I would have shown in my first Oklahoma City spring junior show in 1978, I believe. I did alright with some heifers, never made the sale with a steer ‘til my senior year (1983) when I had reserve Hereford. Between my nieces and nephews, other families I’ve helped, and my own kids, I don’t believe there has been a year since 1978 that I haven’t been involved with one or a dozen steers (and heifers, and a few goats) in this show. We’ve had a few champions and reserves, several class winners and a whole bunch of something less, but most were competitive. A few crashed and burned, too. It’s the nature of the game.
From the standpoint of quality, I haven’t seen them all, but I’ve seen a bunch, and I don’t believe any other junior show can match the sheer depth of quality at OYE. Sure there are lots of great shows and great livestock all across the country, and I’m not saying this to take away from any others, but the percentage of really good ones, that are dialed in and presented to the hilt at OYE would be tough to top.
It has certainly evolved in to an event that’s always fun and exciting, especially for the exhibitors, but for the spectators too. Every day, all the time there’s something happening - showmanship contests, fitting contests, skill-a-thon... The old fuddy duddy in me kinda misses when the grand drive was just the end of the show, but I know how excited the kids are about the big production it has become. That short ride in that stretch limousine is what every kid there dreams about, and that provides more motivation than you can imagine.
I’m proud to say that the shows current CEO is one of those kids I helped along the way. He hasn’t done it alone, but he’s a very big part of what OYE is now. Folks like Jimmy Harrel and Bob Funk and many others not so recognized, too. Many thanks to them all.