Features
Rodeo refound
EDMOND — Gary Haddock was nearly 40 when he finally discovered his calling. One of his new neighbors was a retired firefighter. The other was a DEA agent.
“After visiting with them, I realized I wasn’t doing what I wanted to do,” Haddock said.
So he entered law enforcement, first spending three years as a jailer at the Oklahoma County Jail before being hired as a Guthrie Police officer in 1995. Today, he’s a lieutenant in the department.
And it wasn’t until he turned 50 that Haddock, a longtime Edmond resident, rediscovered an old favorite pastime.
Rodeo.
Haddock, now 54, started “rodeoing” when he was 18, and competed until he was 31 or 32, he said. He quit competing then because of family commitments and the fact that he was getting to the age where competing was harder on his body.
But 20 years later, his son decided to give the sport a try. That’s when Haddock got the rodeo “bug” again.
Today, he’s the No. 2-ranked bareback rider in the world in National Senior Pro Rodeo Association in the 50-60 age group. He’s scheduled to compete next month in Nevada in the world finals for the overall points championship.
“What really got me started again was when Oklahoma City had the BullZilla rodeo in the winter at the fairgrounds,” Haddock explained. “They were giving a real nice buckle for that.”
So he reasoned if he could compete in those and get two or three wins, he could come away with one of those nice buckles.
Now, he’s competing for a more prestigious buckle as a national champion.
If he wins it this year, he’ll retire. If not, he’ll give it one more try next year, he said.
“This has been pretty all-consuming the last three-and-a-half years,” Haddock said. “It’s a pretty focused effort.”
For him, it’s one last chance at some fading glory, he said.
“It’s just real tough to do this at this age,” Haddock said. There are only about 40 members of the NSPRA, he said.
As part of his training regimen, Haddock lifts weights, runs and works every week on his homemade spur board and the El Toro bucking machine in his backyard.
He’ll hang up his rodeo spurs next year, but Haddock said he has no plans to retire from the Guthrie Police Department until he gets his 20 years in.
“There’s no reason for me to. I’m in good shape, and I enjoy it,” he said.
In Guthrie, Haddock is commander of the SWAT team and also the coordinator for the Field Training Officer program.
“Guthrie’s been awful good to me,” Haddock said. “It’s been a real successful job for me, and I like the people I work with.”
(David Hartman may be reached via e-mail at dhartman@edmondsun.com.)
- Features
-
-
Report says girl teen drivers ‘more distracted’ than boys
Differences between the sexes are becoming less noticeable when it comes to teenage driving.
In what seems like a role reversal, girls are expressing a new need for speed, while aggressive driving and speeding by boys is down. -
4-year-old jealous of attention given to newborn
Q: Shortly after our second child was born a year ago, my 4-year-old son began asking me to stop what I’m doing — usually something with the baby — and see something he’s done or “watch” him do something. Over the past year, this seems to have become a compulsion. He makes these (usually trivial) requests of me at least once an hour. Is he insecure because of the attention I’m giving his younger sister? Is this his way of being reassured I still love him? In any case, I can’t keep this up. Help!
-
A breakdown of the word break
Break, broke, broken, breaking. Those words are apt to paint a dreary picture, but not always; i.e., a break in the weather would be nice.
Other than that, we’ve got broken hearts, vows, treaties and bones; jail breaks; teen break-ups and the occasional zits breakout; 7-11 break-ins, and “But, Mom, you said I could!” when Junior misinterprets your “We’ll see” as a promise you’ve broken. -
3-12 Faith: religion news
Ministry name change reflects vision
Jimmy Hodges Ministries International, an Oklahoma based-missions ministry, has been reaching the people of Africa and India since 1986.
Supporting national missionaries is the pivotal difference between the way traditional missionary work is done and the way the ministry has approached the same work. -
Can a racist go to heaven?
I’m old enough to remember when theaters forced African-Americans to sit in the balconies, public transportation authorities required them to sit in the back of the busses or train cars, and restaurants served them only if they came to the back door. The motto of most businesses in the ’50s and ’60s in my neck of the woods could very well have been, “If you’re black, go to the back.”
The belief in white supremacy was seldom questioned in my home town. -
Group drives to fight abortion
LOS ANGELES — Last year Dave Wilkinson asked God for guidance. He wanted to know what he could do to better fight abortion.
Wilkinson, an evangelical pastor, runs three Ventura County, Calif., pregnancy clinics that encourage women to choose alternatives to the procedure. He believes the prevalence of abortion is the biggest test Christians face. “It’s probably one of the things that American Christians are going to have to stand before God and answer for,” Wilkinson said. “He will say, ‘You, as Americans, what did you do to fight abortion?’” -
Young dog saves toddler’s life in bitter cold
PIERCE CITY, Mo. — The first night that Kalina and Jeremy Fortin decided to wean their 2-year-old son of a habit of sleeping with them, the toddler proved way too footloose.
Sometime shortly thereafter on Sunday morning, Jan. 10, Brody apparently got up on his own and wandered out of the rural Pierce City home. The temperature outdoors was just below zero, and Brody wasn’t wearing much more than the long-sleeved pajama top, sweatpants and socks he had gone to sleep in.
If not for the family’s young German shepherd, Lobo, the consequences may well have been fatal. -
Time, effort will alleviate dog’s separation anxiety
Q: We have a 5-year-old Australian Shepherd named Kati that we have had since she was 12 weeks old. She gets along with all our cats and likes to go outside and run like the wind. When she was a puppy we got her in the late fall and because of the weather, trained her to puppy pads, especially if we were going to be gone more than five or six hours. She has never really stopped urinating on the floor when we leave the house. She will urinate on the floor beside a puppy pad, which I regularly place on the floor when I have to leave. I had our veterinarian check her over and do all the appropriate testing and she does not have a urinary tract infection or anything else wrong that we can find. Is she just doing this to spite me when I leave her alone at home?
-
Whispering Pines stands atop state scene
The story of Whispering Pines Bed and Breakfast Inn and Restaurant is like an onion. On the surface, it looks simple — large, Victorian-style house, three suites in the house plus four cottages, located on State Highway 9 southeast of Norman.
-
Writing, baking dual challenges
The Challenged Pens are my writing group. They’re coming to my house this afternoon, and there’s not so much as a cookie in the place.
- More Features Headlines
-
Report says girl teen drivers ‘more distracted’ than boys


