The Virginian-Pilot
                             THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT 
              Copyright (c) 1996, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: Friday, April 5, 1996                  TAG: 9604030140
SECTION: CHESAPEAKE CLIPPER       PAGE: 12   EDITION: FINAL 
SOURCE: BY DAWSON MILLS, CORRESPONDENT 
                                             LENGTH: Medium:   82 lines

PENNING: NEW TEAM SPORT TAKES COUNTRY BY STORM

A rider, sitting high in the saddle in chaps and 10-gallon hat, gallops furiously toward a herd of cattle and cuts three calves out, causing them to amble toward a pen.

Two other riders, one on each side, join the first. Together, they guide the cattle to an open gate. As one calf breaks away, a rider charges headlong to turn it around and into the pen where the other two have been corralled.

A rodeo act? The last roundup?

No. It's ``team penning,'' and it's taking the country by storm.

Some eight years after it originated in California, and five years after it became a sanctioned sport, it has arrived in Virginia Beach.

``It started here July 4, 1995, at the Rocking A Quarter Horse Farm,'' recalls Ed Adamson, owner of the Rocking A and the Carousel Tack Shop in Pungo. ``We had seven teams. On New Year's Day, we had 50 teams, about 100 people.''

``It is a sport,'' Adamson says. ``It's the fastest growing equine sport in the country. At pennings in Louisiana and Mississippi, they're giving away $60,000 in prize money, even pickup trucks. They're getting corporate sponsorship.''

At least five organizations have begun to sanction team penning, including the American Quarter Horse Association. There's even a magazine devoted to it: Team Penning USA. Pungo's ``New Year's Day Winter Classic TP,'' as it is called, rated an article in the magazine.

Cash prizes came to Virginia Beach, but on a more modest scale, starting with the New Year's Day event, which drew entrants from Virginia, North and South Carolina, Maryland and West Virginia. On a recent Sunday, the purse, equal to half of the entry fees, was $750. It is divided among first-, second-, and third-place winners. Spectators are allowed to watch for free.

Practices are held at 7 p.m. Fridays, with some riders staying until midnight. Open jackpots, with purses, are held at 1 p.m. Sundays, and frequently don't finish before 7.

``It's an easy sport to understand,'' Adamson says. ``The crowd gets involved and people enjoy watching. Every week we get new people. Teams that play polo come and do this; they're pretty good at it, in their English saddles.''

Among the horse set, team penning is a ``cross-over.'' Western riders and those who ride English style both come out and enjoy it. Some ride quarter horses; others ride polo ponies.

As with any sport, there are rules. But because team penning is so new they aren't always clearly defined. The area where the penning occurs is about 250 by 120 feet (indoor horse arenas, used for jumping and shows, vary in size). The pen, at one end, is set 16 feet from the side. The calves, at the other end, number either 15 or 30, and wear numbers held on with adhesive: each number appears on three calves.

A post, set 40 or 60 percent of the way down the field, marks the foul line. When the riders, coming from one end, pass it on their way to the calves, at the other end, an announcer calls the number appearing on the three calves they must pen. Roughing the cows or using equipment is prohibited, although the riders can (and do) shout at them. If more than four cows cross the foul line, the team is automatically disqualified.

There are two judges: a flag judge and a foul line judge. When the flag judge is satisfied that the cattle are settled, he or she drops the flag, signaling the riders to come out.

The penning has to be completed in 90 seconds.

``There are,'' notes Adamson laconically, ``a whole lot of tricks to this thing.''

At Pleasant Ridge Stables, 15 cows are in the herd for team events. A typical Sunday may include four ``goes.'' First is a practice ``go,'' followed by a ``go'' for mixed teams: one adult and two youths (under 16). The registration fee for these is $10 per person; ball caps are awarded as prizes. The third and fourth ``goes'' are for 50 percent of the purse; the third is for three youths; and the fourth is for adults (although youths may ride in it). The youth event has a $10 registration fee; the adults pay $20.

There's also the ``one on one,'' where one rider has to pen one calf. When that's done, 30 cattle are put in the arena. ILLUSTRATION: Photos by L. TODD SPENCER

Faith Rogerson is on the penning team sponsored by Hillbilly Tack

Shop of Moyock, N.C.

by CNB