Riata News

Riata Showcase, Something for Everyone!

Riata Showcase, Something for Everyone!

Dec 10, 2025

The Riata Showcase Horse Sale wasn't designed to be flashy. It was designed to be useful.

In its second year, the Riata Showcase once again proved why it fits so naturally alongside the Ariat World Series of Team Roping Finale. With 59 head averaging $52,522 and a packed house at the South Point, the sale reflected exactly what Riata set out to do—connect real rope horses with the people who actually use them.

That matters, especially in a year when many sales across the country felt the pressure of a softer national market. While the average dipped slightly from 2024, consistency was the real takeaway. The top five horses averaged $110,000, the top ten averaged $90,000, and bidding stayed active from start to finish.

Most importantly, the buyers told the story.

The majority of the buying came from team ropers—not speculators, not owners-only—ropers looking for horses they could rope on, haul on, rely on, and build a program around. Some came looking for standout horses. Others came looking for value. They found both, with strong action in the $30,000–$40,000 range and several horses selling in the twenties. That middle of the market stayed healthy all day, which is often the clearest indicator of a sale's real strength.

At the top end, the market spoke clearly.

Exagereyt brought $170,000 to Weiterman Ranch, becoming the first Riata stallion ever included in the Showcase lineup. His inclusion was intentional—Riata viewed it as a test of the market, and buyers responded. With nearly every Riata stallion or slot bringing six figures this fall, the result reinforced the idea that incentive-backed performance still carries weight when it's earned in real competition.

Metallic Play followed at $115,000, trained by Bobby Lewis and sold out of the Las Tunas barn to Eliason Performance Horses. The top-selling gelding, SJR Bet He Sparks by Bet Hesa Cat, brought $105,000 for consignor William Wiley and buyer Freddie Bracamonte.

The Showcase wasn't without its tough conversations. No-sales remained similar to last year—just over a dozen—and most were simply horses that didn't meet their individual reserves. After addressing issues in 2024, Riata held firm on its policies, including removing sellers who turned down high bids from future sales. The $100,000 horse sale incentive was also updated, limiting no-sale horses to one year of eligibility.

Those decisions weren't about optics. They were about credibility.

Buyers noticed the details. The 3-year-olds in the sale stood out for their maturity, and ropers bid on them with confidence. Mike White's 3-year-old Sanctus colt brought $62,000, helped by previewing on mid-level Finale cattle—another example of Riata's commitment to letting horses prove themselves by the clock, not by looks alone.

That distinction is important.

Riata exists in a world with plenty of rope horse futurities and incentive programs doing good work. What separates it is not just the incentive, but the structure behind it. Riata was built by the same vision that created the USTRC and the WSTR—programs rooted in handicap and recreational roping. For the first time, an incentive program was designed to follow horses into the divisions where most ropers actually compete.

No judging. No subjectivity. No controlled environment.

Just the clock.

That philosophy showed up in the sale ring. Flashy horses without horsepower struggled. Horses that could stand up, read cattle, and handle pressure brought bids.

In the end, the Riata Showcase was exactly what it set out to be: a straightforward team roping horse sale with honest horses, active bidders, and real-world validation. It fit seamlessly into a Finale week that paid more than $20 million and reminded everyone that this sport is built from the middle out—not the top down.

Riata didn't try to be everything to everyone.
It simply stayed true to ropers.

And the market rewarded that honesty.