Underdogs Become Wonderdogs at $553,000 Rodeo Corpus Christi

By: Kendra Santos

World champs to unknown underdogs, rising stars to rodeo retirees, moms and dads with day jobs to weekend warriors by choice, the $553,000 spectacle that was Rodeo Corpus Christi 2022 had it all, and the World Champions Rodeo Alliance lived up to its claim of being #AllForRodeo yet again. Does it get any better than a local horseshoer by the name of Quisto Lopez teaming up with fellow area team roper Daniel Braman and outgunning reigning Champs of the World Kaleb Driggers and Junior Nogueira in the Triple Crown of Rodeo Round presented by the Lazy E Arena? Not if they call you Quisto.

Team ropers Daniel Braman and Quisto Lopez were hometown heroes to the Rodeo Corpus Christi crowd. Bull Stock Media Photo

“My dad brought me to slacks here at Rodeo Corpus Christi when I was a little kid, so this rodeo has been part of my whole life,” beamed the happy heading champ, who was suddenly $16,600 richer, as was his heeler, Braman. “This is my biggest win ever at one rodeo, and it’s amazing to have this happen so close to home. I think I’ve entered this rodeo six times, and placed here five times, so it’s been very good to me. I’ve been rodeoing with Cody Thornton this year, but he couldn’t come to Corpus because he’s on his honeymoon. I guess it was just meant to be for Daniel and me this time.

“The most special thing to me about winning this rodeo is that the team roping is sponsored by Hamman Excavating, which was owned by my best friend Bobby Pullin, who died a year and a half ago. His family stayed behind this rodeo to honor Bobby’s memory, and to win something that still has his hand on it means so much me.”

For any of you contestants out there who can’t quite be sure about the financial opportunities funded by the WCRA, Lopez got into Rodeo Corpus Christi—where no entry fees were paid by contestants—by nominating one rodeo he was already going to.

“I squeaked in on the very last day nominations were open by nominating the rodeo in Bulverde, Texas, and won it with Colton Johnson,” Quisto smiled. “Turned out to be a heck of an investment.”

Also against all odds is the fact that Deklan Garland is the leader of the International Professional Rodeo Association bull riding pack, and he’s yet to enter an IPRA rodeo in 2022. The 22-year-old certified nurse’s aid by trade has won back-to-back IPRA bull riding titles in 2020-21. Garland went head-to-head with fellow Oklahoma native bull riders Wyatt Rogers and Sage Kimzey—yes, seven-time and reigning World Champion Bull Rider Sage Kimzey—in Corpus Christi’s Triple Crown of Rodeo Round.

Deklan Garland leaped up the IPRA bull riding standings ladder with the Corpus Christi win. Bull Stock Media Photo

“Up to $10,000 of money won at WCRA events counts toward the IPRA standings, and between winning $4,200 at Cowtown Christmas in Fort Worth in December and $6,000 here at Rodeo Corpus Christi, I’m now #1 in the IPRA—all thanks to the WCRA,” said Garland, who enjoyed the beach so much that he also skipped town with a sunburn surrounding that smile. “The only reason I’m #1 and have a jump on my third straight IPRA championship is the WCRA.”

Barrel racing wife and mom Halyn Lide was so happy for her 10-year-old sorrel horse Keeper that she didn’t even try to contain herself. With same-night runs in the Showdown and Triple Crown of Rodeo Rounds, Lide and Keeper hauled $17,800 five hours home to China Spring, Texas.

Halyn jockeyed Jettin Ta Heaven—aka Keeper—to a $17,800 payday at Rodeo Corpus Christi.
Bull Stock Media Photo

“He wanted this win, and he deserves it,” Halyn said. “We raised Keeper, and my (veterinarian) husband Aaron put the very first rides on him. He said early on, “He’s a keeper,” and that’s how he got his name. We’ve placed at places like Cheyenne (Wyoming) and Salinas (California), but Keeper’s been waiting a long time for our first big win.”

The Lides have two young children. Lawton’s 5 and Alston’s 3. On top of raising kids, Halyn helps Aaron by keeping the books at their Texas Animal Medical Center. There was horse and human wonderment as they all walked away with the prized Rodeo Corpus Christi surfboard in tow.

“Keeper’s cool. I’m not. I don’t know what he’s going to do with a surfboard, but he’s who earned it,” smiled Halyn, who barely beat out Arkansas cowgirl Ari-Anna Flynn for the big win.

Tie-down roper Kincade Henry is thinking big, as in $1 million WCRA Triple Crown of Rodeo big.
Bull Stock Media Photo

Texas tie-down roper Kincade Henry, who’s 20, dominated both the Showdown and Triple Crown of Rodeo Rounds in his trademark event. He and his roan, game-changing horse, Mario, 16, loaded up $16,600 before leaving town. But make no mistake—Henry has his sights set on the $1 million Triple Crown of Rodeo bonus that’s up for grabs to anyone who can win three straight WCRA majors in a single season.

“I can’t complain about $16,000, but we’re all here to try to win three in a row and win the million—you can’t pass that up,” said the sophomore student at Panola College in Carthage, Texas, who plans to transfer to Texas A&M Commerce to pursue a bachelor’s degree in business come fall.

The late RE Josey—husband of ProRodeo Hall of Fame Barrel Racer Martha—first put a rope in Henry’s hand when he was 12. Josey died in February, but Kincade will return to the Josey Ranch in Karnack, Texas, to help people like his dad, Chad Henry, carry on RE’s 50-plus-year tradition of the annual weeklong roping school in June.

“If it wasn’t for RE, I’d probably be playing baseball,” Kincade said. “I owe him a lot, so I’ll go back to the place where I grew up roping and help carry on what he started.”

This kid’s gathered great inspiration from the other end of the arena, as well.

“My coach at Panola, Jeff Collins, the 2000 world champion bareback rider, has a mental game and mindset on life that’s unreal,” Kincade continued. “He doesn’t know a lick about calf roping, but he’s helped me become a winner.”

RC Landingham goes 87 big ones on the back of Frontier Rodeo’s Painted Smoke for the win. Bull Stock Media Photo

Southpaw tie-down roper Jaxon Clegg finished second to Henry, and Riley Webb—who last summer took his shot at becoming the WCRA’s first-ever overnight millionaire in Salt Lake City—was third.

California cowboy RC Landingham is a three-year NFR veteran, so is way past underdog status now. But going head-to-head with World Champ Tim O’Connell and fellow NFR bareback rider Chad Rutherford in the Triple Crown of Rodeo Round is no joke. In the end, Landingham’s 87 big ones aboard Frontier Rodeo’s Painted Smoke was surfboard worthy, RC cashed checks totaling $18,000, and Iowa’s O’Connell and Louisiana’s Rutherford split second and third with 83.5 points apiece.

“To win $18,000 in one place this time of year is a big deal,” Landingham noted. “It’s nice to be able to hang out in one place for a week and still go home with $18 grand. The cost of fuel and flights has gone way up, so a win like this one will go a long way toward the cost of rodeoing this summer. None of us would be here if it wasn’t worth it.”

Working mom Jackie Crawford added to her living-legend status with another W at Rodeo Corpus Christi.

Cowgirl cool was 20-time World Champion Jackie Crawford lighting things up for $16,600 in the breakaway roping with a scorching 1.82-second show stopper, with her littles, Creed and Journey, watching momma work. So sweet to see 20-year-old Bradi Good come oh so close at 2.14 to upstaging a living legend the likes of Jackie.

Coming off of back-to-back Wrangler National Finals Rodeo qualifications, it was no surprise to see Wyatt Casper strike for $15 grand in last night’s Triple Crown of Rodeo Round after racking up 90.5 points on Dakota Rodeo’s Bartender. Four-time NFR bronc rider Cole Elshere was second. Cameron Messier from Herald, California, who’s currently cracked pro rodeo’s top 50, placed third and proved he also belongs on center stage.

Wyatt Casper did work with Dakota Rodeo’s Bartender to the tune of 90.5 points for the victory lap and saddle bronc riding surfboard. Bull Stock Media Photo

Steer wrestling champ Riley Duvall has bulldogged at Rodeo’s Super Bowl four times now, and was by far the busiest bulldogger at Rodeo Corpus Christi. In the three-man Triple Crown of Rodeo Round, Riley hazed for reserve champ and soda-truck delivery driver Tony Aska…then slammed his steer in 4.15 seconds to barely edge Aska…then hopped back on a hazing horse to try and help Tanner Bruner try to beat him. That’s a bulldogger for you, and why it seemed so right to see Riley skip town $16,200 richer.

Riley Duvall helped a number of his friendly rivals from the hazing side at Rodeo Corpus Christi, and also got the 4.15-second steer wrestling win in the Triple Crown of Rodeo Round. Bull Stock Media Photo

Yes, Rodeo Corpus Christi 2022 had it all. And when the rodeo athletes who turn on the afterburners it takes to thrill a packed house of people who purchased tickets are rightly rewarded, well, that’s as good as it gets.

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