Tie-Down Roping
Tie-Down Roping
As with saddle bronc riding and team roping, the roots of
tie-down roping can be traced back to the working ranches of the Old West. When
calves were sick or injured, cowboys had to rope and immobilize them quickly
for veterinary treatment. Ranch hands prided themselves on the speed with which
they could rope and tie calves, and they soon turned their work into informal
contests.
As the event matured, being a good horseman and a fast
sprinter became as important to the competitive tie-down roper as being quick
and accurate with a rope.
Today, the mounted cowboy starts from a box, a three-sided
fenced area adjacent to the chute holding the calf. The fourth side of the box
opens into the arena.
A cowboy's success in tie-down roping depends in large part
on the precise teamwork between him and his horse. The calf receives a head
start that is determined by the length of the arena. One end of a breakaway
rope barrier is looped around the calf's neck and stretched across the open end
of the box. When the calf reaches its advantage point, the barrier is released.
If the roper breaks the barrier before the calf reaches its head start, the
cowboy is assessed a 10-second penalty.
The horse is trained to come to a stop as soon as the cowboy
throws his loop and catches the calf. The cowboy then dismounts, sprints to the
calf and throws it by hand, a maneuver called flanking. If the calf is not
standing when the cowboy reaches it, he must allow the calf to get back on its
feet before flanking it. After the calf is flanked, the roper ties any three
legs together with a pigging string - a short, looped rope he clenches in his
teeth during the run.
While the contestant is accomplishing all of that, his horse
must pull back hard enough to eliminate any slack in the rope, but not so hard
as to drag the calf.
When the roper finishes tying the calf, he throws his hands
in the air as a signal that the run is completed. The roper then remounts his
horse, rides forward to create slack in the rope and waits six seconds to see
if the calf remains tied. If the calf kicks free, the roper receives no time.