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By Brian Dygert
The podcast currently has 33 episodes available.
Epic insights from the #2 reining rider of all time, Shawn Flarida.
Lesson Learned from Spooks Gotta Whiz and The Run for a Million. Should the Run for the Million be reining's superbowl? Bringing the great Spooks Gotta Whiz back to the Run for the Million in 2024. Along with a great discussion around Open aged event levels and 1 rider and 1 horse entry.
Gabriel Borges, #8 Open Rider in 2023 and climbing the ranks fast. We discuss life after the futurity and 1 Rider: 1 Horse open aged events. Fairness and access to horsepower as life after the futurity is here.
A review and detailed analysis of the 2024 Open NRHA Derby competition. Officiating analytics from the open derby 2024 in OKC. Answering the questions and addressing the myths around officiating are analyzed and discussed. What do the results from this year's NRHA open derby say? This episode compares the 2024 NRHA Open derby to the first half of 2024 open aged events.
Million Dollar week is in year 5 as we look at 2023 Run for the Million numbers, stats and best of the best rider' list for 2024.
A compilation judging analytics from open aged events in reining officiating from 2023 are analyzed and discussed. What do the results from this year's NRBC and 100X Stales say? This episode compares the 2023 judging trends to the first half of 2024 open aged events.
The depth of Open competition continues to drive forward and set new trends and norms for the industry. This episode looks at the numbers set by 13 major events and over 2000 open entries in 2023 to create the standard. We slice and dice the numbers and scores including penalties applied and not applied along with the maneuver evaluation decisions made. We look at the go rounds and finals of the 2024 NRBC and 2024 100X Cowtown Classic Stakes.
A new athletic discipline enters the market: we look at and discuss the new Ranch Fuel Super Slide as a new officiating scale is introduced. We share and explain the stats of the officials performance and error rate in the open aged event.
The Show Rundown
2023 Summary of standards and numbers as set by officials
Did the judges use the scale, and does it matter?
Over 88% of maneuver marks are scored between -.5 to +.5, even at the aged events
Does penalty application being non-unanimous affect the final scores?
Crossing 0 and errors: why do they happen so much?
This episode looks at the standards set by 2023 events and then discusses the 4 major events held so far this year. Graphs illustrates why the scores come out the way they do and how hard it is at the top of the class, including analytics for making the cut for finals or the cut for purse payout at events like The Run For A Million Qualifier at The Cactus Classic Reining and the NRBC.
Heads Up
This episode is best consumed by video due to the graphic and visual nature of it. Watch directly via the website, or on Youtube or Spotify for the best Cowboy Office experience.
Keep Your Questions Coming
The Cowboy Office continues to address all of the amazing questions we’ve received since the show started … don’t worry, we keep a list. In honor of you and your viewership, stay tuned and check the website for blog articles now being published. And don’t forget, keep ‘em coming. We are always working on these throughout our series.
RESOURCES:
100X Shows & Events: https://100xshows.com/
Cactus Reining Score Sheets: https://brumleyevents.com/pdf/cactusreiningclassic/2024/60scoresheets.pdf
Production and marketing by ConsultMent.Agency: https://www.consultment.agency/
COWBOY OFFICE SHOW
Website: CowboyOffice.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/cowboyofficeshow
Instagram: www.instagram.com/cowboyofficeshow
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/cowboy-office
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[email protected]
The top scores were three points lower than the 2023 qualifying scores. The numbers are in and the analysis is complete. What do the results from this years’ qualifier say? This episode compares 2024 to last year’s qualifying event.
Heads Up
This episode is best consumed by video due to the graphic and visual nature of it. Watch directly via the website, or on Youtube or Spotify for the best experience.
The depth of Open competition continues to drive forward and find new peaks and valleys as 10 riders get qualified for the Finals in August in Vegas. An in depth analysis of the scores, what they say, how to interrupt them and what do they mean? This episode slices and dices the numbers and scores including penalties applied and not applied along with the maneuver evaluation decisions made. We focus on the top riders that get qualified for the Run For The Million. We look at and review runs that were at the cut line for making the top 10 . We share and explain the stats of the officials performance and error rate on the entire open aged event.
The Show Rundown
Top 10 Qualify for 2024 RFM in Vegas: What the scores say.
Maneuver scoring: Can officials identify and report levels of excellence?
Maneuver spreads: How can the maneuver scores be good and poor at the same time ?
Does penalty application non-unanimous affect the final scores?
Officiating for Reining: Are we ready to step up our judging system?
Performance Rate for officiating. What does the Error Rate say?
This episode looks at examples of excellent rollbacks with clips from Nathan Piper rider Doctor VooDoo, Duane Latimer, riding CS Especially Moody and Martin Muehlstaetter riding Good Time To Tashya. This episode illustrates why rollbacks are the hardest maneuver to mark consistently in the sport of reining.
This episode displays graphs on statistics and data from the Top 10 qualified runs along with graphs of officiating performance and officiating error rate including penalties applied and penalties applied that are not-unanimous across all official score cards.
Runs used in video review and analysis are:
Trevor Dare riding Spat Toy Boy Gun
Cira Baeck riding Out Of The Furnace
Tom McCutcheon riding Super Marioo
Matt Mills riding Guns and Dynamite
Keep Your Questions Coming
The Cowboy Office continues to address all of the amazing questions we’ve received since the show started … don’t worry, we keep a list. In honor of you and your viewership, stay tuned and check the website for blog articles now being published.
ONE MORE THING
The American Horse Council 2023 Economic Impact Study is out.. You can purchase your copy at ahc.org.
RESOURCES:
Brumley Management Group: https://brumleyevents.com/pdf/cactusreiningclassic/2024/60scoresheets.pdf
Production and marketing by ConsultMent.Agency: https://www.consultment.agency/
COWBOY OFFICE SHOW
Website: CowboyOffice.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/cowboyofficeshow
Instagram: www.instagram.com/cowboyofficeshow
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/cowboy-office
TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@cowboyofficeshow
[email protected]
Learning from the past, listening to the present, looking to the future. Bart Corrington taps into his Reining History 101 Facebook group and industry experience to give us insights into the reining industry.
Bart Corrington
- Owner/Operator of BC Reining Horses, Tallahassee, FL
- Two-time NRHA World Champion
- Horse trainer for 29 years
- FB Group: Reining History 101 with over 15,000 members
In This Episode:
Consider this: The NRHA reported its 2022 membership at 14,384. Reining History 101 boasts over 15,000 members.
How does IHSA fit into the puzzle?
Bart’s mother coaches the Florida State IHSA team which operates out of BC Reining Horses. A large percentage of IHSA competitors don’t come from a horse background. This gives Bart a glimpse into the draw of the equine industry on the rest of the world.
- IHSA vs NCEA
- Structure of competition
Reining History 101
NRHA was founded in 1966 on three pillars: Good Ground, Good Judges, Good Purses
- Ground is good
- Judging is satisfactory
- Purses are growing
Is our growth sustainable?
- Nomination Programs
- Shows competing for the same exhibitor pool (this pool is not growing!)
- Newcomers ability to succeed is questionable
Bart’s take on shows in the Southeast and the influence of the Cuban culture
We are an industry that claims to be businesslike and professional but we manage with a club or hobby mindset.
Keep Your Questions Coming
Email questions to [email protected]. We’ll continue to catalog your questions for our blog or next question and answer segment.
RESOURCES:
Production and marketing by ConsultMent.Agency
Reining History 101 Facebook - Click Here
COWBOY OFFICE SHOW
Website: CowboyOffice.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/cowboyofficeshow
Instagram: www.instagram.com/cowboyofficeshow
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/cowboy-office
TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@cowboyofficeshow
[email protected]
In today’s episode, we take a look at the 2023 NRHA Futurity. We talk about the tie for Open Level 4 Champion, scores, spreads, and use of the judging scale. We don’t forget about the Non Pro Futurity and address the industry buzz around Lane Colston and Adam Donahue’s finals runs.
Congratulations to the Winners!
-- Level 4 Futurity Champions Brian Bell, Crystalized Whizkey owned by Wallace Wood
-- Level 4 Reserve Champions Andrea Fappani and Inferno Thirty Five owned by Stephen Archer
-- Level 4 Non Pro Champions Lane Colston and Gunna Be Painted
In This Episode:
Let’s Talk Ties
225.5 tie between Brian Bell on Crystalized Whizkey and Andrea Fappani on Inferno Thirty Five. The stakes: 350K to the Champion, 150K to Reserve and the Title of 2023 NRHA Futurity Champion.
Andrea Fappani and Inferno Thirty Five were last in the draw. The judges’ held this score for a review which acted as a catalyst creating a perfect storm of confusion in a run off situation. Would there be a run off? No, go with awards. Wait, yes, clear the arena! Um, let’s wait an hour.
Is it time to change the Futurity Conditions to eliminate the run off option? This is the pinnacle event of the reining industry. Why not require a run off to crown a definitive Champion? No one wants a tie in the Super Bowl, and it shouldn’t be an option at the NRHA Futurity.
We Don’t Judge Style
Style varied greatly between champion & co-champion. Neither are great movers, did that impact scores in circles and rundowns? It was refreshing to see multiple styles perform well and get paid at the highest level. This is what judging has been teaching for years and we saw it played out on the main stage this year.
Set Up for Success with Pattern Selection
Pattern selection for Go 1 and Go 2 was phenomenal. Pattern 12 allowed separation and provided an excellent filtering process, then pattern 15 thinned out the semi-finalists with some challenging maneuvers.
New Schedule Helped Everyone
The extra days opened the schedule and allowed for shorter days. The show had good length of working days for judges/staff/exhibitors/horses. Everyone performs better when well rested.
Scoring Analytics
Average cut Scores were 1 to 1 ½ points higher in 2022 compared to this year. Was competition different or was judging more conservative?
Judging was consistent throughout the entire Futurity, where they were in the draw made no difference, judges did a great job sorting the competition.
With three-year-olds being this dynamic, what can we expect from them in the next two years? Genetics, training, and development practices have allowed them to mature at this level. But they still need to be brought along and developed to keep them performing well for longer.
Non Pro Futurity Buzz
NP Champions: Lane Colston and Gunna Be Painted
Adam Donahue’s Circles - did they get marked appropriately?
Keep Your Questions Coming
Email questions to [email protected]. We’ll continue to catalog your questions for our blog or next question and answer segment.
RESOURCES:
Production and marketing by ConsultMent.Agency
COWBOY OFFICE SHOW
Website: CowboyOffice.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/cowboyofficeshow
Instagram: www.instagram.com/cowboyofficeshow
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/cowboy-office
TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@cowboyofficeshow
[email protected]
Maneuver scoring was implemented for the first time and reining and the working western industry was changed.
Is it time for a new revolution?
Some years become pivotal points in history. The equine industry, the working western world, and the reining industry can look at 1985 as the year everything changed.
What was this industry altering catalyst?
The introduction of the new reining scoring system. Until this point, judging was subjective with seemingly arbitrary scores assigned based on one judge’s opinion at the end of the run. With the introduction of this new officiating system, a standard would be set, education would become required, and scores would be derived from a maneuver by maneuver objective evaluation.
Soon the entire horse industry would embrace the revolutionary system and virtually all pattern classes would develop a maneuver scoring system. Judges in all disciplines would become trained observers rather than individuals offering their arbitrary opinions.
Today’s Guest:
John Snobelen: The mind, teacher and mentor to the reining officiating system
NRHA Hall of Fame (1994)
Non Pro & owner
Mentor, judge, innovator
Past Minister of Education for the province of Ontario
“If we were wine - we would be good by now - fine & priceless.” John Snobelen - 2023
The Show Rundown
In this episode, Brian Dygert and Jody Brainard reflect with John Snobelen about the innovative mindset the leaders of the reining industry used to create the NRHA judging system. They look at 1985 as a focal point to find lessons we can use today.
Reining Judging System
The judging system has worked for 38 years. Or has it? The industry is three times bigger than it was in 1985. Competition has evolved but the judging system has not. What was once innovative is now outdated. Is it time for a system update?
The judging system needs to be able to handle the highly evolved levels of competition. The industry continues to get better, horses are more dynamic, fine distinctions separate the winning runs, and technical skills continue to elevate competition.
Brian and Jody ask these questions to special guest John Snobelen and he provides unorthodox and unexpected answers. John, who spent a career studying leadership, change, and courage, offers perspective not just on the tools needed for reining judges, but on human behavior, judging performance, and that improvement itself may not be enough.
Challenges the Officiating System Needs to Handle
Multiple Levels
Running all levels (1-4 in Aged events) concurrently creates inconsistent results
Consider the difference between a Rookie 70 and an Open 70
Re-evaluate the standard from the bottom up
Depth of Competition
It takes a 220 or better to make the finals in major events, like the 100x Reining in Tulsa
Winning runs average 226-230
Volume of entries creates classes lasting multiple days
Focus fatigue, consistency spread over multiple days
Need more tools to make fine distinctions (½ points are not enough)
Challenges the Industry Needs to Consider
Economics of earnings
Purse distribution
Industry growth and development
Continued Education
Officiating Management
Politics & Economic pressures
Change Management
Keep Your Questions Coming
Email questions to [email protected]. We’ll continue to catalog your questions for our blog or next question and answer segment.
RESOURCES:
Production and marketing by ConsultMent.Agency
COWBOY OFFICE SHOW
Website: CowboyOffice.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/cowboyofficeshow
Instagram: www.instagram.com/cowboyofficeshow
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/cowboy-office
TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@cowboyofficeshow
[email protected]
A Horse Sporting Event Like We’ve Never Seen! Life After the Futurity is Here
The 100X Reining Classic made a lot of claims before the event. They stepped up and delivered, even exceeding expectations. The 100X producers and staff proved that different is better.
This wasn’t a horse show, it was an event. With 1,700 horses competing for $3 million in purse money spread over 9 days and distributed deeper across the competition, they are showing the reining world what the future of this industry looks like.
We can’t cover this event in one episode, we’ll have two more coming this month. Today’s episode is an overview of the 100X Reining. We look at the impact of this type of event on the industry and watch a couple of the winning runs.
The Show Rundown
The Numbers are In
- 172 in the 100X open Futurity - took 2 days
- 138 in 100x Stakes [4 yr olds only] - 2 days for qualifying go round and
- 92 in 100X Invitational Futurity
- 130 in the NARS Derby - 4-7 yr olds to close the event out!!
Winning Runs
- 007 & Gabriel Borges
- Xtra Wimp It Good & Fernando Salgado
- Pale Face Blazin & Edouard Winne
Change is Coming
- Is it time for an independent judges system?
- Can A non-profit organization, run by and for political influence, train and manage officials at this level?
- Where do weekend horse shows fit in? Should they be separate from Aged Events?
- 100X isn’t waiting for an organization to lead, they are moving the industry forward
Big Impact of this Event
- Changing the way we view Futurity horses, 4yr Old horses, and Aged horses.
- Creating room to let horse develop over time
- No more of the Futurity being the end of major event careers
- Outside the box thinking was incredible and created excitement at all levels
- Elevated production teams are leading the way
- Breeders programs seem to be creating a “self-handicap” that opens the trail for more riders to compete and succeed.
- The “unspoken 80:20 purse money rule” is on it’s way out
(100X Stakes L1 winner was paid double what the L1 Derby winner was paid)
Coming Soon
Two more shows on 100X. We’ll go into the analysis of competition on the 100X Stakes and the NARS Open Derby.
- Sign up for notifications at www.cowboyoffice.com.
- If you have questions, email us at [email protected].
Keep Your Questions Coming
Email questions to [email protected]. We’ll continue to catalog your questions for our next question and answer segment.
ONE MORE THING
Take the American Horse Council Economic Impact Survey. Your voice matters so use it!
RESOURCES:
100X Reining Classic: https://100xreiningclassic.com/
Production and marketing by ConsultMent.Agency
COWBOY OFFICE SHOW
Website: CowboyOffice.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/cowboyofficeshow
Instagram: www.instagram.com/cowboyofficeshow
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/cowboy-office
TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@cowboyofficeshow
[email protected]
The podcast currently has 33 episodes available.