 When 
							a new Tennessee walking horse arrived on Jack Way’s 
							farm 19 months ago, Way’s first inclination was to send 
							the horse back.
When 
							a new Tennessee walking horse arrived on Jack Way’s 
							farm 19 months ago, Way’s first inclination was to send 
							the horse back.
							He had seen the dapple-gray stallion eight years 
							earlier when it won a World Grand Championship in Shelbyville, 
							Tenn.
							But the horse that came off the trailer that cold 
							day in February hardly resembled a champion. He’d been 
							put out to pasture for stud service and hadn’t competed 
							in show competition in eight years.
							“When we got him, he was about 350 pounds overweight,” 
							Way said. “He had a woolly coat, no grooming.”
							“It looked like a Welch pony, he was so round and 
							fat,” said Johnny “Butch” Lewis, a trainer at Way’s 
							5 Way Farm in Coaling.
							The fact that the horse wasn’t wearing the trademark 
							platform shoes that help accentuate the steps of Tennessee 
							walkers made him look even shorter and heavier.
							“We went upstairs and found some shoes and put on 
							the first ones we found,” Lewis said.
							From there, it was just a few trips down to the barn 
							before Way and Lewis, who had been working with Tennessee 
							walkers for 25 years, knew the horse was Silver Design, 
							winner of the Amateur 4 Year Old Grand Championship 
							in 1993.
							“We could see that the athletic potential he had 
							shown years earlier was still there,” Way said.
							With a rigid diet and training program, what transpired 
							during the next 18 months was one of the greatest comeback 
							stories in Tennessee walking horse/shistory.
							Last month, after dropping more than 300 pounds, 
							Silver Design and rider Thad Way won the Owner-Amateur 
							Youth Riders on Ponies 60 inches and Under World Grand 
							Championship. Thad Way is Jack Way’s 17-year-old son.
							The competition was held in Shelbyville at an event 
							known as The Celebration, the World Series of walking 
							horse competition.
							“To come back in a different division with a different 
							rider, from the standpoint of that long of a layoff, 
							it’s a pretty big story,” said Mark McGee, who has/scovered 
							the Tennessee Walking Horse industry for 20 years. He 
							is editor of the Times-Gazette in Shelbyville, known 
							as the Tennessee Walking Horse Capital of the World.
							Although The Celebration awarded World Grand Championships 
							in 31 classes, Silver Design and his rider put on a 
							standout performance.
							
							 “That 
							horse made an incredible showing, and that young man 
							did an absolutely incredible job of presenting him,” 
							said Bob Cherry, executive director of the Tennessee 
							Walking Horse Breeders’ and Exhibitors’ Association. 
							“It was just, in my mind, one of the top four or five 
							horses in The Celebration.”
“That 
							horse made an incredible showing, and that young man 
							did an absolutely incredible job of presenting him,” 
							said Bob Cherry, executive director of the Tennessee 
							Walking Horse Breeders’ and Exhibitors’ Association. 
							“It was just, in my mind, one of the top four or five 
							horses in The Celebration.”
							Throughout the competition, Thad literally had the 
							voice of his father in his ear, with Way dispensing 
							directions from a remote receiver into a headset his 
							son was wearing.
							For Way, a 44-year-old Tuscaloosa insurance agent, 
							the event was the high point in a hobby that began at 
							age 6 when his father, recovering from heart surgery, 
							bought a few horses as a way to bring himself and his 
							son together.
							“Emotionally, it was probably my greatest victory 
							in the horse business to see a kid of mine win it,” 
							said Way, who himself had won two championships as a 
							youth.
							Way’s father died in 1986. But Way has continued 
							the family’s Tennessee Walking Horse tradition with 
							Thad and his other sons, Winston, 19, William, 11 and 
							Alex, 9.
							Today, Way’s 40-acre farm is home to 120 Tennessee 
							Walkers. Some are owned by him while others are boarded 
							there for breeding or training purposes.
							What began as a small hobby is now a big business, 
							all based on devotion to one breed of horse with a peculiar 
							birthright.
							“What makes the Walking Horse a performance horse 
							is what’s called the running walk, which is the perception 
							that he’s running with his front legs and walking with 
							his back legs,” Way said. “They’re born with natural 
							ability. Their gait is one they actually come into this 
							world with.”
							For Thad, the road to a World Grand Championship 
							meant afternoons of driving the 20 miles from East Central 
							High School to the Coaling farm to train for competitions 
							leading up to The Celebration.
							Then there were weekends and summer months spent 
							cleaning stalls and performing other farm chores.
							“This is pretty much what I call my sport to compete 
							in,” said Thad, a junior at East Central. “I’ve been 
							around it all my life.”
							Besides the exacting demands of his father, Thad 
							also had the expectations of Lewis, the horse’s trainer, 
							to deal with. Lewis gave up his job at the Tuscaloosa 
							Veterans Affairs Medical Center two years ago to become 
							a full-time trainer for Way.
							
							 “He’s 
							not easy on an individual,” Thad said of Lewis, as if 
							speaking both for himself and Silver Design.
“He’s 
							not easy on an individual,” Thad said of Lewis, as if 
							speaking both for himself and Silver Design.
							But the high expectations and rigid training paid 
							off.
							“The rider can really affect how the horse performs,” 
							McGee said. “He did a really good job of riding the 
							horse and that was the consensus of everybody. He rode 
							the hair off the horse,′ one trainer up here said.”
							Next month, Thad and Silver Design will present the 
							colors at the International Tennessee Walking Horse 
							Championship in Murfreesboro, Tenn.
							Plans for future competition are being weighed, though 
							no final decisions have been made.
							“I’d be leaning toward him competing in the Celebration 
							again,” Jack Way said. “It’s hard to take a horse that’s 
							loved as much as he is at the time of his life and keep 
							him out of the show ring.”
							One thing for certain: The win has rejuvenated Silver 
							Design’s breeding career. Way plans to increase the 
							horse’s stud fee from about $800 to $1,000.
							“It doesn’t hurt its reputation any to have him come 
							back like that and win a World Grand Championship title,” 
							McGee said.
							Way declined to reveal what he and partner Rex Critzer 
							of Franklin, Mich., paid for Silver Design. But he said 
							they have already exceeded their business plan of recouping 
							the horse’s purchase price through stud fees within 
							two years. Last year, the horse bred 100 mares.
							Richard Garnes, who sold Silver Design to Way and 
							Critzer, says he doesn’t have any regrets about the 
							transaction. Garnes’ wife, Linda, rode the horse to 
							the 1993 championship.
							“We’ve always loved the horse and felt that whatever 
							is best for the horse needed to happen,” Garnes said. 
							“As it turned out, what Jack did with the horse ... 
							couldn’t have been any better.”