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Siena University Athletics

Pacheco 3

Men's Soccer

Every Student Has a Story: Jacob Pacheco '21

When the pandemic suspended campus life this spring, Jacob Pacheco '21 went straight to work. After all, it was calving season.

The following feature story about Siena Men's Soccer Senior Jacob Pacheco was taken from the November 13, 2020 issue of The "Scoop", a bi-weekly publication for the Siena Community.

Most ranchers will tell you the ideal breeding season for cows is May - that way the calves are born in early spring the following year. The forage is beginning to regrow in February as the days lengthen and the temperatures rise, providing adequate grazing for the mother cow (and ample nutrition for her calf). So, when classes went remote this spring, Pacheco logged on from his family's cattle ranch in Taos, New Mexico, and in between classes, he assisted with cows in labor (below, right). 

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Pacheco cherished the routine. Every day, before he started kindergarten, he would get up early with his grandfather and tend to the cattle. Being a rancher is a lifestyle and a way to make a living. Pacheco always wanted both. 

His grandfather and father started buying cattle more than 30 years ago (Pacheco's great grandfather also owned cows, but sold them soon after World War II). They now own approximately 300 cattle at any given time and raise them on 14,000 acres of leased land in the northern New Mexico mountains during the spring, and on 6,000 acres of pastures in the winter. They specialize in grass fed, black angus beef (they never use hormones or pesticide). It's a good-sized, yet local ranch - but when Pacheco gets his shot, he has plans to broaden operations.

Pacheco's grandfather passed away seven years ago. His dad manages the ranch now, but it was never his passion or his primary income (he recently retired from a government job). Pacheco, though, plans to take over the business and run the ranch with his brother, and expand. More cows, more land - and they want to increase the distribution of their own butcher shop. Pacheco's Siena degree will help, and he looks forward to realizing his grandfather's dream. But more than anything, he looks forward to being back on horseback.

Everybody deserves a happy place. For Pacheco, it's easy. Riding eight hours a day over miles of northern New Mexico mountains tending to his herd. Or, on the soccer pitch. 

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(Pictured above on the family ranch with his father, Rudolph)
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Players Mentioned

Jacob Pacheco

#5 Jacob Pacheco

B
6' 2"
Senior

Players Mentioned

Jacob Pacheco

#5 Jacob Pacheco

6' 2"
Senior
B