|
|
|
Home
> Hall
of Fame >
Hall of Fame Horses - Hall of Fame >
King Fritz
It is impressive to look at a list of entries
and know you are in the presence of a great stallion. Although he passed
away in 1975 at the age of 19, King Fritzs impact can still be seen in
arenas across the country in the form of a Chex.
King Fritz, by
Power Command and out of Poco Jane (by Poco Bueno), foaled in 1956 and
was purchased as a yearling in a package deal by Fritz and Ellen Watkins
of Oregon. His first five foals arrived his 3-year-old year and because
the Watkinses used a checkmark as their brand they decided to use Chex
in each of the foals names. That decision began a legacy.
In
1962 King Fritz received his AQHA Open Championship, earning points in
Reining, Western Riding and Western Pleasure. Having achieved that
accomplishment, the stallion retired from competition. He went on to
sire tremendous horses like Shirley Chex, Fritz Command, Fritzi Chex,
Kiddo Chex, Paula Chex, Moon Chex and Royal Chex.
In 1970, Les
and Cora Lynn Vogt, saw a stallion ad for King Fritz in Western Horseman
magazine and Les jokingly said he was going to buy the horse. Without
any money, Les called Fritz Watkins and found out Fritz had just made
the decision to sell his stallion and broodmares. Les Vogt bought the
entire package.
When Les first saw King Fritz step out of the
trailer he was expecting an exquisite stallion but instead saw the
complete opposite and thought for sure he had made a huge mistake. The
band of broodmares followed and he became more and more disappointed. At
the time Les bought King Fritz, he had only sired 69 registered
offspring and was bred mainly to the Watkinss broodmares.
We
had the superstar mares of the day however nothing produced like that
old infamous cross with those strange looking mares that I bought in the
group in the original package from Fritz Watkins, Les admitted. And by
strange looking, these mares were odd looking, they were real odd
looking.
But paired with King Fritz, those mares produced
outstanding horses. The cross was magic.
The first Snaffle Bit
Futurity, in 1970, ended with a tie between Bobby Ingersoll and Les
Vogt. Bobby was riding Leocita Chex and Les and Cora Lynn were the proud
new owners of her sire. Three years later a Chex Wrangler Chex
carried Les to his first Snaffle Bit Futurity Championship.
King
Fritzs offspring were outstanding show horses and are continuing the
tradition with fabulous offspring of their own. The remarkable stallion
sired 318 registered foals and his daughter, Chexy Lady, is the American
Quarter Horse Associations number 3 All-Time Leading Dam of World
Champions. What began with a checkmark, a group of undesirable
broodmares and a bay Power Command stallion has resulted in an
impressive line of horses with impeccable heritage.
There were
so many King Fritz horses that were consistently great horses, Les
said. It was an era a time of magic.
|
|
|