A Lifelong Passion Begins
Clinton grew up with a love of horses. Although he lived in the city with his family, he looked forward to the weekends he got to spend on his grandparents’ farm where his grandmother would give him rides on her old Thoroughbred mare. By the age of 12, he began playing polocrosse and was eventually chosen for a national team representing his state.
When he was 13, he met Gordon McKinlay, a horseman and clinician who would change his life, and ultimately set Clinton on his career path. After attending one of Gordon’s clinics, where he learned how to do the groundwork and riding exercises that now make up the basis of the Method, Clinton began a two-year apprenticeship with the revered horseman. Under Gordon’s expert guidance, Clinton started and trained over 600 horses, many of which were rank horses from the Outback.
At age 17, Clinton graduated Gordon’s apprenticeship and began working for Ian Francis, a three-time National Cutting Horse Association Futurity Champion and five-time National Reining Horse Association Futurity Champion. While the focus of Gordon’s program was on safety for horse and rider and starting colts, Clinton looked to Ian for his ability to get a horse soft and supple and ready to compete on a national level. Clinton worked steadily with Ian for a year and then used his knowledge and expertise to open his own training facility in Rockhampton, Queensland.
Clinton continued running his training barn and teaching clinics until coming to the United States in 1996 for a brief apprenticeship with Al Dunning, winner of multiple American Quarter Horse Association World Championships. Clinton then returned to Australia and his training horse business where he won the first go and placed third in the 1997 Australian National Reining Horse Association Futurity on his mare Mindy. Mindy later traveled to the United States with Clinton and played a key role in helping him establish Downunder Horsemanship. She quickly became an iconic horse in the industry.