Search

Top News

'Therapeutic' riding leads cutter to high school national finals rodeo

Tanner O'Daniel began riding after mother's death

Previous Next
Previous Page
Share
Print
Email



BELLE FOURCHE -- Tanner O’Daniel’s journey to a state championship in cattle cutting has been one of tragedy and triumph.

The 18-year-old from a ranch near Kadoka grew up at Rapid City, but found himself in a whole new world after the death of his mother in a car accident in 2001.

While in Rapid City, Tanner participated in his share of football, soccer, swimming and golf.

Once he moved to the ranch, athletics took on a new form – rodeo.

Tanner’s mom, Lori Stoddard did some riding in her day as did his grandfather and aunts and uncles.

Tanner’s aunt and second mom, Jodi Stoddard, said that when Tanner arrived at the ranch, it looked like breeding might tell in people as it did in quality cutting horses.

“The boy took to horses almost instantly,” she said. "They were very therapeutic after his mother's death.”

Tanner did more than adjust. He excelled.

"I was pretty nervous at first," Tanner said. "I had ridden a little bit, but nothing major."

That first summer he started in Little Britches and 4-H rodeo. He did breakaway roping, flag racing and goat tying.

When he hit high school, Tanner decided he wanted to compete in cutting. But he wanted to do more than just compete -- he set a goal to be state champion cutter.

"I started riding horses more and more," he said, then grinned. "I sorta liked it."

Tanner found stiff competition.

Most rodeo kids start when they're big enough to sit a horse by themselves at age 2 or 3.

Tanner was starting late, but he persevered.

And there was that matter of breed.

“My Dad won a saddle at the state fair in cutting,” Stoddard said.

This week, the journey culminated in the 18-year-old Red Cloud High School graduate winning the S.D. High School Finals Rodeo boys cutting competition. He now heads to the high school national finals in late July on the South Dakota State Rodeo Team.

He did more than just win, his proud aunt said.

"Tanner got a Gates Millennium Scholarship, so he can go to school wherever he wants,” she said.

Tanner heads to Chadron State College in the fall. He can take a couple of horses with him, and that's just what he plans to do.

Then what?

He said he probably will stay with the ranch life.

"I just like it a lot, so I want to get more and more with horses... to train them and such,” he said, then grinned again.

Rapid Reply

Send us your Rapid Reply

(optional)
   
The preceeding are comments from the readers. In no way do they represent the views of the Rapid City Journal or Lee Enterprises.

The opinions above are from readers of rapidcityjournal.com and in no way represent the views of the Rapid City Journal or Lee Enterprises.

Rapidcityjournal.com provides this community forum for readers to exchange ideas and opinions on the news of the day. Passionate views, pointed criticism and critical thinking are welcome. Name-calling, crude language and personal abuse are not welcome. Moderators will monitor comments with an eye toward maintaining a high level of civility in this forum. Our comment policy explains the rules of the road for registered commenters.

If you don't see your comment, perhaps...

  • you called someone an idiot, a racist, a dope, a moron, etc. Please, no name-calling or profanity (or veiled profanity -- #$%^&*).
  • you rambled, failed to stay on topic or exhibited troll-like behavior intended to hijack the discussion at hand.
  • YOU SHOUTED YOUR COMMENT IN ALL CAPS. This is hard to read and annoys readers.
  • you named a business or identified a business in a way good or bad. Contact the business directly with your customer service concerns or your praise – they’ll likely appreciate your feedback.
  • you believe the newspaper's coverage is unfair. It would be better to write Jerry Steinley at jerry.steinley@rapidcityjournal.com or call him at 394-8427. This is a forum for community discussion, not for media criticism. We'd rather address your concerns directly.
  • you included an e-mail address or phone number, pretended to be someone you aren't or offered a comment that makes no sense.
  • you accused someone of a crime or assigned guilt or punishment to someone suspected of a crime.
  • your comment is in really poor taste.

Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

Tanner O’Daniel with his aunt and second mom Jodi Stoddard. Tanner came to live with his aunt after his mom’s death in a car crash in 2001. Randall Bradley/Belle Fourche Post/Bee

Top Jobs

Featured Dealers

Newspaper Ads

RCJ Extras

Advertisement