Dear Roper,

Youth team roping isn’t just growing. It has become, by every meaningful measure, the single richest opportunity available to young athletes anywhere in the world.
Start with The Patriot.
Right here in Fort Worth, The Patriot Finals paid more than $3 million across 10 days, creating a stage that mirrors the professional level, with real pressure and real stakes.
And it doesn’t stop there.
The SEVS Judgement Day World Youth Team Roping Championships added another $450,000 the following week, drawing more than 250 entries in its sled roping alone—most of those being kids entering a roping for the very first time. Together, events like these are redefining what youth sports can be.
In most youth sports, families spend money. Here, there’s a real path to earning it back—and often far more. With over $100 million paid out annually in team roping, the scale is undeniable.
Compare that to gaming, the next closest competitor for kids’ attention. At the top, it pays. For most, it doesn’t. And it’s done alone, in front of a screen. (No hate—it’s just different.)
Roping offers an alternative. One that’s physical, social and, for many, built around family. It teaches kids how to win, lose and keep showing up. And it pays.
That combination is rare.
But with that opportunity comes responsibility. Roping doesn’t just hook kids. It keeps them. So we have to do this right. Teach them to manage money. To handle pressure. To grow, not just win.
That’s where events like The Patriot lead. The money matters, but the real value is in the process behind it. Because in the end, money won’t sustain this sport. The culture will. And right now, we’re building something bigger than most people realize.
We’ll see you down the road somewhere soon,

Chelsea