 |
| Dan
Mortensen: |
| Six-time |
| bronc-riding
champion |
| by
Evelyn Boswell |
|
| This
could be the year that Dan Mortensen, '92
AgBus, becomes clear king of the saddle-bronc-riding
world. |
| Already
a six-time national champion, the Billings native
needs one more win to break a tie with legendary
cowboy Casey Tibbs. Tibbs, who died in 1990, won
the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association's saddle
bronc-riding championship six times from 1949 to
1959. |
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| Mortensen
won the title in 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1998 and 2003. The
national competition is held every November in Las Vegas. |
| John Larick,
former rodeo coach at MSU, believes Mortensen will win his seventh
national title. |
| "He
has such a strong constitution, works hard and is focused,"
Larick said. "Clear back when he was a college student,
basically before he came to MSU, I had watched him and said,
'This guy, when he figures out how good he really is, there's
just no stopping him.'" |
| Mortensen
wasn't born in the saddle and didn't grow up on a ranch. His
dad, Don, is an electrician, and his mom, Sheryl, is a health
clerk at the Lockwood School. But Mortensen had friends who
competed in rodeos, and he became involved when he was around
11 years old. |
| "It
seemed like the thing that I wanted to do, and so I did,"
Mortensen said. "It kept me busy and kept me out of trouble.
It gave me a lot of goals and aspirations to achieve." |
| Mortensen
competed in junior rodeos, youth rodeos, high school and college
rodeos. During his three years at MSU, he was a member of the
rodeo team that won two national championships. After joining
the professional rodeo circuit, he was named Rookie of the Year.
Besides winning six national championships in saddle bronc riding,
he was named the All-Around World's Champion Rodeo Cowboy in
1997. He won a bronze medal for saddle bronc-riding at the 2002
Winter Olympics. |
| "It's
just something I really enjoy. I dedicated my life to it,"
commented Mortensen who spends 240 to 250 days a year on the
road. |
| He added,
"I probably learned more about the business aspect of rodeo
when I was at Bozeman. It's a lot more than just getting on
and riding. You need to learn how to rodeo and how to be successful
and how to manage your business." |
| Busy now
between rodeos and promotional appearances for Wrangler, Coors
and David Sunflower Seeds, Mortensen said has no plans to retire
any time soon. |
| "I
don't really want to put a limit on myself," said Mortensen
who is his own trainer, coach and boss. "As long as I'm
healthy and still enjoy what I do and feel I'm competitive,
I would like to continue." |
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