One of the main things I always have to address at roping schools,
clinics and lessons is the importance of staying balanced and having correct
posture. Having your shoulders set right, and your body and head upright with
your eyes level is important. Roping is somewhat of an athletic sport, so your
body needs to be in the right place. Good posture helps you ride your horse,
swing your rope correctly, and see and judge whats happening in the run, so
posture is an important part of the process

|
When you’re coming down the arena, you should be sitting upright
and keeping your body straight up and down, and centered in the middle of your
horse. Your left shoulder should be a little bit forward and your right shoulder
should be back a little. If you pick your horse up and have your horse in your
hand, bringing your left shoulder forward helps pick your inside (left) rein up
and lets you arc your horse to the left. It brings your left foot into your
horse a little bit, which also helps form that left arc.
Having your right shoulder back allows you to swing your rope down
over the left side of your horse and keep your hand back behind your head in
your swing. It structurally forms you in the correct position to pick your horse
up right, have the plane of your swing correct, be ready to make your corner and
square up on the steer, and have your swing down over the steer’s back.
As you develop your roping ability, your horse tends to want to
protect himself because you catch a lot more steers and he gets a lot more
jerks. Keeping your body in one spot through the whole run won’t cue him and
tell him you’re getting ready to deliver your loop, which keeps your horse from
anticipating your shot and getting short.
A lot of amateur or low-numbered ropers have a bad habit of
changing their body position in their delivery, which cues their horses to stop.
Their horses tend to get quick or short. Leaning down also keeps those ropers
from getting a good loop delivered.
For the most part your top-level ropers have good posture and
really sit upright on their horses with very good form. There are a couple of
guys I know who’ve been great ropers for a long time who tend to lean forward a
little more than others, and they even teach their students to go ahead and lean
forward a little bit. What they do really well is not change their body position
in their delivery, so their horses don’t get the cue to stop. It’s not my way,
but they’ve figured out a way to make it work for them.
When I was a kid, I watched the great ropers and tried to learn
from them. The guy I tried to emulate more in my riding style than anyone was
Leo Camarillo. He had such good up-and-down posture, so that’s what I worked to
develop. Any time I found myself leaning off to the right or leaning forward,
that was a cue to my horse. I knew it was a bad habit to get into, so I always
worked to have good athletic posture. Staying in the middle of my horse is what
worked for me.