When we look at the sire lines in American Quarter Horse racing, we see how Three Bars and Top Deck have dominated as the prominent sire lines. A look at eight of the top ten million-dollar sires trace to either Three Bars or Top Deck in their sire line. They are First Down Dash, Corona Cartel, Apollitical Jess, Mr Jess Perry, Walk Thru Fire, PYC Paint Your Wagon, Dash For Cash and One Famous Eagle. It must be noted that five of the eight trace to Three Bars in the sire line and the other three trace to Top Deck in the sire line. A look at these stallions shows that the Three Bars sire line comes down to today primarily through Dash For Cash, and the Top Deck sire line today comes down primarily through Jet Deck. We will be looking at the Jet Deck branch of this sire line and one key individual in that line is the horse Easy Six.
But first let us put the success of this Top Deck sire line into perspective with a look at the winners of the All American Futurity-G1, the premier race for two year olds. The All American Futurity-G1 was first run in 1959 and in 2010, Mr Piloto by Mr Jess Perry won the futurity. Since then, eight All American Futurities have been won by horses sired by sons or grandsons of Mr Jess Perry. The winners are One Dashing Eagle (2012), Imperial Eagle (2016) and Fly Baby Fly (2017), all by One Famous Eagle by Mr Jess Perry. Then we add Apocalyptical Jess (2018), Mr Jess Jenkins (2019) and KJ Desparado (2021), all by Apollitical Jess by Mr Jess Perry. The last two are Hes Judgeandjury (2022) by Hes Relentless by One Famous Eagle by Mr Jess Perry; and Cowboys Gun Z (2023) by Flying Cowboy 123 by Apollitical Jess by Mr Jess Perry. Then we add that the winners Handsome Jack Flash (2013), Jess Good Candy (2015) and Whistle Stop Cafe (2020) are all out of mares sired by Mr Jess Perry. Mr Jess Perry is sired by Streakin La Jolla by Streakin Six by Easy Six. Our look at Easy Six will show how significant this horse was in the perpetuation of the Top Deck sire line and how he did it with a limited opportunity.
Our look at Easy Six will start with the late Ted Wells, Jr., a highly respected horseman and an AQHA Hall of Fame member. Scott Wells tells us of his father’s role in the life of Easy Six. “Dad grew up a son of a rancher and after World War II he came back and tried to work with his dad and that didn’t work. He thought he would rodeo. He left Pawhuska and went to Amarillo when he was rodeoing. He had a saddle and a suitcase with him. He met George Pumphreys in the lobby of some hotel in Amarillo. George hired him to break colts for the Burnett Ranches’ Four Sixes. This was like 1946. He broke colts there at the Four Sixes and really loved George Pumphreys, who was the foreman there at the Sixes for decades.”
Scott continued, “Then he got a different job breaking colts for another outfit and ended up taking a son of Leo to Ruidoso where he won a race. He did come back to Oklahoma where he worked in a feed store and rodeoed. He got to match racing this son of Leo that he roped off. His name was Stormy Lee. Won some match races and Walter Merrick became aware of him. Noticed that he was a good horseman, and they developed an acquaintance, not the friendship that came later.”
For the pedigree buffs we see that Stormy Lee was sired by Leo and out of a daughter of Zantanon the sire of King P-234. Her name was Babe Cheshewalla, whose dam was Pluma, a daughter of Jabalina, the dam of King P-234. This makes Babe Cheshewalla a 3/4-sister to King P-234. King P-234 is the sire of Squaw H, the seventh dam in the…