Wednesday, August 24, 2022 A16 SPORTS Wallowa County teen has an eye on national titles By KATY NESBITT For the Wallowa County Chieftain ENTERPRISE — In a county well known for its pro rodeo the last full weekend of July, it’s no surprise to fi nd a pro rodeo cowboy in the mak- ing. Hanley Miller is already a state champion and was asked to perform at the 2022 Chief Joseph Days Rodeo. As a high school freshman this spring, Miller won the tie- down competition at the state rodeo fi nals. With that title, the Pro Rodeo Cowboy Asso- ciation paid for his PRCA card; at 15, he was too young to compete but was allowed to test his skill against the pros as an exhibitionist. Just before Chief Joseph Days, Miller placed 29th in the tie-down aggregate at the National High School Rodeo fi nals in Gillette, Wyoming. With three more years in high Contributed Photo Hanley Miller, an incoming sophomore at Joseph High School, is the 2022 Oregon State High School Rodeo tie-down champ. This July he ran with the pros as an exhibitionist at the Chief Joseph Days Rodeo. school and two until he is old enough to hold a PRCA card, he has ambitious goals. “I want to win a national title in tie-down and qualify for the NFR (National Finals Rodeo),” he said. Miller, an incoming soph- omore at Joseph High School, fought hard for that state championship in tie-down. He said he had a tough go in the second round of state fi nals after being very consis- tent all year. “I had to forget about it and move on,” he said. The excitement of the crowd carried him through, and his mother, Dena Miller, said, “he took care of busi- ness” and got the win. This past year he team roped with partner Bayli Ladner, of Klamath Falls. The pair placed fourth at the Oregon State Finals Rodeo in Prineville. This coming year, Miller said he is adding steer wrestling to his events, with an eye on earning points toward the all-around competition. The high school rodeo sea- son is three competitions in the fall and four in the spring. Miller said he had a rope in his hand as a toddler and was horseback by the age of 3. It wasn’t long before he was a regular at local junior and ranch rodeos and a hand at Chief Joseph Days, either untying calves at timed event slack competitions or cooling down the pickup men’s horses. At the age of 7, he com- peted in his fi rst rodeo out- side of Wallowa County — the Cayuse Junior Rodeo in Pendleton. He started com- peting in junior high rodeo competitions as a sixth grader and qualifi ed for nationals, held in Huron, South Dakota. Miller’s seventh grade year was during the COVID- 19 shutdowns, so he and his family opened up their arena to kids in Wallowa County to come rope and ride. Up to 50 would attend an afternoon of roping, barrels and pole bending. “There were no fall sports so we had rodeo practice open to the community all fall on Tuesdays and Thursdays,” Dena Miller said. The following year as an eighth grader, the young cow- boy qualifi ed again for the junior high rodeo national in Des Moines, Iowa. With three more years of high school, the sky’s the limit. “To see your kid want something and work for it is really emotional,” Dena Miller said. Hanley Miller’s skills aren’t confi ned to the rodeo arena. Along with the rest of his family, he moves cattle for the Fence Creek Ranch, and he started training horses by the age of 11. “People will call up and say, ‘I want a roping horse,’ and I work with them,” Miller said. Keen on perfecting his rodeo skills, while encour- aging others to do so as well, Miller and his family are hosting a breakaway and tie-down roping clinic with PRCA champion Nathan Steinberg. “We are excited to share our passion and bring some- one with his qualifi cations to come to the county,” Dena Miller said. Shortage of high school football offi cials hitting Northeastern Oregon By DICK MASON The Observer LA GRANDE — A shortage of football refer- ees is looming as the start of high school football sea- son in Northeastern Oregon approaches. The Northeast Oregon Football Offi cials Associ- ation, which provides offi - cials for high school and middle school varsity and junior games in Union, Wal- lowa, Baker and Grant coun- ties, has just 19 people avail- able to offi ciate this season, seven short of the minimum needed, according to Pete Caldwell, commissioner of the association. MORE INFORMATION People interested in serving as football offi cials for the Northeast Oregon Football Offi cials Association should call Pete Caldwell at 541-910-7020. “It is the lowest number we have had,” said Caldwell, who has been with the North- east Oregon Football Offi - cials Association for about 25 years. Caldwell attributes the decline to the fact that many members have been retiring. “I don’t know why more younger people are not get- ting involved in offi ciating. It is a mystery,” said Caldwell, noting that the average age of his association’s members is now 61.5 years. He said that unless the association can recruit more people to offi ciate, it will face the prospect of request- ing schools on some occa- sions to change their sched- ules. For example, schools may be asked to move some contests to Thursday or Sat- urday — instead of Fridays, when there are a high num- ber of games scheduled — to reduce the logjam, making it possible for offi cials to be provided for all of them. Caldwell, who noted that rescheduling had to be done several times in 2021 when there was also a shortage of offi cials, said it is not easy. “It is a huge headache,” he said. Doug Hislop, of La Grande, an offi cial with the association for the past 52 years, said rescheduling games is not ideal. He said he fears that the complications created by the process may lead some schools to cancel some contests. Caldwell is hoping people will step forward to serve as offi cials to reduce the short- age. Previous offi ciating experience is not needed. “We can teach anyone to be an offi cial,” he said. Caldwell said those start- ing out may fi rst be assigned to middle school and junior varsity games before offi ci- ating varsity contests. This will allow them to develop their skills in a less pressure packed environment, he said. Caldwell said many peo- ple who serve as offi cials are driven to do so because they want to help youth. “They want to give back to the community and kids,” he said. Hislop said this a motivat- ing factor for him, noting that he will never forget how ref- erees made it possible for him to participate in athletics as a youth growing up in Idaho. “I had the opportunity to play football and wrestle because we had offi cials,” he said. Others are drawn to offi - ciating because of their love of a specifi c sport — football, for example. “It gives people a chance to be part of the game,” Cald- well said. Offi cials are paid on a per game basis, making $73.50 for offi ciating class 4A games. Offi cials are paid a little less for offi ciating var- sity games involving schools in the 3A, 2A and 1A classi- fi cations for smaller schools. NEW • Sockeye Salmon: The pre-dam blunders that caused their extinction and today’s plans for reintroduction • Wallowa Lake Amusement Park and its merry-go-round • Early rodeos at the Lake (1930’s) where Harley Tucker got his start. • The electric railroad vs the steam railroad • The Edelweiss Inn’s history • The Wallowa Lake Monster • The national park that almost was in today’s Eagle Cap Wilderness AND MUCH, MUCH MORE! Available at The Bookloft, Cooper Creek, Heidi’s Grain Growers, Wallowa Lake Lodge, Eagle Cap Chalet, and www.eaglecappress.com