Text
from the book Legends, 1993
He was a good halter horse and an extraordinary sire
whose get totally transformed the sport of cutting.
DOC BAR will forever be remembered as the horse who
revolutionized the cutting horse industry.
But he was not bred to be a cow horse. A look at his pedigree shows speed,
and that's what Tom and Jack Finley wanted when they bred Dandy Doll to
Lightning Bar, a AAA AQHA Champion son of Three Bars (TB).
Dandy Doll was a AA mare by Texas Dandy.
Dandy Doll won races from 220 yards up to 440 yards.
At 14.3, 1,000 pounds, Doc Bar was a washout on the race
track. Doc Bar was not a race horse. He wasn't even a performance horse. But
he turned out to be a good halter horse and an extraordinary sire whose get
totally transformed the sport of cutting. And although he was never ridden
in competition, his sons and daughters forever changed the cutting horse
industry with their ability and style.
Doc Bar was shown at halter 13 times, with 12 wins, 1
second, 36 national points and 10 grand and reserve grands.
After the halter horse structure turned to taller horses,
Doc Bar's career as a halter horse sire was in jeapordy. His owners crossed
him on their Poco Tivio mares and this led to the greatest nick in Quarter
Horse history, producing the first of a long line of cow horses. An example
of the magic cross was Fizzabar, a 1961 mare by Doc Bar and out of Teresa
Tivio. Fizzabar wound up in the NCHA Hall of Fame, she was the National
Cutting Horse Association World Champion Mare.
An unprecedented string of NCHA Futurity wins continued
almost unbroken for 2 decades, in which Doc Bar's get and grandget dominated
cutting's most prestigious event.

