], but winning at both ends is a rare and amazing feat,” Beaver says.

Murray worked every event in his youth, but at roughly half Beaver’s size, a steer wrestling or tie-down roping career just wasn’t in the cards. He never set out to win the Linderman, in part because trying to work both sets of chutes is, in his words, “a logistical nightmare.” Besides the ever-toughening level of competition in every event, Murray flew a lot while working the three roughstock events. Having to haul horses would have made it nearly impossible to compete at world-title-contender speed.

“Back in the olden days, when guys like Jim Shoulders and even Phil Lyne were rodeoing, rodeo was a lot simpler and a lot more fun because the cowboys went to one rodeo town and stayed there for the duration,” Murray says. “It’s more of a rat race now, and with all the trips you’d have to make back and forth to work every event, you really couldn’t do it at a world championship level. My hat’s off to every guy who’s ever won the Linderman. What Phil Lyne did was unbelievable. It’s very difficult to be world-class at both ends of the arena.”

Linderman, winner of world all-around championships in 1950 and ’53, also won world bareback riding, steer wrestling, and saddle bronc riding titles. He was the PRCA-predecessor RCA’s president from 1951-57, and served as secretary/treasurer. Linderman died in a 1965 plane crash on the way from RCA headquarters in Denver to Washington State. He was 45.

My dad happened by my house one evening and, when he noticed how fascinated I was by the legend of Bill Linderman, he told me about a framed check he’d once seen hanging in the former Pig ‘n’ Whistle restaurant in Denver years after Linderman’s death. As the story has been passed along— cowboy to cowboy—Linderman, a regular there, stopped off to cash a check on his way to the airport. When the barkeep asked him to write his address on the check, Linderman playfully wrote “Heaven.” His plane crashed later that day in Salt Lake City. It is said that he emerged from the wreckage once, but went back in to try and save fellow passengers. He was never seen again.

Kendra Santos has been Rodeo Editor for AC since the magazine’s founding in 1994. She lives with her husband and two sons in Creston, Calif.

 

 



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