In the end, wanting competitive bulldogs isn't just about "your happiness," it's about
understanding what it takes to win
Understanding what it takes to win has a lot to do with a basic knack, yes, but it also has to do with
experience. When I started out, I knew what a good game dog looked like right away, but I had absolutely no idea on conditioning and calling a dog's weight right. Consequently, I put some very good dogs in there in poor shape, and at weights they never should have been at, and so they lost.I
However, what I
did get good instruction on early on was
how to breed dogs properly ... and that (combined with the fact I knew what a good dog looked like) allowed me very quickly to breed dogs that were soon winning wherever they got off the plane. The first dogs I bred were breaking even, but after a few generations it became an anomaly when they lost. In other words, back in the early 90s my dogs were winning just over 50% of the time (57%), which is just over 5x out of every 10x they got matched ... but by the year 2000 ... and on up until today the have been winning 87% of the time (or just about 9x out of every 10x they get matched), and again that has been all over the world, in whosever hands they get in. So I went from breeding dogs that "broke even" with the best in the world ... to breeding dogs that kicked ass over the best in the world 9x out of 10, thus improving the line I started with. Because, again, this progression was from dogs of my breeding that all traced back to the original dogs I bought and bred back in 1990.
Therefore, although I stopped competing, I was able to continuously succeed as a breeder because I understood the Cajun Rules as well as the basic rules of fighting, which is
"Protect yourself at all times."
To me, any dog that didn't have a high degree of athleticism + the sense to keep itself from "getting bit back" was a loser dog to me. A lot of people may "be happy" watching 2 dogs "swap it out," but
the reality is such dogs are stupid palookas and not World Class animals in my book. A World Class dog does all the biting
without getting bit much in return. Even if he's a killer, to my way of thinking a truly good killer is still killing in such a way as to position himself
out of harm's way.
After having schooled dogs with people from coast-to-coast, and getting feedback from several hundred matches, it is my firm conviction that most people accept dogs that aren't really all that athletic
or bright ... they're mainly "rough and predictable" ... and they're not too game, either. Because that's another thing I have always enjoyed more than the average guy in dogs is some f***ing incredibly game dogs. 9.5x out of 10, if any match with one of my dogs goes over the hour mark, it's the Vise-Grip dog that's going to win on the scratching. Very rarely do my dogs ever lose a scratching contest ... which, essentially is what a Cajun Rules contest is ... and that has been proven time-and-time-again.
So winning consistently isn't just about "you being happy," it's about really knowing fighting strategy in general. It may "make you happy" to watch one-dimensional stifle dogs driving for the back end, but I promise you will never achieve a 9x/10 win record choosing dogs of this style to continuously breed for. You may get an occasional ace that can make that work, but you will be losing (and counting to 10) more often than winning. Further, producing dogs that win consistently goes beyond knowing what a winning style looks like, it's also about selecting
the right dogs (and family) that display this winning style to breed together, and then continuously making
the right choices as to how to sustain (and improve upon) the gene pool you're working with
to keep it that way (or improve upon it).
Jack