THE RUN FOR A MILLION CO-CHAMPION
TRFAM
$1 Million Dollar Invitational: It’s A Draw
The Million Dollar Invitational was billed as the biggest event in the history of reining. The Las Vegas event, held Aug. 17 during The Run For A Million horse show (TRFAM), didn’t disappoint.
Twelve of the most successful trainers in the sport were invited to compete for a $1 million payout, and they rode a roster of some of the best reining horses to step into a pen in recent years. In the end, the judges could not separate the 229.5-point performances by Cade McCutcheon and Custom Made Gun, and Craig Schmersal and No Smoking Required.
The riders, each mounted on a son of the late Colonels Smoking Gun (Gunner), opted not to run off. They settled for a co-championship, pocketing $307,000 each.
The co-champions were among the riders featured in the reality series “The Last Cowboy,” which followed trainers as they prepared their horses for the Million Dollar Invitational. Footage from the lucrative reining event was featured in The Last Cowboy’s season finale, which aired Wednesday, Aug. 28, on the Paramount Network.
The show, produced by Brumley Management Group, was a National Reining Horse Association (NRHA)-approved event. Riders could bring any three horses to Las Vegas, ultimately narrowing it down to one to ride in the one go-round invitational.
The field of horses included NRHA Futurity Open champions, an American Quarter Horse Association World Champion and horses with multiple futurity or derby championships to their name.
Schmersal chose No Smoking Required, a 6-year-old sorrel stallion that had banked more than $169,000 in career earnings leading up to the invitational, with top finishes such as the Level 4 Open Reserve Championship at this year’s NRHA Derby.
The Equi-Stat Elite $4 Million Rider considered himself fortunate to ride in front of the energetic, packed crowd that traveled to the South Point Equestrian Center to see the dozen riders go for the big prize at the Million Dollar Invitational.
“Not very many people get to do that, and those 12 riders were very fortunate to be able to do that,” Schmersal said. “And, to have my horse fire like he did tonight, it’s a dream come true and a really big deal.”