Gifted
By Kendra Santos

Beaver and team roping partner Cole Bigbee
put the spin on their team roping run at the ’06
NFR. |
ON TOP OF TOUGH, ON TOP OF DETERMINED, JOE BEAVER POSSESSES
A RARE TALENT FOR DOING IT BEST—OVER AND OVER.
As the professional rodeo world readies to roll into the 49th
annual Wrangler National Finals Rodeo, December 6 to 15 in Las
Vegas, someone will be noticeably
absent.
His name is Joe Beaver, but in Vegas
he’s just as well-known as “Joe
Fabulous.” In 1985—the year
ProRodeo’s Super Bowl moved to the
Thomas and Mack Center—then young
gun Beaver made a huge splash in the
sport. That season’s Professional Rodeo
Cowboys Association Tie-Down Roping
and Overall Rookie of the Year won his
first of eight world championships.
He’s since banked eight world titles—
five in tie-down roping and three world
all-around championships—and last
December won more than any other
NFR contestant to capture the 2006
NFR all-around crown. Between the tiedown
roping and team roping events,
Beaver has 22 finals qualifications under
his belt. Is it any wonder they call the
Thomas and Mack “The House That Joe
Built”?

At 42, and with eight world titles to his
name, Beaver is at the top of his game. |
The guy is flat amazing. He’s won
more than any other cowboy in the history
of professional rodeo, with PRCA
career earnings of $2,872,454.
Beaver is taking an injury-forced
timeout in 2007 after having hip surgery
the week after last year’s NFR. Think
about this: In a field of 20-something
studs, Beaver—who just turned 42—
placed in seven of the 10 tie-down roping
rounds. He and his team roping partner,
21-year-old Cole Bigbee, placed in
half the rounds in that event. Beaver basically dominated a field of guys half
his age—gimping along with the handicap
of a serious hip injury all the way.
It’s a pretty devastating blow to have
to bow out for a year after winning the
all-around at the ultimate cowboy contest.
No one loves life—or winning—
more than Joe Beaver. Losing his dad
and mentor, Walter, last fall did nothing
but boost Beaver’s lifelong passion for
going all out all day, every day.
“If you look at the guys who’ve won a
lot throughout rodeo history—Jim
Shoulders, Harry Tompkins, Larry
Mahan, Phil Lyne, Ty Murray—they all
have that extra edge,” said Beaver,
who’s also extremely handy as a rodeo
commentator in the broadcast booth
when he’s out hurt. “It’s that inside
killer instinct that just comes to the top
when you have to be your best. I think
you’re born with it. God gives it to you
and says, ‘Here. If you’re tough enough
and smart enough to use it, and you’re
strong enough to use it when times are
tough, it’s all yours.’ In the end, it comes
out. And you never lose it. It’s an extra
spark inside you that kicks out.
“The drive that keeps me going is
that special spark that certain people
are hit with. I’m not saying we’re special.
But we do have a different view.
It’s just in you. It’s what makes you get
out there and work hard. Until it fizzles
out, I don’t think you can fight it.
But I think you have to be smart
enough not to override it when it’s
over. When that spark fizzles and it goes, you need to be smart enough to
say it’s time to step down.”
ProRodeo Hall of Famer Beaver’s
got gold buckles in each of the last
three decades, and there are more
glory days ahead.
“I’ve got a gift,” the Huntsville,
Texan, states gratefully. “If you’re lucky
enough to have a gift, you should use it
until it no longer benefits you or your
sport. I’m not done. And until the day
comes that I can’t compete at the very
top level, you can bet your butt I’ll be
out there practicing and trying as hard
as is humanly possible. Nobody loves to
rope more than me.”
Stampede
on Stage

Country vocalist Josh Turner is part of the lineup of performers for this year's
Texas Stampede. |
Featuring not only exceptional rodeo
action during a three-day event but also powerful
musical performances, the Texas Stampede, a
fundraiser for Children’s Medical Center, once
again will tempt even the slickest of city slickers
into boot-stompin’ fun Nov. 9 to 11 at American
Airlines Center in downtown Dallas. Highlights include the Wrangler ProRodeo Tour
Championship, in which the Top 10 competitors still in
contention for the world title following the Ariat Playoff
Series meet the toughest riding and roping stock to provide
a showcase of the sport’s best of the best.
The Stampede music tradition breaks loose in concerts
by Daughtry, Josh Turner, and Kellie Pickler,
three hot, new talents who’ll take the stage at Texas
Stampede to deliver their own unique brand of energy,
electricity, and excitement.
And the whole family will enjoy the Sky Ranch
Rodeo U, an on-the-dirt experience for kids ages 6 to
16 to learn first-hand the ways of the cowboy, and the
Children’s Medical Center Christmas Stampede, a
holiday marketplace with appeal for traditional Texas
as well as city slickers. For more information, visit
www.texasstampede.org.
New Beat for
Bull Riders
Professional Bull Riders, Inc.
was pleased to announce that
as of Mon., July 16, it officially took
up residence in its new corporate
headquarters in Pueblo, Colo.
The new PBR World Headquarters is
located at 101 W. Riverwalk on the
Historic Arkansas Riverwalk in Pueblo.
The PBR was to phase in employees
over the next month.
PBR Chief Executive Officer Randy
Bernard stated, “I am very pleased that
our move to Pueblo is finally a reality.
The Pueblo Economic Development
Corporation, Pueblo’s city leaders, and
the entire community have embraced
us from the beginning. We’re excited to
call Pueblo home.”
The PBR’s new contact information
is Professional Bull Riders, Inc., 101 W.
Riverwalk, Pueblo, CO 81003, 719-242-
2800. For more information, visit
www.pbrnow.com, or contact Angela
Hiatt at 719-242-2800, ext. 380.
Crossings
Don King, cowboy, saddlemaker, creator
of the Sheridan style saddle, and
founder of King’s Saddlery and
King’s Museum in Sheridan, Wyo., of
natural causes, in Sheridan, on July 27.
He was 83.
COLEN H. SWEETEN JR., noted
speaker, Western historian, and cowboy
poet, of cancer, in Springville,
Utah, on Aug. 15. He was 88. (See also
p. 160.)
WAYNE JENNINGS, former top
Professional Rodeo Cowboys
Association steer wrestler and tiedown
roper, of a heart attack, in
Payson, Ariz., on Aug. 19. He was 73
“National Day” Brings
Duke Unveiling

John Wayne, the legend, will live on in bronze at the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum. |
The National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in
Oklahoma City, Okla., announced the newest addition to its collection, a
heroic-sized bronze to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the birth of
movie star, American icon, and National Cowboy and Western Heritage
Museum supporter John Wayne.
“The sculpture is in memory of the continued culmination of more than 40 years
of association with Mr. Wayne and his family,” said Don Reeves, the Museum’s
McCasland Chair of Cowboy Culture.
Wayne was the first recipient of a Wrangler Award in the major motion picture
category. The Alamo was honored in 1961 during the inaugural Western Heritage
Awards, held at the prestigious Skirvin Hotel in downtown Oklahoma City. On
June 26, 1965, the popular actor led the parade celebrating the official opening of
the Museum. He served on the Museum’s Board of Directors until his heath
declined in 1979. He died that same year.
The sculpture was created by Edward J. Fraughton, commissioned by the
Museum, and purchased with support from the Kerr-McGee Corporation.
Fraughton has been active in the Museum’s annual Prix de West art exhibition for
23 years. The sculpture depicts Wayne as he appeared in the 1960s during the
height of his career. The 8-foot, 8-inch bronze was unveiled July 28, 2007, during
National Day of the American Cowboy festivities.
Kitchen Cares
for Cowboys
A popular proverb states that
the quickest way to a man’s heart is
through his stomach. Since 1998,
the wife-husband tandem of Linda
and Ted Wiese have taken that to
heart with the Cowboy Bistro, a
mobile kitchen that serves complimentary
meals to cowboys and
cowgirls at a handful of rodeos
across the country.
Feeding stomachs is one thing. The
Wiese couple takes it the extra mile.
They feed souls too.
“When you want to get close to
someone, sit down across the table and
visit with them,” said Ted, an ordained
cowboy minister. “When we feed them,
it builds good relationships. That’s
what we need to do.”
At no charge to cowboys—the couple
depends only on donations—Linda, a
chef, prepares homestyle meals from
scratch, while Ted concocts his worldfamous
sweet tea, in addition to peach
and blackberry cobblers.
It all evolved from a vision to provide
a home away from home for cowboys
and, at the same time, offer nutritious
meals instead of candy and snacks from
the concession stands.
We serve one meal, and we bless it and
bless the cowboys,” Ted Wiese said. “We
love all of them like a mom and dad do.
Some of these guys, maybe their father
never told them that they love them.
They all need to be told that. And we do.”
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