Jimmie Cooper
“Winning is
what rodeo’s all about,” World Champion roper and bulldogger Jimmie Cooper told
ProRodeo Sports News in the early 1980s, at the height of his career.
Cooper’s father “Jimmie T.,” a 1950s rodeo roper standout, noted Jimmie was
“probably better prepared than lots of others. He goes harder, makes more
rodeos, and is very serious about his arena work.” This focus and dedication
earned Cooper induction into both the National Cowboy Hall of Fame and ProRodeo
Hall of Fame.
Jimmie
Cooper was born in the far southeast corner of New Mexico
in 1956 to a family of world-class timed event (roping and steer wrestling)
cowboys. Raised on his parents’ cattle ranch, he graduated from New
Mexico State University
with a B.S. in Agricultural Economics. Although Jimmie joined the Professional
Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA) in 1977, he did not compete full-time until
1980, when he was chosen as the PRCA’s Rookie of the Year. Cooper’s events were
calf roping, team roping, and bulldogging (steer wrestling).
Jimmie
joined the so-called “New Breed” of post-1965 rodeo cowboys pioneered by Larry
Mahan, Tom Ferguson, Donny Gay, his cousin Roy Cooper, and others. The “New
Breed” were known for business acumen and professional
savvy alongside stellar cowboy skills and traits. Cooper referred to his
college education in economics when he said, “I hope I never have to use it to
get a job, but I use it every day in my rodeoing. You have to make smart
economic decisions, and you have to look at both the short run and the long
run.”
Standing six feet tall 195 lbs.,
Jimmie Cooper employed brains, brawn, and calculated risk-taking in rising to
the top of the sport. The late-great rodeo historian Willard Porter described
Cooper’s ability to utilize “coordination and balance” to enhance his “size and
strength” in calf roping and bulldogging competitions. “Cooper really knew how
‘to use’ big, rank calves and steers,” wrote Porter. “One very seldom sees him
bobbling a flanking maneuver on a calf or missing a twist-down as he stops and
brings a steer’s body around. One sometimes sees him take a chance, but it is
the special chance he must take, the chance the gambler in him tells him to
take.”
Jimmie
Cooper finished in the top five of the World All-Around standings for seven
straight years from 1980-86. He won the World All-Around Champion Cowboy title
in 1981, and the story of that championship race is legendary. Entering the
National Finals Rodeo fourth in the All-Around standings, Jimmie advanced past
Paul Tierney and Tom Ferguson by tying his own cousin Roy Cooper for first
place in the calf roping. In the “tie-breaker,” he beat Roy by
two-tenths of a second and won the calf-roping title. This earned him first in
the All-Around, a mere $48 ahead of “Cousin Roy”!
The New
Mexico cowboy earned a lot of money in
the 1980s Ellensburg Rodeo arena. Cooper won the Ellensburg bulldogging
championship twice (an ’80 tie and ’85) and both the calf and team roping
events (’85 and ’84). In 1980, Cooper won the Ellensburg Rodeo All-Around
title, temporarily ending Tom Ferguson’s (ERHOF ’97) four-year string of
victories. Cooper was Ellensburg Rodeo All-Around Champion in ’80, ’84, and
’85.
Ellensburg
Rodeo Hall of Fame Board Member and PRCA timed-event competitor Jack Wallace
remembers “Jimmie had a lot of grit and determination. He wasn’t always flashy,
but he always got the job done and always ended up at the pay window.”
Today,
Jimmie Cooper still resides in his hometown of Monument, New
Mexico, with his wife Sheryl. In 2004,
their twin sons, Jake and Jimmie, earned team roping Rookies of the Year
honors.