By: Jolee Jordan
While most teenage boys are thinking about . . . well, girls, hanging with their friends, cars and girls, the Ford boys are pretty well preoccupied with rodeo. For Jackson, 17, and Kashton, 16, nothing beats matching talents against bucking horses every chance you get.
Theyโve followed in their dad, Joeโs footsteps. Rodeo is definitely a family sport, with the love of the game passed from generation to generation, but thereโs not too many households that can boast of multiple world champions.
The Fords hope to add their names to that short list by winning World Championships offered through the World Champions Rodeo Allianceโs (WCRA) Division Youth (DY) in 2023.
The WCRA recently announced its partnership with the Cinch World Championship Jr. Rodeo (WCJR) to be held in July 2023. The event is hosted at the world famous Lazy E Arena in Guthrie, Oklahoma and will have $200,000 in added prize money for competitors in WCRA DY.
Through this partnership, the WCRA will be recognizing World Champions in every discipline and both their Youth (ages 13-15) and Junior (19 & under) Divisions. World Champions will receive cash bonuses along with prizes and bragginโ rights.
โThatโs pretty cool,โ Kashton said. Heโs the younger brother and rides bareback horses like his dad did. โYou get to ride with the best guys and awesome horses [at the Cinch WCJR] so we definitely want to go next year.โ
โThat would be pretty awesome,โ Jackson, the bronc rider of the family, added. He also competes in steer wrestling at high school rodeos.
The boys nominated their efforts at the 2022 edition of the Cinch WCJR through the VRQ (Virtual Rodeo Qualifier) to kick off the new season for WCRA DY. Kashton won both long rounds and the average, eventually finishing second in the sudden death finals. Jackson also placed in both rounds, landing fourth in the average.
Thanks to their nominations, Jackson took the early lead in the race for the 2023 WCRA DY World title in saddle bronc riding while Kashton sits second in the bareback riding.
Both boys say theyโve wanted to compete for as long as they can remember.
โWe both wanted to rodeo and Dad wanted us to do two different events so we werenโt competing against each other,โ Jackson noted of his choice of events. โDad asked me if I wanted to try saddle broncs.โ
Jackson said he was drawn to the classic event of rodeo due to the longevity of the riders.
โDad said that bronc riders often compete into their 40โs,โ he said. โSo, it was something I could do longer.โ
After trying it out first while in middle school, Jackson was hooked.
โI just liked it,โ he said. โPlus, thereโs a lot of saddle bronc riders where Iโm from.โ The Fords make their home in Sturgis, South Dakota, long known as bronc riding country.
โI wanted to be a bull rider when I was younger,โ Kashton admitted. โMy folks didnโt like that.โ
It sorted itself out, though.
โI wasnโt very good at it,โ Kashton laughed.
Their father, Joe Ford, Jr., rode bareback horses; in fact he was a South Dakota High School Champ and made trips to the Finals at the collegiate level as well as the ProRodeo circuit level while competing in the Badlands Circuit.
โThatโs getting on a long time ago now,โ the elder Ford joked. โThe boys grew up around it, of course, but I never wanted to push it on them.โ
By the time they hit junior high school, Jackson and Kashton started asking to try it out.
โI helped Kashton because I was a bareback rider too but I really wanted them to learn from current pros,โ Ford said. โSo we took them to Stace Smithโs Thanksgiving school.โ
โMostly from my dad,โ Kashton said of where he learned the trade. โWeโve been able to get on a lot of practice horses and thereโs been a lot thrown in along the way.โ
Both Kashton and Jackson cite long-time pro Louie Brunson as a big help to their budding careers in the sport.
โWe go down to Louie Brunsonโs in New Underwood and we get to get on whenever we want,โ Kashton said of Brunsonโs herd of horses. โThatโs pretty awesome.โ
โWeโve gone to lots of practices at Louieโs,โ Jackson agreed. โAnd JJ Elshere, he is one of my buddyโs dad; heโs been great.โ
The boys have gotten help from and attended schools taught by some of the best in the business including leading PRCA riders Sage Newman and Chase Brooks. โThatโs helped a lot,โ Jackson said.
The Fords have taken advantage of their great location, attending practices at Gillette College under coach Marvin Garrett (another cowboy who knows something about competing alongside a sibling) and Dickinson State College.
โThey get to get on Burch horses at Gillette,โ Ford noted. Though he is divorced from the boysโ mother, Marsha, theyโve worked together to give the boys the best opportunities to succeed.
โWeโve invested a lot in having them get on appropriate horses,โ he said. โTheir mom is really supportive and sheโs helped haul them where they needed to be.โ
In 2022, Jackson and Kashton have ventured out on the road themselves more.
โIn the beginning, it was my brother and one of our parents but this year, itโs mainly been us, maybe with a buddy or two,โ Jackson noted.
They have been competing in youth rodeos like National Little Britches and the National High School Rodeo Association for several years but have branched out in 2022 to include the South Dakota Rodeo Association (SDRA), North Dakota Rodeo Association (NDRA), Mid-States Rodeos as well as the Indian National Finals Rodeo (INFR) qualifying events.
So far, theyโve been just as successful against adult competitors with Kashton leading the SDRA standings and Jackson sitting third. Not surprisingly, the boys are ranked 1-2 in the SDRA Rookie of the Year standings.
Both are eyeing their upcoming 18th birthdays and the chance to turn pro.
โIโll be 18 this winter and I plan to buy my [PRCA] permit,โ Jackson said. He has one year left at Sturgis Brown High School and has plans to go on to college. โI donโt know where yet or what Iโll study. Nothing piques my interest right now.โ
Kashton is a junior who will homeschool beginning this fall. He plans to accelerate his schooling so that he can graduate with his brother.
He has one plan on his mind at that point.
โRiding bareback horses,โ he laughed. When asked what he likes to do for fun when not riding bucking horses, Kashton has a quick reply.
โRide the spur board, I guess. Thatโs about all I think about, riding bucking horses.โ
Itโs clear that both Kashton and Jackson are focused on being the best they can be inside the arena. But itโs the men theyโre becoming outside the arena that makes their dad the most proud.
โI try to teach them the things they to know about going down the road and everything that comes with it,โ he said. โThe thing that makes me the proudest as their dad is when people comment on what good kids they are.โ
Nominations for leaderboard positions to the 2023 Cinch WCJR close on June 25, 2023. Competitors can earn their spots at the Cinch WCJR either through the DY Leaderboard, through a series of Qualifying events, or by taking their shot through Open Entry qualifying rounds at the event. The number one competitor on the Leaderboard is automatically seeded into the finals Showdown Round.
For more information on DY, the VRQ, or the 2023 Cinch WCJR, visit https://dy.rodeo.