Adrian Hedden
Artesia Daily Press
achedden@currentargus.com
Tim Keithley published his first newspaper column in 1979.
As a sophomore wide receiver for the Central High School Bulldogs in Springfield, Missouri, his football career abruptly ended not in the end zone but in front of a typewriter.
A third-stringer, Keithley was told by the coach he should try to catch a word or two instead of footballs. His writing career began.
“He said I could still be on the team, but he couldn’t guarantee I’d ever play. He didn’t want to tell me I was no good,” Keithley recalled with a chuckle nearly 47 years later. “He said, ‘Why don’t you be a sportswriter?’ It was the best advice I ever got.”
The first edition of the Keithley’s Korner column was published in 1979 in the student newspaper – and decades later Keithley can’t recall either the coach’s name or the name of the publication that carried his first byline.
But the feeling of seeing his name in print comes back quickly in recollection. It was the start of a long media career.
Still bearing the original title, “Keithley’s Korner” lives to this day and now runs weekly in the Ruidoso News. The column highlights local businesses, organizations and events in the community and most often shines a flattering light on local people.
Along with his newspaper column, of course, local residents know Keithley from his long association with Ruidoso Downs Racetrack and his popular radio shows: “Tim and Layle,” which airs from 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. weekdays on Bear Country stations 94.7 FM and 1450 AM; and “KWES Saturday Morning” on 93.5 FM.
“I call him the voice of Lincoln County,” said Ruidoso resident Richard Connor, CEO and Editor and Publisher of El Rito Media.” Now I will add ‘Dash for Cash Keithley’ in honor of the legendary quarter horse.”
“He knows everyone here and beyond,” Connor said. “And everyone likes Tim Keithley.”
Keithley, 60, added yet another layer to his involvement in the community March 2 when he became El Rito Media’s general manager, overseeing sales and marketing for the company’s five local newspapers in Alamogordo, Artesia, Carlsbad and Española.
He’ll be focused on Ruidoso, which he’s called home since 1999, but Keithley also will drive revenue company-wide as El Rito rebuilds community journalism in multiple areas of rural New Mexico.
El Rito Media was formed in 2022 with the purchase of the Rio Grande Sun in Española, expanding to include the Artesia Daily Press in 2023 and acquiring the Carlsbad Current-Argus, Alamogordo News and Ruidoso News from Gannett in 2024.
To Keithley, the opportunity to reconnect each community with its local newspaper is both daunting and challenging. Local news, he says, is critical to an engaged public and should reflect the passions and people of the community.
“I just really have a strong passion for this community and that’s the kind of person that you want to help operate the newspaper,” Keithley said. “All El Rito media wants to do is to provide local news. The Girl Scout selling cookies, the basketball scores. That’s what a local newspaper does – puts local stories and local photos in your newspaper.”
‘It’s in your blood’
Keithley moved to Ruidoso from Kansas City, Missouri, to work at Ruidoso Downs Racetrack in October 1999, extending an association with then-track owner R.D. Hubbard that began a decade earlier when he was hired to work at a track Hubbard owned in Kansas City, The Woodlands.
Keithley took the job almost immediately after graduating with a bachelor’s degree in electronic media from Missouri State University. With the Kansas City track falling on hard times brought about by competition from riverboat gambling and other factors, Hubbard offered Keithley the opportunity to relocate amid the mountains of southeast New Mexico.
Tim started in ticket sales at Ruidoso Downs and over the years expanded his role to include advertising sales, hosting TV and radio shows each racing season, and eventually becoming the track’s spokesman and public face in the community.
He left the track temporarily in 2010 for a four-year stint in public service as district director for then-U.S. Rep. Steve Pearce. The former congressman is currently President Donald Trump’s nominee to serve as director of the federal Bureau of Land Management.
For those who make their living in horse racing, the track is more than just a place to work. Racing is a way of life and for Keithley, the racetrack tapped an innate affinity for the horses, the sport and the business. He was mesmerized by the powerful strides of quarter horses and thoroughbreds as they surged toward the finish line, and by the subculture of horse racing.
“A racetrack is different because it’s a whole world inside of itself,” Keithley said. “It’s in your blood. I was just infatuated with all of it.”
Keithley’s passion for an institution so quintessential to the community fostered his deep connection with Ruidoso and southeast New Mexico.
“It is such a big part of this town,” Keithley said of the track. “This is the Yankee Stadium of quarter horse racing.”
And when tragedy struck in 2024 with the South Fork and Salt fires, a ferocious duo of wildfires that burned about 20,000 acres, killed at least three people and eventually brought about the likely end of racing at Ruidoso Downs, Keithley said, he was inspired by the resolve of track owner Johnny Trotter and general manager Rick Baugh.
The fires led to a devastating series of floods as they burned away vegetation that would normally hold back monsoonal rainwaters, damaging the track and forcing officials to move its races to The Downs in Albuquerque each of the last two seasons. Track officials said in January that the 2026 season was canceled and that the track was closed indefinitely, due to flood damage.
But Keithley said Trotter and Baugh remained key figures in the community, despite their misfortune, and inspired him to continue supporting the needs of Ruidoso.
“They have just been through the ringer. They have tried so hard to keep horse racing vibrant,” Keithley said. “I’m just praying that someday we are going to see that back in Ruidoso. This is what this town is built on, this 80-year-old racetrack.”
It’s that same unrelenting passion for the community that Keithley intends to bring to his role at El Rito Media, both as general manager and the company’s most-enduring columnist.
“I do really enjoy getting people’s stories and telling that story,” he said. “If someone has something they’re passionate about, I like to get that out of them.”
Managing Editor Adrian Hedden can be reached at 575-628-5516, or @AdrianHedden on the social media platform X.