Rodeo Life

Category: Rodeo Life Today

  • All In The Family

    All In The Family

    Four generations of the Roberts family have volunteered with the Days of ’76 rodeo   

    Deadwood, S.D. (July 10, 2023) – Pat Roberts’ life has revolved around the Days of ’76 Rodeo.

    In fact, he’s the third of four generations of Roberts who has been involved in the PRCA event, which takes place in Deadwood July 23-29.

    The first time he attended the rodeo was at four days old, in 1955, and since then, he’s never missed a single performance of the rodeo. His son Chris hasn’t either.

    It’s a tradition with the Roberts, a family affair, Chris said. He and his dad volunteer with other organizations, but the Days of ’76 is near and dear to their hearts. “The rodeo is one thing we’ve been involved with, I can say, for forever.”

    Chris’ great-granddad, also named Pat, started the tradition of volunteering with the rodeo; Pat’s son Bub, continued it; Bub’s son Pat was the third generation, becoming a committee man in the 1970s, and now Pat and his wife Annie’s son Chris continues the tradition.

    Pat remembers hearing stories of his granddad, who broke horses, mostly teams, for a living. When he would sell a team, the staunch old cowboy would tell the buyer that he’d come and get them during the Days of ’76, so they could be used to pull wagons in the parade. Pat remembers trailing sixty or seventy head of horses, some from the teams his granddad had broke and sold, from Whitewood to Deadwood for the rodeo parade each year.

    The ranchers usually didn’t mind, Pat said. “They were proud to have them in the parade, and most of them would drive their team,” on the parade route.

    As a kid, Pat was on horseback, helping run calves and steers out of the arena. He graduated to running a chalkboard: writing judges’ scores and flashing it up to the crow’s nest, before the days of electronic equipment.

    When he dated his wife, Annie, one of the first outings they had was to a Little Britches Rodeo in Deadwood. She worked in the crow’s nest as a timer and with bookwork, as he volunteered in the arena. “She knew,” he said, of his love for rodeo and “The Days,” the nickname committee members have for the event.

    They married in 1981, and had four kids: Chris, Mike, Scott and Abby.

    All four kids helped with the rodeo, and Chris has continued as an adult.

    Like his dad, Chris got his start as a kid.

    “I was probably more in the way than helping,” he said. He helped untie calves during the tie-down roping and clear the arena of calves and steers.

    He joined the committee in 2002 and served as chairman in 2012 and 2022.

    “Being on the board as long as I have, I’ve served on all the sub-committees,” he said. “That’s one thing about our rodeo. It’s all hands on deck. It’s a very involved group of people.”

    The board consists of 20 people, all volunteers, who produce the Days of ’76.

    “It’s a great, great group of people,” Chris said. “You don’t find groups like this that work as hard as we do, for the same goal, and get along so well.”

    Camaraderie among the committee members is good, he said. “We’re all good friends, and a lot of those friendships were made simply by being on the Days of ’76 committee. It’s a great group of people. I think the majority of us look forward to the meetings and getting together, and we have fun while we’re doing it.

    “The camaraderie is hard to explain, but it’s there and it’s deep.”

    Wives and kids have volunteered. Chris and his wife Abbie’s three kids volunteer, as has Abbie, and Pat’s wife Annie. “My wife has been supportive, as has Chris’s,” Pat said.

    Pat remembers when his daughter Abby was planning wedding dates for herself and soon-to-be husband. He told her, “there are three dates in my life you can sure get married on, but I won’t be there,” and one of them was the Days of ’76. “She said, ‘you’re not serious,’ and my wife said, ‘absolutely.’ We don’t plan anything for the family over those days.”

    The last full week of July, the Roberts family has plans.

    “We know exactly what we’re doing, and where we’ll be,” Chris said. “No question on any of it.”

    “It’s fun,” Pat said. “It just gets in your blood. I wouldn’t miss it for anything. I’m going to have to be pushing up daisies to miss it.”

    This year’s Days of ’76 takes place July 23-29, Performances are July 26-29 at 7 pm nightly with a 1:30 pm matinee on July 29. Slack, the extra competition that doesn’t fit into the performances, runs July 23-27.

    Tickets range in price from $11-$41 (plus fees) and can be purchased online at Daysof76.com and at the gate. For more information, visit the website.

    A free concert by the band Brule will kick of rodeo week on July 25 at 8 pm, at Outlaw Square.

    In 2011, Days of ’76 was inducted into the PRCA’s Pro Rodeo Hall of Fame.

    Dianna Palmer

    dkpalmer14@gmail.com

  • Back where it all began

    Back where it all began

    Boxleitner finds glory at Rooftop, the rodeo that pointed him toward roping

    ESTES PARK, Colo. – Just two days before his 23rd birthday, Tyler Boxleitner gave himself a bit of a present.

    He roped and tied his calf in 12.1 seconds during Sunday’s fifth performance of the Rooftop Rodeo to move into a share of the tie-down roping lead with one day left in the Town of Estes Park signature event. What makes it special are the facts around his 2023 run at the rodeo just 20 miles from his home in Loveland, Colorado.

    “Seven years ago I came to this rodeo with my mom to watch the barrel racing,” said Boxleitner, whose mom, Kari, and sister, Taryn are barrel racers. “That was the day I decided to become a calf roper, and I ran with it. It’s special to be here at the rodeo that started it all. To be able to be splitting the average and win the first round is just an unbelievable feeling.”

    All of this week’s experiences give him a hometown feeling, because so much of his life has been spent up the mountain at the base of the Rocky Mountain National Park.

    “I grew up fishing and hunting around Estes Park,” he said. “It’s just a special place. Loveland is a special place to me, but this is one of my favorite rodeos, especially now.”

    Boxleitner stopped the clock in 9.9 seconds Thursday night to win the first round. That was worth $1,620 and gave him a boost he needs to catch Mountain States Circuit leader Riley Pruitt. Leading up to Sunday night, Boxleitner had earned $6,889 in the region made up primarily of rodeos and contestants in Colorado and Wyoming.

    His earnings in Estes Park already have shot him to the standings lead, and he’ll add to it with his average check. He and Kincade Henry each roped two calves in a cumulative time of 22.0 seconds. Boxleitner began competing in ProRodeo in 2019 and has tried his hand at competing full time. This year, though, his focus is on rodeoing primarily in the circuit.

    “I decided this year the best option for me was to stay close to home and finish out my 7-year-old horse named Slick,” he said of the sorrel gelding. “I made the decision to stay on him no matter how bad or good it went and just try to figure it out on him. It’s been really good on him lately.”

    “I plan to go for (the National Finals Rodeo) next year. I’m going to try to dominate the circuit this year and be ready to hit the trail hard come Oct. 1.”

    The ProRodeo season is cyclical. It runs Oct. 1 of one year to Sept. 30 of the next, but world champions aren’t crowned until the NFR in December. In order to win a gold buckle, cowboys and cowgirls must qualify for the finale, but only the top 15 in the world standings at the end of the regular season earn that right.

    All the positives are stacking up for Boxleitner. He trusts his young horse, because the gelding always works to help his human partner. It takes a horse that can get to the calf quickly, then stop fast and keep the line tight to allow the cowboy to tie three legs together. It’s a combination of horsemanship and the thrill of competition that drives him.

    “At the end of the day, it’s you and your horse, and you’re competing against your calf and don’t have to rely on anybody else,” Boxleitner said. “It’s on you and your horse to make the best run you can. Maybe it’s selfish, but I like to win my self and not have to share the glory.

    “This is the hardest thing I’ve ever done, and it’s something you can never quit getting better at and never quit learning. I think that’s why I’m so drawn to it. I’m always trying to get better. You can never hit the ceiling.”

     

    Results
    Rooftop Rodeo
    July 5-10
    Bareback riding : 1. (tie) Waylon Bourgeois, on The Cervi Brothers’ Bazinga, and Richmond Champion, on Cervi Championship Rodeo’s Hitman, 85.5 points; 3. Jacob Raine, 85; 4. Lane McGehee, 83; 5. (tie) Kade Berry, Keenan Hayes and Jacob Lees, 79.

    Steer wrestling: First round: 1. Aaron Vosler, 3.6 seconds, $1,721; 2. Riley Duvall, 3.7, $1,425; 3. Bridger Anderson, 4.1, $1,128; 4. (tie) Rowdy Parrott and Cash Robb, 4.3, $683 each; 6. (tie) Jace Joos and Tristan Martin, 4.5, $148 each. Second round: 1. Brandon Harrison, 3.6 seconds; 2. Clayton Hass, 3.7; 3. Stephen Culling, 3.9; 4. Kyler Dick, 4.2; 5. Dakota Eldridge, 4.5; 6. Walt Arnold, 4.6. Average: 1. (tie) Aaron Vosler and Dakota Eldridge, 9.1 seconds on two head; 3. Rowdy Parrott, 9.2; 4. Bridger Anderson, 9.3; 5. Tyler Pearson, 9.9; 6. Kyler Dick, 10.8.

    Team roping: First round: 1. Korbin Rice/Jake South, 4.4 seconds, $1,721 each; 2. Tyler Wade/Wesley Thorp, 4.5, $1,425; 3. (tie) Cam Jensen/Tanner Whetham and Kreece Thompson/Landen Glenn, 4.7, $979 each; 5. Lightning Aguilera/Jared Fillmore, 4.8, $534; 6. (tie) Pedro Egurrola/JC Flake and Kellan Johnson/Carson Johnson, 5.0, $148 each. Second round: 1. (tie) Tanner Tomlinson/Patrick Smith and Andrew Ward/Buddy Hawkins II, 4.2 seconds; 3. Dustin Egusquiza/Levi Lord, 4.3; 4. Payden Emmett/Lucas Falconer, 4.5; 5. (tie) Kellan Johnson/Carson Johnson and Kreece Thompson/Landen Glenn, 4.7 each. Average: 1. (tie) Andrew Ward/Buddy Hawkins II and Kreece Thompson/Landen Glenn, 9.4 seconds on two head; 3. Kellan Johnson/Carson Johnson, 9.7; 4. Korbin Rice/Jake South, 9.8; 5. Lightning Aguilera/Jared Fillmore, 10.3; 6. Tanner Tomlinson/Patrick Smith, 14.2.

    Saddle bronc riding: 1. Stu Wright, 87.5 points on Cervi Championship Rodeo’s Ricky Bobby; 2. Stetson Dell Wright, 87; 3. Kade Bruno, 86; 4. Sam Martin, 84; 5. Cort Scheer, 83; 6. Lefty Marvel Holman, 82.5.

    Tie-down roping: First round: 1. Tyler Boxleitner, 9.9 seconds, $1,620; 2. Kincade Henry, 10.1, $1,341; 3. Kyle Dickens, 10.2, $1,061; 4. Colton Farquer, 10.7, $782; 5. Ross McAdow, 12.2, $503; 6. Zaine Mikita, 12.9, $279. Second round: 1. Jeremiah Peek, 10.0 seconds; 2. Kincade Henry, 11.9; 3. Tyler Boxleitner, 12.1; 4. Ricky Lambert, 12.5; 5. Seth Peterson, 12.6; 6. Cash Hooper, 13.3. Average: 1. (tie) Kincade Henry and Tyler Boxleitner, 22.0 seconds on two head; 3. Seth Peterson, 25.7; 4. David Trahan, 28.8; 5. (tie) Cash Hooper and Ross McAdow, 29.7 each; no other qualified runs.

    Barrel racing: 1. Shelley Morgan, 15.84 seconds; 2. Steely Steiner, 16.01; 3. Hayle Gibson, 16.10; 4. Kelly Allen, 16.11; 5. Kelly Yates, 16.14; 6. (tie) Michelle Darling and Makala Pierce, 16.18; Sadie Wolaver, 16.19; 9. (tie) Rainey Skelton, Heidi Tillard and Sydney Graham, 16.21; 12. (tie) Michelle Merrick and Halyn Lide, 16.24; 14. (tie) Fallon Forbes and Preslie Reid, 16.25.

    Bull riding: 1. Stetson Dell Wright, 88 points on Cervi Championship Rodeo’s Theodore; 2. Tyler Kippes, 87.5; 3. Wyatt Phelps, 83; 4. Luke Mast, 82; 5. Fulton Rutland, 81; 6. Braden Richardson, 80.5.

     

  • Beisel and Boisjoli Best Over Fourth of July

    Beisel and Boisjoli Best Over Fourth of July

    COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO – Emily Beisel (pictured here at Prescott, WPRA photo by Fernando Sam-Sin)  and Shelby Boisjoli turned in A-plus performances over the Fourth of July known as Cowboy Christmas to lead their respective events in total money won at rodeos that were contested between June 26 and July 5.

    This is the second time for Beisel to capture this accomplishment but first for Boisjoli. Beisel won a total of $25,277, while Boisjoli led all breakaway ropers with $15,397. Both had some major competition with Beisel edging Paige Jones by just over $500. Jones finished with $24,776 and Carlee Otero was third with $22,795. Boisjoli narrowly edged Beau Peterson who finished with $15,186 and Kelsie Domer with $13,980. Peterson won the Basin City (WA) Freedom Rodeo to close out the Fourth of July run and almost overtook Boisjoli, who also picked up one final check to push total over $15,000 and hold onto the top spot.

    Beisel collected her biggest check North of the border at the Ponoka Stampede. She took the title aboard Chongo and added $16,835 to her 2023 earnings. She also picked up checks at the Cody (WY) Stampede – $4,019, Home of Champions (Livingston, MT) – $2,410 and the Molalla (OR) Buckaroo Rodeo – $2,013.

    The timing of Beisel and Jones finishing 1-2, couldn’t have been better especially when looking at their horsepower and the ranch their mounts came from. As the 2003 WPRA World Champion Janae Ward Massey posted on her social media page:

    “What a 4th of July in the rodeo arena for Youree Ranch horses. Emily Beisel and Paige Jones banked over $50,000 between them on Bazinga, Pipewrench, Chongo and Beau. Way to go girls, can’t wait to see you in the bright lights of Vegas! You make the ranch proud.”

    The Youree family has played a big part in the history of the WPRA and their horse breeding program continues to make headlines.

    For Boisjoli her biggest check came at the World’s Oldest Rodeo in Prescott (AZ) where she won the title and $7,896. She also collected checks at the Greeley (CO) Independence Stampede – $1,106, the Black Hills Roundup (Belle Fourche, SD) – $1,961, the Mandan (ND) Rodeo Days – $3,917 and Basin City (WA) Freedom Rodeo – $517 to bring her 2023 Fourth of July to a close. Boisjoli has sure been on a hot streak as of late winning the Reno (NV) Rodeo the weekend prior to Cowboy Christmas getting underway.

    Boisjoli’s No. 1 fan is no doubt her husband Haven Meged, who won the PRCA Tie-Down Roping World Title in 2019. He is now trying to help his wife do the same on the breakaway side.

    Stay tuned to how all these ladies finish out their already spectacular 2023 rodeo season. Full coverage will be in the August issue of the WPRA News.

    Cowboy Christmas – Top 10

    Barrel Racing

    1. Emily Beisel   $25,277
    2. Paige Jones     $24,776
    3. Carlee Otero   $22,795
    4. Stevi Hillman $17,161
    5. Tracy Nowlin  $16,484
    6. Dona Kay Rule           $16,029
    7. Ashley Castleberry     $14,352
    8. Ilyssa Riley     $13,703
    9. Hailey Kinsel  $12,893
    10. Tarryn Lee      $12,234

     

    Breakaway Roping

    1. Shelby Boisjoli       $15,397
    2. Beau Peterson         $15,186
    3. Kelsie Domer          $13,980
    4. Rickie Engesser      $13,010
    5. Madalyn Richards  $11,144
    6. Martha Angelone    $10,663
    7. Taylor Munsell       $8,459
    8. Cheyanne Guillory $8,101
    9. Danielle Lowman   $7,518
    10. Nicole Baggarley  $7,331
  • 104th Cody Stampede Rodeo closes with a bang

    104th Cody Stampede Rodeo closes with a bang

    CODY, Wyo., July 4, 2023 In spite of mud, a unseasonably cool temperatures, the final performance of this year’s Cody Stamped Rodeo offered plenty of excitement, or maybe it was because of the mud.

    Cowboys and cowgirls had plenty to clean up after making an appearance at Stampede Park on the Fourth of July and some of them did it with a big smile on their face. At the top of that list is Stetson Wright from Milford, Utah.

    The four-time world champion all-around cowboy showed fans here just why he has earned that title. He competed in the saddle bronc riding and placed fourth. Then he brushed off a little mud and got ready for the bull riding.

    The bull he got on was Pokerface from Frontier Rodeo Company. Wright matched him move for move and when the judges added up their scores, Stetson had a 90-by his name. His ride came after Tristen Hutchings, the reigning National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association champion scored an 89. Wright’s win added $10,039 to his season earnings. Before the lucrative Fourth-of-July holiday, known as Cowboy Christmas, he was third in the world standings with $131,513. His traveling partner Ky Hamilton is first in the standings and has a $10,000 lead.

    Wright’s check in the saddle bronc riding was for $3,557 making him the big money winner at the 104th edition of the Cody Stamped. He earned $13,596 from the rodeo which paid nearly $400,000 to athletes. Next in line at the pay window was barrel racer Paige Jones from Wayne, Oklahoma, who stopped the clock in 17.20 seconds during the third performance of the rodeo. She was 16th in the Women’s Professional Rodeo Association world standings prior to the win. It should move her into the top 15 and give her an opportunity to make her first trip to Las Vegas to compete at the Wrangler National Finals Rodeo.

    The 104th Cody Stampede Rodeo is part of the Cinch Playoff Series, so contestants are earning points to qualify for events at the end of the season that could seal their trip to Las Vegas in December to compete for world championships. The third and fourth performances were both sold out and other performances were near capacity. The Cody Nite Rodeo gets back on schedule July 5, and runs through the end of August with rising stars advancing their skills.

     

     

    104th Cody Stampede Champions

    Bareback Riding — Tim O’Connell, Zwingle, Iowa, 89 points, $9,870

    Steer Wrestling – Blake Knowles, Heppner, Ore., 3.9 seconds, $8,885

    Team Roping – Tanner Tomlinson, Angleton, Texas & Patrick Smith, Lipan, Texas, 4.6 seconds, $8,310

    Saddle Bronc Riding – Sage Newman, Melstone, Mont., 89 points, $9701

    Breakaway Roping – Martha Angelone, Stephenville, Texas, 2.0, , $5,104

    Tie-Down Roping – King Pickett, Weatherford, Texas, 7.4 seconds, $9,668

    Barrel Racing – Paige Jones, 17.20 seconds, $11,759

    Bull Riding – Stetson Wright, Milford, Utah, 90 points, $10,039

     

    The following are unofficial results from the 104th Cody Stampede, Tuesday, July 4, 2023 —

    Bareback riding: 1, Tim O’Connell, Zwingle, Iowa, 89 points on Frontier Rodeo’s Breaking News, $9,870. 2, Keenan Reed Hayes, Hayden, Colo., 88.5, $7,567. 3, Waylon Bourgeois, Church Point, La., 86.5, $5,593, 4, Orin Larsen, Inglis, Manitoba, 86, $3,619. 5, (tie) Bradlee Miller, Huntsville, Texas, and Dean Thompson, Altamont, Utah, 85.5 and $1,974 each. 7, (tie) Jayco Roper, Oktaha, Okla.; Tanner Aus, Granite Falls, Minn.; and Sam Petersen, Helena, Mont., 84.5, $768.

     

    Steer wrestling: 1, Blake Knowles, Heppner, Ore.,3.9 seconds, 8,865. 2, Aaron Vosler, Laramie, Wyo., 4.2, $7,840. 3, (tie) Bridger Anderson, Carrington, N.D., and Reed Kraeger, Waco, Neb., 4.3 and $6,272 each. 5, Ty Erickson, Helena, Mont., 4.4, $5,226.  6, (tie) Stephen Culling, Fort St. John, British Columbia, and  Olin Hannum, Malad, Idaho, 4.7, $4,442. 8, (tie) Coltin Justin Crawford, Drayton Valley, Alberta, Denver Berry, Checotah, Okla.; and Kyler Dick, Oakley, Utah, 4.8, $2,962.

     

    Team roping: 1, Tanner Tomlinson, Angleton, Texas, and Patrick Smith, Lipan, Texas, 4.6 seconds, $8,310. 2, Ty Arnold, Midway, Texas and Kaden Profili, Jacksonville, Texas, 4.7, $7,332. 3, (tie) Jake Cooper Clay, Sapulpa, Okla., and Kollin VonAhn, Blanchard, Okla.; and Nelson Wyatt, Clanton, Ala., and Chase Tryan, Helena, Mont., 4.9, $5,866. 5, Chad Masters, Cedar Hill, Tenn., and Trey Yates, Pueblo, Colo., 5.0, $4,888. 6, (tie) Clay Smith, Broken Bow, Okla., and Coleby Payne, Stephenville, Texas; Jr. Dees, Aurora, S.D., and Ross Ashford, Lott, Texas; Garrett Tonozzi, Lampasas, Texas, and jace Davis, Stephenville, Texas; Keven Danile, Franklin, Tenn., and Travis Graves, Jay, Okla., 5.1, $3,666. 7, (tie) Garrett Rogers, Baker City, Ore., and Jake Minor, Ellensburg, Wash,; and Dawson and Dillon Graham, Wainwright, Alberta, 5.3, $978.

     

    Saddle bronc riding: 1, Sage Newman, Melstone, Mont., 89 points on Frontier Rodeo’s Miss Ellie, $9,701. 2, Wyatt Casper, Miami, Texas, 88.5, $7,437. 3, Brody Cress, Hillsdale, Wyo., 87.5, 5,497. 4, Stetson Wright, Milford, Utah, 86.5, $3,557. 5, Ben T. Andersen, Eckville, Alberta, 86, $2,264. 6, Shorty Garrett, Eagle Butte, S.D., 85, $1,617. 7, Leon Fountain, Corona, N.M., 84, $1,293. 8, (tie) Sterling Crawley, Stephenville, Texas, and Tegan Smith, Winterset, Iowa, 83.5, $485.

     

    Breakaway roping: 1, Martha Angelone, Stephenville, Texas, 2..0 seconds, $5,104 . 2, (tie) Samantha Fulton, Miller, S.D., and Bryanna Lehrmann, Lexington, Texas, 2.3, $3,701 each. 4, (tie) McKenna Hickson, Lipan, Texas; Danielle Lowman, Gilbert, Ariz.; Macy Young, Wittman, Ariz.; Shaylee Terry, McKinnon, Wyo.; and Peggy Garman, Sundance, Wyo.; 2.4, $1,710. 9, (tie) Taylor Engesser, Spearfish, S.D.; Taya McAdow, Fort Lupton, Colo.; and Erin Johnson, Fowler, Colo.; 2.5, $893. 12, Alie Thiel, Eaton, Colo.; Elizabeth French, Glasgow, Mont.; Sarah Angelone, Lipan, Texas; and RyleeGeorge, Oakdale, Calif., 2.6, $447.

     

    Tie-down roping: 1, King Pickett, Weatherford, Texas, 7.4 seconds, $9,668. 2, Jake Pratt5,687, Ellensburg, Wash., 8.0, $8,531. 3, Hagen Houck, Henrietta, Texas, 8.1, $7,393. 4, Ty Harris, San Angelo, Texas, 8.5, $6,256. 5, Marty Yates, Stephenville, Texas, 8.6, $5,687. 6, Kincade Henry, Mount Pleasant, Texas, 8.7, $5,118. 7, (tie) Tyler Boxleitner, Loveland, Colo.; Zack Jongbloed, Iowa, La.; and Chris McCuistion, Collinsville, Texas; 8.8, $3,981.  10, (tie) Karson Kolacek, West, Texas; Riley Pruitt, Gering, Neb.; Jordan Ketscher, Squaw Valley, Calif.; Sterling Smith, Stephenville, Texas; and Marcos Costa, Iratama, Brazil, 8.9, $455.

     

    Barrel Racing: 1, Paige Jones, Wayne, Oklahoma, 17.20 seconds, $11,759. 2, Hailey Kinsel, Cotulla, Texas, 17.34,  $9,408. 3, Sydney Graham, Abilene, Texas, 17.36, $7,644.  4, Michelle Darling, Medford, Okla., 17.47, $5,880. 5, (tie) Stevi Hillman, Granbury, Texas, and Emily Biesel, Weatherford, Okla., 17.48  and $4,116 each. 7, Ivy Saebens, Nowata, Okla., 17.55, $2,940. 8, (tie) Leslie Smalygo, Skiatook, Okla., and Margo Crowther, North Fort Myers, Fla., 17.56, $2,499. 10, (tie) Wenda Johnson, Pawhuska, Okla., and Taycie Matthews, Wynne, Ark., 17.59, $1,911. 13, Shelley Morgan, Eustace, Texas, 17.63, $1,470. 14, Victoria Proctor, Ledbetter, Texas, 17.64, $1,176. 15, (tie) Hailey Garrison, Glen, Mont., and Abigail Knight, Charlo, Mont., 17.66, $294.

     

    Bull Riding: 1, Stetson Wright, 90 points on Frontier Rodeo’s Pokerface, $10,039. 2, Tristen Hutchings, Montview, Idaho, 89, $7,697. 3, Tyler Bingham, Howell, Utah, 87.5, $5,689. 4, (tie) Maverick Potter, Waxahachie, Texas, and Roscoe Jarboe, New Plymouth, Idaho, 86, $3,012. 6, (tie) Trey Kimzey, Strong City, Okla., and Bryce Burnell,  Sheridan, Wyo., 84, $1,506. 8, Ruger Piva, Challis, Idaho, 82.5, $1,004.

     

  • College Rodeo Crowns 2023 Champions

    College Rodeo Crowns 2023 Champions

    CASPER, Wyo. (June 17, 2023) – Championship Saturday at the 2023 College National Finals Rodeo (CNFR) began with the top 12 student athletes in nine events roping and riding for individual and team honors, The night ended with the crowning of 10 individual and two all-around national champions along with new women’s and men’s national champion teams.

    The night began with bareback riding. Kade Sonnier, a graduate student in health and human performance at McNeese State University, qualified in eighth place in the finals but made a bid for the title when he scored 84.5 points on Vold Rodeo’s horse Brubby Spoon. Sonnier’s total of 314 points on four rounds held first place until the final bareback rider of the night.

    Weston Timberman, who was born and raised in Casper before moving to Columbus, Montana, came in with the highest total after the first three rounds. Rodeo insiders were anticipating the matchup between Timberman and Vold’s horse Crossbreed’s Captain Hook – the horse Missouri Valley College’s Ty Pope rode to win last year’s title. The freshman science major at Clarendon College matched Sonnier’s score of 84.5 and won the championship by 11 points. Timberman was instrumental in Clarendon College winning another men’s team championship and also earned men’s rookie of the year honors.

    Kincade Henry of Mount Pleasant, Texas, became one of the few tie-down ropers to win back-to-back college championships. The junior ag business major at Texas A & M University – Commerce came into the finals with a 2.7-second overall lead. His time of 10.5 seconds was good enough for second in the round and his second consecutive college title.

    The first upset of the night came in breakaway roping. Makayla Farkas of Leona Valley, California, was in third place when the night began. The senior kinesiology major at West Hills College tied for second in the round with a time of 2.7 seconds and roped the championship with 10.9 seconds on four runs.

    The saddle bronc riding had been a battle all week with a single point separating Quintin McWhorter of California Polytechnic State University – San Luis Obispo and Damian Brennan of Western Texas College. The pair were the final two cowboys to compete with McWhorter, an ag education graduate student from Petrolia, California, going first. McWhorter scored 85 points on Vold Rodeo Company’s bronc named Jerry’s Justice for 323.5 total points. Brennan, an Australian who just wrapped up his junior year in farm and ranch management, and Vold’s bronc Moon Valley combined for 84 points, tied for second in the round and matched McWhorter’s total. Both athletes were crowned national saddle bronc riding champions.

    JT Ellison, a senior at the University of West Alabama, came into the finals with a three-second lead overall. As the final competitor in steer wrestling Ellison, who majored in cell and molecular biology, made a business-like run of 6.7 and won the championship by 1.3 seconds.

    The goat tying was the tightest event with six-tenths of a second separating the top eight finalists when the night began. Almost every cowgirl clocked a time in the six-second range. When the dust settled Montana State University senior Paige Rasmussen jumped from third to first overall when she won the final round with a time of 6.0 seconds. The psychology major from Bozeman won the all-around cowgirl national championship here in 2021, but this was her first individual national title.

    A pair of Texans took national honors in the team roping. Slade Wood, a freshman from New Ulm, and Logan Moore, a junior from Pleasanton, held a lead of almost two seconds when Saturday’s action began. They finished second in the round and were named champion header and heeler, respectively. Wood is a business major representing Southwest Texas Junior College and Moore is a wildlife biology major at Wharton County Junior College.

    Taycie Matthews of Wynne, Arkansas, won her first national title in her third trip to the CNFR. Matthews, a junior business major at the University of West Alabama, won two of the first three rounds and finished second in the other. She was the 12th barrel racer to compete in the finals and her time of 13.94 was good enough for second in the round and won the championship by 32-hundredths of a second. Three of the 12 finalists in barrel racing were from the University of West Alabama and Matthews led her team to the school’s first women’s team championship.

    The night ended with Tristan Hutchings winning his second collegiate bull riding championship in three years. The Idaho native just wrapped up his senior year at Sul Ross State University in Alpine, Texas, with a degree in agriculture. Ironically, he drew the same bull that cost him the 2022 bull riding title here – Vold Rodeo Co’s Night Trip. Although he bucked off at 7.56 seconds, Hutchings won the title as the only bull rider to make three qualified rides this week.

    The men’s all-around title went to Quade Hiatt of Canyon, Texas, a junior business marketing major at West Texas A & M University. He and partner Jace Helton of Weatherford College finished as reserve champions in team roping. Hiatt also finished fifth in tie-down roping.

    Freshman Haiden Thompson of Yoder, Wyoming, won both the women’s all-around and rookie of the year titles. A business major at Gillette College, Thompson qualified for the finals in both breakaway roping and team roping.

    The 2024 College National Finals Rodeo returns to Casper next June.

     

    2023 COLLEGE NATIONAL FINALS RODEO CHAMPIONS

     

    Bareback – Weston Timberman, Clarendon College, 325 points.

    Tie-Down Roping – Kincade Henry, Texas A&M University – Commerce, 35.8

    Breakaway Roping – Makayla Farkas, West Hills college, 10.9

    Saddle Bronc Riding (tie) – Quintin McWhorter, Cal Poly State University, and

    Damian Brennan, Western Texas College, 323.5 points

    Steer Wrestling – Joshua Ellison, University of West Alabama, 26.0 seconds.

    Goat Tying – Paige Rasmussen, Montana State University, 24.3 seconds.

    Team Roping – Slade Wood, Southwest Texas Junior College and

    Logan Moore, Wharton County Junior College, 22.8

    Barrel Racing – Taycie Matthews, University of West Alabama, 55.53

    Bull Riding – Tristen Hutchings, Sul Ross State University, 236 points

    Men’s All-Around – Quade Hiatt, West Texas A&M University, 365 points

    Women’s All-Around – Haiden Thompson, Gillette College, 180

    Men’s Team – Clarendon College 855 points

    Women’s Team – University of West Alabama, 696.3 points

    Men’s Rookie – Weston Timberman, Clarendon College, 320 points

    Women’s Rookie – Haiden Thompson, Gillette College, 180

    Men’s AQHA Horse of the Year – Coral Lil Dual, Cutter Carpenter, Texas A&M University – Commerce

    Women’s AQHA Horse of the Year – No Mistaken He’s Fine, Paige Rasmussen, Montana State University

     

     

     

    CASPER, Wyo.—The following are final results from the College National Finals Rodeo, June 17, 2023, courtesy of the National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association. Compest lete results are available at www.collegerodeo.com.

     

    Bareback riding: (final round) 1, (tie) Weston Timberman, Clarendon College, and Kade Sonnier, McNeese State University, 84.5 points each. 3, Ty Pope, Missouri Valley College; Nick Pelk, Missouri Valley College and Bradlee Miller, Sam Houston State University, 79. (total on four) 1, Timberman, 325. 2, Sonnier, 314. 3, Pope, 313. 4, Miller, 311.5. 5, Kooper Helmburg, Missouri Valley College, 310. 6, Donny Proffit, University of Wyoming, 309. 7, Sage Allen, College of Southern Idaho, 306.5. 8, Pelke, 305.

     

    Tie-Down Roping: (final round) 1, Cutter Carpenter, Texas A&M University – Commerce, 9.5 seconds. 2, Kincade Henry, Texas A&M University – Commerce, 10.4. 3, Connor Atkinson, Texas A&M University, 10.6. 4, Cole Walker, University of Tennessee – Martin, 10.7. (total on four) 1, Henry, 35.8. 2, Carpenter, 39. 3, Atkinson, 39.1. 4, Bodie Mattson, University of Wyoming, 39.5. 5, Quade Hiatt, West Texas A&M University, 40.7. 6, Walker, 40.8. 7, Daniel Miranda, Cal Poly State University, 42.1. 8, Logan Smith, Northwest College, 45.9.

     

    Breakaway Roping: (final round) 1, Raegan Steed, College of Southern Idaho, 2.6 seconds. 2, Makayla Farkas, West Hills College, and Kyleigh Winn, Kansas State University, 2.7 each. 4, Kennedy Buckner, Blue Mountain Community College, 3.1. (total on four) 1, Farkas, 10.9. 2, Buckner, 11.3. 3, Samantha Kerns, Treasure Valley Community College, 12.2 4, Steed, 13.3. 5, Winn, 21.3. 6, Sutton Mang, Allan Hancock College, 21.5. 7, Morgan Foss, Dickinson State University, 21.7. 8, Mikenna Schauer, Montana State University Northern, 29.4.

     

    Saddle Bronc Riding: (final round) 1, Quintin McWhorter, Cal Poly State University, 85 points. 2, (tie) Dylan Hancock, Clarendon College, and Damian Brennan, Western Texas College, 84. 4, Isaac Richard, McNeese State University, 83.5. (total on four) 1, (tie) McWhorter and Brennan, 323.5 each. 3, Richard, 320.5. 4, Hancock, 319. 5, Slade Keith, Clarendon College, 314. 6, Will Pollock, Clarendon College, 310. 7, Lance Gaillard, Tarleton State University, 308.5. 8, Parker Fleet, Hill College, 308.

     

    Steer Wrestling: (final round) 1, Mason Couch, Southeastern Oklahoma State University, 3.6 seconds. 2, Tyler Bauerle, Cisco College, 4.7. 3, Bradley Hesnor, McNeese State University, 5.0. 4, Colt Honey, Texas Tech University, 5.2. (total on four) 1, JT Ellison, University of West Alabama, 26.0. 2, Hesnor, 27.3. 3, Bauerle, 29.1. 4, Traver Johnson, Montana State University, 29.2. 5, Honey, 30.6. 6, Bode Spring, Montana State University, 32.8. 7, Jesse Keysaer, University of Tennessee – Martin, 33.8. 8, Kason Davis, Pearl River College, 34.2.

     

    Goat Tying: (final round) 1, Paige Rasmussen, Montana State University, 6.0 seconds. 2, Kaylee Cormier, McNeese State University, 6.1. 3, Kenna McNeill, University of Wyoming, 6.2. 4, (tie) Cheyenne Vande Stouwe, Southwestern Oklahoma State University, 6.3 each. (total on four) 1, Rasmussen, 24.3. 2, Madelyn Richards, Texas A&M University, 24.7. 3, (tie) Cormier, and McNeill, 24.8. 5, Kaytlyn Miller, Texas Tech University, 25.1. 6, Haiden Thompson, Gillette College, 25.5. 7, Vande Stouwe, 25.7. 8, Avery Ledesma, New Mexico State University, 26.1.

     

    Team Roping: (final round) 1, Mason Appleton and Nicholas Lovins, Western Oklahoma State College, 5.5 seconds. 2, Slade Wood, Southwest Texas Junior College and Logan Moore, Wharton County Junior College 6.5. 3, Jace Hanks, and Wyatt Ahlstrom, Utah Valley University, 6.9. 4, Cam Jensen, University of Wyoming and Tanner McInerney, Gillette College, 10.3. (total on four) 1, Wood and Moore, 22.8. 2, Quade Hiatt, Western Texas A&M University and Jace Helton, Weatherford College, 29.1. 3, Appleton and Lovins, 32.4. 4, Hanks and Ahlstrom, 36.4. 5, Ty Johnson, Texas A&M University – Commerce and Cooper Parsley, Panola College, 49.5. (on two) 6, Cobie and Cole Dodds, Feather River College, 18.2. 7, Wyatt Bray, Tarleton State University and Cutter Pake Thomison, Western Texas College, 18.4. 8, Chilly Hernandez and Juanito Montoya, New Mexico State University, 21.0.

     

    Barrel Racing: (final round) 1, Tayla Moeykens, Montana State University, 13.84 seconds. 2, Taycie Matthews, University of West Alabama, 13.94. 3, Abby Hepper, Southwestern Oklahoma State University, 14.05. 4, Annie alexander, New Mexico State University, 14.06. (total on four) 1, Matthews, 55.53. 2, Moeykens, 55.85. 3, Hepper, 56.40. 4, Raven Clagg, University of West Alabama, 56.93. 5, Emme Norsworthy, University of Wyoming, 56.97. 6, Annie Alexander, New Mexico State University, 57.26. 7, Jordan Driver, Tarleton State University, 57.52. 8, Gwyneth Cheyne, Blue Mountain Community College, 57.56.

     

    Bull Riding: (final round – two rides) 1, Caden Bunch, Southeastern Oklahoma State University, 84.5 points. 2, Dawson Gleaves, Weatherford College, 805. (total on three) Tristen Hutchings, Sul Ross State University, 236. 2, Dawson Gleaves, Weatherford College, 233.5. (on two) 3, Bunch, 166. (on one) 4, Wyatt Phelps, Sheridan College, 85.5. 5, Cole Skender, University of Arkansas – Monticello, 82.5, 6, Brad Moreno, Central Arizona College, 71.

     

    Men’s All-Around: 1, Quade Hiatt, West Texas A&M University, 365 points. 2, Cole Walker, University of Tennessee – Martin, 113.3.

     

    Women’s All-Around: 1, Haiden Thompson, Gillette College, 180 points. 2, Bailey Stuva, Northeastern Oklahoma A&M College, 45.

     

    Men’s Team: 1, Clarendon College 855 points. 2, McNeese State University, 790. 3, Texas A&M University – Commerce, 690. 4, Missouri Valley College, 520.

     

    Women’s Team: 1, University of West Alabama, 698.3 points. 2, Montana State University, 593. 3, University of Wyoming, 382.5. 4, Southwestern Oklahoma State university, 382.5.

     

     

     

     

  • Hutchings rides third bull to dominate CNFR

    Hutchings rides third bull to dominate CNFR

    CASPER, Wyo. (June 15, 2023) – A collegiate champion who has already made a mark in the pro ranks has dominated the bull riding at the College National Finals Rodeo at the Ford Wyoming Center.
    Tristan Hutchings of Monteview, Idaho, won his first collegiate bull riding championship in 2021. He finished as reserve champion here last year and qualified for his first National Finals Rodeo (NFR) as a professional. In Las Vegas he won four of the ten rounds and finished third for the world title.
    This year in Casper, Hutchings is the only bull rider to make three qualified rides. His 84-point score on Vold Rodeo Company’s bull Icecube Thursday night put him first in round three. He finished second in both the first and second rounds. The recent college graduate will have to wait until Friday night’s competition is over to see how he finishes in the third round. Just an attempt to ride in Saturday’s championship round will clinch his second collegiate title in three years. Hutchings just wrapped up his senior year at Sul Ross State University in Alpine, Texas, with a degree in agriculture and is currently ranked 12th in the professional standings.
    Damian Brennan, a junior majoring in farm and ranch management at Western Texas College, took the lead in saddle bronc riding. Brennan, a native of Queensland, Australia, scored 81 points on Frontier Rodeo’s bronc named Delta Force to take the lead in round three. His total of 239.5 points gave him a 1.5-point edge in the overall standings. Isaac Richard, a junior agriculture major at McNeese State University, scored 77 points to tie for third in round three and hold on to second place overall.
    Last year Brennan finished one spot short of qualifying for his first NFR and earned the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA) Rookie of the Year title. Both he and Richard will be among the 12 bronc riders to compete for the championship on Saturday night.
    The overall leader changed in four other events on Thursday night. Student athletes taking the top spot after three rides or runs included bareback rider Weston Timberman of Clarendon College; steer wrestler JT Ellison of the University of West Alabama; team ropers Slade Wood of Southwest Texas Junior College and Logan Moore of Wharton County Junior College; and barrel racer Taycie Matthews of the University of West Alabama.
    Round three at the 2023 CNFR concludes Friday night at 7 p.m. MDT. Once round three is completed the top 12 overall will compete once more on Championship Saturday to determine the champions in nine events, The men’s and women’s all-around champions, the men’s and women’s team champions and the men’s and women’s rookie of the year will also be crowned on Saturday.

    CASPER, Wyo.—The following are results after the third performance at the College National Finals Rodeo, Wednesday, June 15, 2023 courtesy of the National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association. Complete results are available at www.collegerodeo.com.

    Bareback riding: (third round leaders) 1, Ty Pope, Missouri Valley College, 84 points. 2, Colton Eck, Missouri Valley College, 83. 3, Donny Proffit, University of Wyoming, 79. 4, (tie) Isaac Ingram, Panola College, and Nick Pelke, Missouri Valley College, 78.5 each. 6, Weston Timberman, Clarendon College, 78. (total on three) 1, Weston Timberman, Clarendon College, 240.5. 2, Pope 234. 3, Allen, 233. 4, (tie) Sam Peterson, Clarendon College, and Bradlee Miller, Sam Houston State University, 232.5. 6, Donny Proffit, University of Wyoming, 230.5. 7, Kade Sonnier, McNeese State University, 229.5. 8, Eck, 227.5.

    Tie-Down Roping: (third round leaders) 1, Quade Hiatt, West Texas A&M University, 8.2 seconds. 2, Cole Eiguren, Treasure Valley Community College, 8.3. 3, Denton Oestmann, Northwestern Oklahoma State University, 8.4. 4, Cael Stratton, Central Arizona College, 8.7. 5, (tie) Kincade Henry, Texas A&M Commerce, and Marley Berger, Southwestern Oklahoma State University, 9.0. (total on three) 1, Henry, 25.4. 2, Hiatt, 28.1. 3, Bodie Mattson, University of Wyoming, 28.4. 4, Connor Atkinson, Texas A&M University, 28.5. 5, Cutter Carpenter, Texas A&M University – Commerce, 29.2. 6, Eiguren, 29.3. 7, Bode Spring, Montana State University, 29.7. 8, Cole Walker, University of Tennessee – Martin, 30.1.

    Breakaway Roping (third round leaders) 1, (tie) Kenli Raby, Missouri Valley College, and Emma Eiguren, Treasure Valley Community College, 2.0 seconds each. 3, Molly Salmond, Montana State University, 2.3. 4, (tie) Bailey Stuva, Northeast Oklahoma A&M University, and Addie Weil, Northeastern Oklahoma A&M, 2.4 each. 6, Baylee Johnston, New Mexico State University, 2.5. (total on three) 1, Tyree Cochrane, Cal Poly State University, 7.8. 2, Haiden Thompson, Gillette College, 8.0. 3, Makayla Farkas, West Hills College, 8.2. 4, Samantha Kerns, Treasure Valley Community College, 8.4. 5, Morgan Foss, Dickinson State University, 9.6. 6, Raegan Steed, College of Southern Idaho, 10.7. 7, Mikenna Schauer, Montana State University Northern, 17.5. 8, Kyleigh Winn, Kansas State University, 18.6.

    Saddle Bronc Riding: (third round leaders) 1, Damian Brennan, Western Texas Slade Keith, Clarendon College, 77.5 points. 2, Bailey Small, Panhandle State University, 77.0. 3, Cauy Masters, Clarendon College, 76.5. 4, (tie) Tucker Bourdet, Cuesta College, and Parker Fleet, Hill College, 76 each. (total on three) 1, Bourdet, 233. 2, Keith, 231.5. 3, Parker Fleet, Hill College, 230.5. 4, Brody McAbee, Southwestern Oklahoma State University, 221. 5, Bailey Small, Panhandle State University, 219. 6, Ty Pope, Missouri Valley College, 212.5.

    Steer Wrestling: (third round leaders) 1, Trace Harris, Texas A&M University, 3.6 seconds. 2, Kason Davis, Pearl River College, 4.3. 3, Mike Nannini, Montana State University, 4.8. 4, Jaden Whitman, Montana State University, 4.9. 5, Colt Honey, Texas Tech University, 5.0. 6, (tie) Logan Atkinson, Walla Walla Community College, and Jacob Wang, University of Wyoming, 5.3 each. (total on three) 1, Joshua Ellison, University of West Alabama, 19.3. 2, Bradley Hesnor, McNeese State University, 22.3. 3, Jaden Whitman, Montana State University, 22.9. 4, Austin Madison, Black Hills State University, 23.2. 5, Honey, 25.4. 6, Nannini, 26.0. 7, Bode Spring, Montana State University, 27.3. 8, Davis, 27.8.

    Goat Tying: (third round leaders) 1, Kenna McNeill, University of Wyoming, 5.8 seconds. 2, Aimee Davis, Cal Poly State University, 5.9. 3, (tie) Karissa Rayhill, Eastern Wyoming College; Madalyn Richards, Texas A&M University; and Kamryn Duncan, McNeese State University; 6.0 each. 6, (tie) Cheyenne Vande Stouwe, Southwestern Oklahoma State University, and Kaylee Cormier, McNeese State University, 6.1. (total on three) 1, Rayhill, 18.2. 2, Richards, 18.4. 3, McNeill, 18.6. 4, (tie) Kaylee Cormier, McNeese State University, and Haiden Thompson, Gillette College, 18.7. 6, Mikenna Schauer, Montana State University – Northern, 19.3. 7, Cheyenne Vande Stouwe, Southwestern Oklahoma State University,19.4. 8, Maggie Usher, Cal Poly State University, 19.7.

    Team Roping: (third round leaders) 1, Cam Jensen, University of Wyoming and Tanner McInerney, Gillette College, 4.2 seconds. 2, Jayse Tettenhorst and Kaden Profili, Trinity Valley Community College, 5.3. 3, Zane and Ty Taylor, Treasure Valley Community College, 5.5. Lovins, Western Oklahoma State College, 6.3. (total on three) 1, Bray and Thomison, 18.4. 2, Chilly Hernandez and Juanito Montoya, New Mexico State University, 21.0. 3, Appleton and Lovins, 26.9. 4, Jace Hanks, and Wyatt Ahlstrom, Utah Valley University, 29.5. 5, Ty Johnson, Texas A&M – Commerce and Cooper Parsley, Panola College, 33.6. (on two) 6, Slade Wood, Southwestern Texas Junior College, and Logan Moore, Wharton County College, 10.0.
    Barrel racing: (third round leaders) 1, Jaylie Matthews, University of West Alabama, 14.14 seconds. 2, Brooke Krolczyk, Texas A&M University, 14.17. 3, Emma Ricke, Northeastern Oklahoma A&M, 14.25. 4, Kiersten Pettus, Central Arizona College, 14.26. 5, Annie Alexander, New Mexico State University, 14.27. 6, Gwyneth Cheyne, Blue Mountain Community College, 14.26. (total on three) 1, Matthews, 42.22. 2, Jordan Driver, Tarleton State University, 43.18. 3, Alexander, 43.20. 4, Pettus, 43.34. 5, Cheyne, 43.34. 6, Jayci Byler, Sam Houston State University, 43.35.

    Bull Riding: (third round leaders) 1, Dawson Gleaves, Weatherford College, 74. (total on two) 1, Gleaves, 153. 2, Tristen Hutchings, 152 (on one) 3, Wyatt Phelps, Sheridan College, 85.5. 4, Cole Skender, University of Alabama – Monticello, 82.5. 5, Caden Bunch, Southeastern Oklahoma State University, 81.5.

  • Untitled post 25117

    CASPER, Wyo.—The following are results from Monday slack at the College National Finals Rodeo, June 12, 2023, courtesy of the National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association. Complete results are available at www.collegerodeo.com.

     

    Barrel racing: (first round winners) 1, Taycie Matthews, University of West Alabama, 13.77 seconds. 2, Tayla Moeykens, Montana State University, 13.85. 3, Jaylie Matthews, University of West Alabama, 14.06. 4, Abby Hepper, Southwestern Oklahoma State University, 14.08. 5, Raven Clagg, University of West Alabama, 14.12. 6, Elie Bard, Gillette Ccollege, 14.14. 7, Jordan Driver, Tarleton State University, 14.25. 8, Emma Norsworthy, University of Wyoming, 14.35.

     

    Bareback riding: (second round leaders) 1, Sage Allen, College of Southern Idaho, 82 points. 2, Sam Petersen, Clarendon College, 79.5. 3, Kooper Heimburg, Missouri Valley College, 79. 4, Mason Stuller, Western Texas College, 77. (total on two) 1, Allen, 160.5. 2, Kooper Heimburg, Missouri Valley College, 159.5. 3, Petersen, 158. 4, Bryce Eck, Fort Scott Community College, 152.

     

    Tie-Down Roping: (first round winners) 1, Kincade Henry, Texas A & M University – Commerce, 8.3 seconds. 2, Jacob Walters, Texas Tech University – Lubbock, 8.6. 3, (tie) Bode Spring, Montana State University, and Cole Walker, University of Tennessee – Martin, 9.3. 5, Quade Hiatt, West Texas A & M University, 9.7. 6, Ty Christensen, University of Montana – Western, 9.9. 7, Connor Atkinson, Texas A & M University, 10.0. 8, Bodie Mattson, University of Wyoming, 10.1.

     

    Breakaway Roping (second round leaders) 1, Haiden Thompson, Gillette College, 2.1. 2, (tie) Brooklin Quisenberry, Cal Poly State University, and Meghan McGinley, Montana State University, 2.3.. 4, Kiley Slavin, Garden City Community College, 2.4. (total on two) 1, Haden Thompson, Gillette College, 5.0. 2, Cate Hepper, Montana State University, 5.2. 3, (tie) Samantha Kerns, Treasure Valley Community College, and Makayla Farkas, West Hills College, 5.3 each.

     

    Saddle Bronc Riding: (second round leaders) 1, Tucker Bourdet, Cuesta College, 79.5 points. 2, Caleb Meeks, Montana State University, 77.5. 3, Lance Gaillard, Tarleton State University, 74.5. 4, Darcy Radel, Western Texas College, 73. (total on two) 1, Tucker Bourdeet, Cuesta College, 157. 2, Slade Keith, Clarendon College, 154. 3, Darcy Radel, Western Texas College, 73. 4, Lance Gae Gaillard, Tarleton State University, 153.

     

    Steer Wrestling: (first round winners) 1, Cash Robb, Texas A&M University – Commerce, 3.8 seconds. 2, Jude Leonards, McNeese State University, 4.5. 3, Gus Franzen, Southeastern Oklahoma State University, 5.2. 4, Jesse Keysaer, University of Tennessee – Martin, 5.5. 5, Austin Madison, Black Hills State University, 5.6. 6, Colt Honey, Texas Tech University, 5.8. 7, Sherrick Sanborn, New Mexico State University, 5.9. 8, Grant Peterson, Cal Poly State University, 6.2.

     

    Goat Tying: (first round winners) 1, Aimee Davis, Cal Poly State University, 5.7 seconds. 2, (tie) Kristin Reaves, Sam Houston State University; Madalyn Richards, Texas A&M University; Jessica Stevens, Montana State University; and Haiden Thompson, Gillette College; 5.9 each. 6, Parker McIntyre, Panhandle State University, 6.0. 7, Kaytlyn Miller, Texas Tech University, 6.1. 8, (tie) Heather McLaughlin, University of West Alabama; Paige Rasmussen, Montana State University; and Karissa Rayhill, Eastern Wyoming College, 6.2.

     

    Bull Riding: (second round leaders) 1, Caden Bunch, Southeastern Oklahoma State University 87.5 points. 2, Wyatt Phelps, Sheridan College, 85.5. (overall leaders on one) 1, Bunch, 87.5. 2, Phelps, 85.5. 3, Dawson Gleaves, Weatherford Colleege, 79. 4, Tristen Hutchings, Sul Ross State University, 67.

     

    Team Roping: 1, Slade Wood, Southwest Texas Junior College, and Logan Moore, Wharton County Junior College, 4.8 seconds. 2, Cobie and Cole Dodds, Feather River College, 6.0. 3, Wyatt Bray, Tarleton State University and Cutter Pake Thomison, Western Texas College, 6.2. 4, Drew Tilton, Cal Poly State University and Paden Prior, Chico College, 6.5. 5, Ty Johnson, Texas A & M University Commerce and Cooper Parsley, Panola College, 6.6. 6, Quade Hiatt, West Texas A&M University and Jace Helton, Weatherford College, 6.7. 7, Jace hanks, and Wyatt Ahlstrom Utah Valley University, 6.8. 8, (tie) Cam Schroeder, Iowa Central Community College and Trey Frank, South Dakota State University; Cannon Smith, University of Tennessee – Martin, and Chase Graves, University of West Alabama; and Logan Graham, Southern Arkansas University and Cole Walker, University of Tennessee – Martin, 7.8 seconds each.

     

     

     

     

  • 2023 CNFR competition kicks off with Bulls Broncs & Breakaway

    2023 CNFR competition kicks off with Bulls Broncs & Breakaway

    CASPER, Wyo. (June 11, 2023) — When college rodeo athletes have opportunities to win national titles, they give it their all time after time.

    That has been the case at the College National Finals Rodeo (CNFR) and as the 73rd edition kicked off Sunday at the Fort Wyoming Center in Casper, it was evident once again. Competition kicked off with the Bulls Broncs and Breakaway. Qualifying for the CNFR is a lofty goal for students pursuing degrees. Juggling classes, practices and traveling to competitions is real life preparations for a future career in or out of the rodeo arena.

    Dawson Gleaves, a bull rider from Amarillo, Texas, stayed in his home state to attend Weatherford College. He is one of the contestants hoping to make rodeo a professional career. With a nickname of Sticky, Gleaves did just that on his first bull here. He was one of two bull riders to make it to the eight-second mark scoring 79 points on Vold Rodeo’s Easy Sid.

    The other bull rider to make it to the whistle was the 2021 champion, Tristen Hutchings who has qualified for the National Finals Rodeo while competing for Sul Ross State University at Alpine, Texas.

    The breakaway roping was extremely tough with a four-way tie for first place. Former CNFR champion Zoie Bedke from Idaho State University is on that list along with the National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association student president, Tyree Cochrane from Cal Poly State University. Maggie Usher, also from Cal Poly and Sydney Theobald who attends Black Hills State University finish the top four out. Each of them stopped the clock in 2.4 seconds.

    Third generation rodeo competitor Weston Timberman who is a freshman at Clarendon College won the bareback riding with an 81.5-point score.

    Winning the saddle bronc riding was Quintin McWhorter who is representing the Cal Poly State University men’s team.

    Competition here features three full rounds in each event. These competitors will have their second round during slack on Monday and Tuesday. The steer wrestling, barrel racing, team roping, goat tying, and tie-down roping contestants will complete their first round on Monday.

     

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    CASPER, Wyo.—The following are results from Bulls Broncs and Breakaway at the College National Finals Rodeo, June 11, 2023, courtesy of the National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association. Complete results are available at https://nam11.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.collegerodeo.com%2F&data=05%7C01%7C%7C0ef0d85aaeac41a5779008db6af27e46%7C449f706eb0314e909107a6feb17d108f%7C0%7C0%7C638221361999033105%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C3000%7C%7C%7C&sdata=ZxYm47u%2F4Ez86%2BRqM8TpyZ79v6E2mZozm3vYW3zmu2w%3D&reserved=0.

     

    Breakaway Roping: (first-round winners) 1, (tie) Maggie Usher, Cal Poly State UniversitSy; Tyree Cochrane, Cal Poly State University; Sydney Theobald, Black Hills State University; and Zoie Bedke Idaho State University; 2.4 seconds each. 5, (tie) Makayla Farkas, West Hills University; Samantha Kerns, Treasure Valley Community College; Alli Masters, Southwestern Oklahoma State University; Madison Bean, South Plains College; and Rylee George, Texas A & M University-Commerce; 2.5 each.

     

    Bareback Riding: (first round winners) 1, Weston Timberman, Clarendon College, 81.5 points. 2, Kooper Heimburg, Missouri Valley College, 80.5.

    3, Luke Thrash, Southeastern Oklahoma State University, 80. 4, Bradlee Miller, Sam Houston State University, 79. 5, (tie) Sam Petersen, Clarendon College and Sage Allen College of Southern Idaho, 78.5 each.

    7, Ty Pope, Missouri Valley College, 77.5. 8, Wyatt Wood, Cal Poly State University, 76.5.

     

    Saddle Bronc Riding: (first round winners) 1, Quintin McWhorter, Cal Poly State University, 84 points. 2, Shea Fournier, McNeece State University, 82.5. 3, Slade Keith, Clarendon College, 81.5. 4, Damian Brennan, Western Texas College, 81. 5, Darcy Radel, Western Texas College, 80. 5. 6, (tie) Cauy Masters, Clarendon College, and Isaac Richard, McNeece State University, 79 each. 8, Lance Gaillard, Tarleton State University, 78.5

     

    Bull Riding: (first round winners – two rides) 1, Dawson Gleaves, Weatherford College, 79 points. 2, Tristen Hutchings, Sul Ross State University, 69.

  • Zeke Thurston captures first Miles City (Mont.) Bucking Horse Sale Xtreme Broncs title

    Zeke Thurston captures first Miles City (Mont.) Bucking Horse Sale Xtreme Broncs title

    It remains incongruous. Zeke Thurston competes in a sport that races the heartbeat, forces confrontations with danger and leaves the body in peril. When it comes to riding saddle bronc horses, no one did it better than the world champion. Yet when he talks about his success, he is calmer than a lagoon.

     

    On May 21, he discussed a triumphant ride on Burch Rodeo’s Lunatic From Hell like he was reading off a grocery list. This is what has made him one of the best.

     

    “I just try to keep a pretty cool head and focus on my job,” Thurston said.

     

    At the World Famous Miles City (Mont.) Bucking Horse Sale Matched Xtreme Bronc Ride, Thurston delivered a 91-point ride in the finals to secure the title. It proved the perfect match of poise and horse – Lunatic From Hell has been ridden by the event champion in five of the last six years.

     

    And the one year he didn’t win it, he was part of a re-ride. So, five out of six?

     

    “That’s a pretty good average for a horse. It was a really good ride,” Thurston said. “He kind of bailed out of there and had a really good day. He stayed with it. I have been on that horse a few times prior. So, I knew about him, but it was like five-to-six years ago, so it’s been a while.”

     

    Thurston’s 91-point trip was enough to edge Sage Newman (89.5 points) for the title in Montana. Winning is a habit for Thurston. The Alberta cowboy owns a resume that widens eyes even among stars. He has claimed three PRCA World Championships (2016, 2019, 2022) and qualified for the National Finals Rodeo eight times. Events like this just fuel his fire.

     

    “The Xtreme events are really cool. It’s a real sporty event: 30 of the best guys in the world getting on great bucking horses. It’s good watching,” Thurston said. “It was really good. There were people everywhere cheering.”

     

    Up next is a first-time Xtreme Broncs event in Palmer, Alaska. It’s a new event, but Thurston has a plan to post the same old results.

     

    “It will be more of the same. I want to keep the ball rolling,” Thurston said, “and keep doing what we are doing.”

  • Rafael Jose de Brito Makes PBR History as First Rider to Be Crowned World Champion and Rookie of the Year in Same Season

    Rafael Jose de Brito Makes PBR History as First Rider to Be Crowned World Champion and Rookie of the Year in Same Season

    FORT WORTH, Texas – Rafael Jose de Brito (Potirendaba, Brazil) etched his name in the PBR (Professional Bull Riders) history books this afternoon in Fort Worth, Texas, completing a come-from-behind surge in the standings to win the World Finals event and 2023 PBR World Championship.

    The 31-year-old Brazilian, who arrived in America in the summer of 2022, became the first rider to ever win the world title and Rookie of the Year honors in the same season.

    “I want to thank God for making this dream come true and for all He has done for me,” Brito said from the dirt as he hoisted three glittering buckles. “I put in the work. I rode bulls day after day. It’s a great thing to have my name next to champions like Adriano [Moraes], Guilherme [Marchi], Silvano [Alves], Kaique [Pacheco] and Jose [Vitor Leme]. I want to dedicate this to Kaique at home watching.”

     

    Brito traveled to Dickies Arena for his career-first World Finals ranked No. 9 in the heated gold buckle battle but atop the race amongst first-year Unleash The Beast competitors.

    While he failed to convert in the opening two rounds, upended by Top Dollar (Hookin’ W/DeHoff/VanCleave) in 2.41 seconds in Round 1 and Stone Cold Gangster (Universal Pro Rodeo/Rachel & Dustin Powell) in Round 2, Brito, who in 2022 signed as a free agent for the Texas Rattlers in the separate PBR Team Series, returned more determined and with newfound confidence in Round 3.

    Tasked with Chiseled (Flinn/D&H Cattle Co.), Brito delivered the first 90-point ride of the 2023 PBR World Finals with a mammoth 90.5-point score.

    The 8-second effort garnered Brito a crucial 89 Unleash The Beast points, propelling him from No. 9 to No. 7 in the standings, and he inched within 336 points of then No. 1 Kaique Pacheco (Itatiba, Brazil), who did not compete at the seven-day event due to injury.

    While Round 4 did not go in Brito’s favor, as the Brazilian was bucked off in 2.05 seconds by Ricky Vaughn (D&H Cattle Co./Buck Cattle Co.), he rebounded in Round 5.

    Conquering Time Bomb (Carr Pro Rodeo) for 89.25 points and tying for the second-best score of the night, Brito cracked the Top 5 in the World Championship battle. Garnering 46 Unleash The Beast points, he surged from No. 7 to No. 5 and was within 290 points of the No. 1 rank.

    The score also allowed him to gain ground in the Rookie of the Year race, rising 209.67 points ahead of the then-second-place contender Daniel Keeping (Montague, Texas), who was shut out at the 2023 PBR World Finals.

    Brito’s momentum continued to mount in Round 6 as he overtook the World Finals event lead courtesy of an 88.5-point ride atop Short Circuit (D&H Cattle/McWhorter) that netted another 46 points. While Brito remained No. 5 in the standings, he rose within 244 points of No. 1 Pacheco.

    Brito also extended his lead atop the Rookie of the Year race, surging 276.5 points out in front of the new No. 2-ranked rider Wingson Henrique da Silva (Navirai, Brazil).

    Silva was challenging Brito in the Rookie of the Year battle, as well as in the race for the World Finals event title and World Championship.

    Before Championship Sunday, Brito and Silva were two of just six riders to have gone 3-for-6 at the World Finals. Silva’s three scores, logged consecutively in Rounds 3-5, led him to begin the final day of the individual season third on the World Finals event leaderboard, 4.75 points behind Brito, and No. 11 in the World Championship standings.

    In Round 7, Brito elected to go head-to-head with Red Mosquito (Cord McCoy/Zach Muegge/McCoy Rodeo), while Silva architected a matchup between himself and Ivy League (Jane Clark/Gene Owen).

    Both decisions proved fruitful as each rider made the 8, marked a matching 88.25 points, to tie for second in the round on the final day of the championship event.

    Brito and Silva’s scores, coupled with key buckoffs from Dalton Kasel (Muleshoe, Texas), Dener Barbosa (Paulo de Faria, Brazil), Cooper Davis (Jasper, Texas) and Andrew Alvidrez (Seminole, Texas), made it a three-rider race entering the championship round.

    The third contender, two-time PBR World Champion Jose Vitor Leme (Ribas do Rio Pardo, Brazil), kept his title hopes alive in Round 7 when he delivered the second-best score, covering JAG Metals Grand Theft (D&H Cattle Co./Philip Elkins) for 90.25 points. The ride, which also avenged a buckoff from Round 2, earned Leme 49 Unleash The Beast points, briefly giving him the world No. 1 rank as he surpassed Pacheco by 9 points.

    As the sixth man out in the championship round, Leme’s renewed hopes of victory were quickly extinguished as he was tossed by Canadian-born Yellowknife (Blake Sharp/Michael Floyd) in a swift 1.8 seconds.

    Then it all came down to the final two outs of the season as Silva readied to take on Ricky Vaughn, while Brito found his name matched with World Champion Bull contender Flapjack’s (Parker/OK Corralis/Gordon/D&H Cattle).

    While Silva was first out, the tension quickly mounted as he was awarded a re-ride when Ricky Vaughn stumbled. Silva’s third bull of the day, Hunting Trip (Dozier Cattle Co./Martinez Bucking Bulls), would be his final bovine athlete opponent of the season.

    In a must-ride situation, Silva failed to convert, bucked off in 4.93 seconds.

    Despite still needing to attempt his draw, Brito, who would inevitably be bucked off by Flapjack in 0.97 seconds, began to tear up atop the back of the chutes as Silva’s buckoff clinched a never-before-accomplished trifecta for Brito, as he won the World Finals to clinch the 2023 Rookie of the Year honor and 2023 PBR World Championship.

    Brito concluded the World Championship race 287 points ahead of No. 2 Leme and, in the Rookie of the Year battle, 486.5 points ahead of runner-up Silva. On the World Finals event leaderboard, Brito edged second-place Silva by 4.75 points in the aggregate.

    In addition to becoming the first rider to win all three titles in the same season, Brito is now just the eighth rider to capture both the World Championship and World Finals event win the same season, joining Daylon Swearingen (2022 – Piffard, New York), Leme (2021), Jess Lockwood (2019 – Volborg, Montana), Silvano Alves (2014 – Pilar do Sul Brazil), J.B. Mauney (2013 – Statesville, North Carolina), Renato Nunes (2010 – Buritama, Brazil) and Mike Lee (2004 – Decatur, Texas).

    In the PBR’s 30-year history, Brito is the 21st different rider – and eighth Brazilian – to claim the PBR World Champion gold buckle. His title is the 13th time a rider from Brazil has won what’s been called the most difficult individual championship in professional sports.

    Throughout 2023, Brito earned $1,586,514, including $1,390,500 for his career-first PBR World Championship and World Finals event win.

    In the bull pen, Ridin Solo (Cord McCoy/Bill McCarty/McCoy Rodeo) defended his title, crowned the 2023 YETI PBR World Champion Bull and earning the accompanying $100,000 bonus.

    The honor was bestowed upon the animal with the highest average bull score from their six highest-scored regular-season outs and two outs at the PBR World Finals.

    Much like the race amongst the riders, the battle between the organization’s animal athletes was equally fierce. Ridin Solo began the World Finals ranked No. 2 in the world, 0.41 points behind regular-season leader Cool Whip (Julian/Staci Addison/D&H/Crooked W).

    First bucking in Round 2, Ridin’ Solo tied Cool Whip for the No. 1 rank in the fierce title battle with a monstrous 46-point trip earned via his 5.9 seconds of work against Barbosa.

    Following the outs, both Solo and Cool Whip, who was marked just 42.75 points for his 4.27-second buckoff of Boudreaux Campbell (Crockett, Texas), held a matching 45.61-point average.

    The World Champion bull contenders then returned to the arena in Round 4.

    Delivering what would ultimately be the second-best bull score at the 2023 PBR World Finals, Ridin’ Solo overtook sole ownership of the No. 1 rank.

    Ridin’ Solo, matched up against Chase Outlaw (Hamburg, Arkansas), sent the charismatic Arkansas native to the ground in a swift 3.54 seconds, awarded a mammoth 46.5-point score.

    The powerful animal athlete’s score, paired with Cool Whip’s uncharacteristic 44-point out during his 3.15-second buckoff of Tyler Manor (Portland, Indiana), allowed Ridin’ Solo to surge to the lead in the World Champion Bull race.

    When the dust settled, with each bull having just one out remaining, Ridin’ Solo pulled 0.07 points ahead of the No. 2 bull. Cool Whip, meantime, plummeted in the standings to No. 4, 0.25 points behind No. 1 Ridin’ Solo.

    During the round, UTZ BesTex Legend (Blake Sharp/Chris Utz/Carey Brothers) took a firm hold on the No. 2 rank in the standings. Legend was scored an impressive 46 points after he bested Aaron Williams (Pismo Beach, California) in a quick 1.56 seconds.

    On Championship Sunday, Cool Whip was first out, bucking in Round 7. Despite tossing Koltin Hevalow (Smithville, Missouri) in 5.81 seconds, the powerful bull was marked just 43.75 points to eliminate him from the World Championship race. Cool Whip concluded the year with a 45.55-point world average, ranked No. 4 in the world.

    Legend was next out, bucking second in the championship round. His 45-point, 3.24-second trip with Joao Lucas Campos (Porto Feliz, Brazil), however, was not enough to pass Ridin Solo. The trip led him to finish the year with a 45.63-point world average, tied for No. 2 alongside Flapjack.

    Ridin’ Solo capped his season with a 45-point trip with Braidy Randolph (Jonestown, Pennsylvania).

    The captivating bull defended his World Champion title with an impressive 45.70-point world average, finishing 0.07 points ahead of runners-up Legend and Flapjack.

    Ridin’ Solo is now just the seventh animal athlete ever to win the honor in multiple seasons. He joins the elite club which includes two-time PBR World Champion Bulls Dillinger (Herrington Cattle Co.), Bones (Teague Bucking Bulls) and Smooth Operator (Dakota Rodeo/Julie Rosen/Clay Struve/Chad Berger), and three-time PBR World Champion Bulls Little Yellow Jacket (Berger/Teague/Taupin), Bushwacker (Julio Moreno Bucking Bulls) and SweetPro’s Bruiser (D&H Cattle Co./Buck Cattle Co.).

    Ridin’ Solo was also named the YETI “Built for the Wild” Bull of the Finals, earning a $25,000 bonus, as the animal athlete who posted the top combined score across his three outs logged during the 2023 PBR World Finals.

    Blake Sharp was crowned the 2023 PBR Stock Contractor of the Year. The honor was Sharp’s first, dethroning Chad Berger, who had won the award the past nine consecutive seasons.

    Andrew Alvidrez (Seminole, Texas) earned the Lane Frost/Brent Thurman Award for the top-marked ride of the 2023 PBR World Finals: Unleash The Beast when he won Round 5 compliments of an unmatched 91.5-point ride atop Red Mosquito (Cord McCoy/Zach Muegge/McCoy Rodeo).

    Pacheco won the Mason Lowe Award, presented annually to the bull rider who records the highest-scored ride during the PBR Unleash The Beast regular season. Pacheco earned the honor for his 93-point ride aboard Ricky Vaughn during the 15/15 Bucking Battle in Indianapolis, Indiana, in late January.

    Nick Tetz (Calgary, Alberta, Canada) was awarded the Glen Keeley Award for the first time in his career. This award goes to the Canadian bull rider earning the most Unleash The Beast points during the season.

    PBR RidePass on Pluto TV will offer re-airs and on-demand replays of every PBR Unleash The Beast event. PBR RidePass is available on desktops, laptops and mobile devices via www.pluto.tv. Click here for on-demand PBR programming.

    Stay tuned to PBR.com for the latest news and results and be sure to follow the league on all social media platforms at @PBR.

     

    PBR Unleash The Beast
    PBR World Finals: Unleash The Beast
    Dickies Arena – Fort Worth, Texas
    Event Leaders (Round 1-Round 2-Round 3-Round 4-Round 5-Round 6-Round 7-Round 8-Event Aggregate-Event Points)

    1. Rafael Jose de Brito, 0-0-90.5-0-89.25-88.5-88.25-0-356.50-783 Points.
    2. Wingson Henrique da Silva, 0-0-86-89.5-88-0-88.25-0-351.75-508 Points.
    3. Ramon de Lima, 87-0-88.75-0-0-88.25-0-0-264.00-370 Points.
    4. Braidy Randolph, 0-85.75-87.25-0-89.25-0-0-0-262.25-264 Points.
    5. Jesse Petri, 0-0-0-88.75-85.75-87.25-0-0-261.75-221 Points.
    6. Dawson Branton, 85-0-0-0-87.75-80-0-0-252.75-178 Points.
    7. Josh Frost, 0-0-0-0-86-0-90.5-74-250.50-271 Points.
    8. Jose Vitor Leme, 0-0-0-0-88.5-0-90.25-0-178.75-145 Points.
    9. Dener Barbosa, 85.75-0-0-0-0-90-0-0-175.75-155 Points.
    10. Boudreaux Campbell, 84.75-0-90.25-0-0-0-0-0-175.00-86 Points.
    11. Joao Lucas Campos, 85-0-0-89.5-0-0-0-0-174.50-103 Points.
    12. Colten Fritzlan, 0-86-86.75-0-0-0-0-0-172.75-72 Points.
    13. Andrew Alvidrez, 0-0-0-0-91.5-0-0-0-91.50-92 Points.
    14. Derek Kolbaba, 89.75-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-89.75-89.5 Points.

    (tie). Austin Richardson, 0-89.75-0-0-0-0-0-0-89.75-89.5 Points.

    1. Dalton Kasel, 0-0-89-0-0-0-0-0-89.00-44 Points.

    (tie). Flavio Zivieri, 0-0-0-0-89-0-0-0-89.00-40 Points.

    (tie). Nick Tetz, 0-89-0-0-0-0-0-0-89.00-48 Points.

    1. João Ricardo Vieira, 88.5-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-88.50-48 Points.

    (tie). Kyler Oliver, 0-0-0-0-0-88.5-0-0-88.50-46 Points.

    (tie). Marcus Mast, 0-0-0-0-88.5-0-0-0-88.50-34 Points.

    1. Chase Dougherty, 88.25-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-88.25-44 Points.
    2. Cooper Davis, 0-0-88-0-0-0-0-0-88.00-34 Points.

    (tie). Lucas Divino, 0-0-88-0-0-0-0-0-88.00-34 Points.

    1. Eduardo Aparecido, 0-0-0-0-0-87.75-0-0-87.75-36 Points.

    (tie). Ezekiel Mitchell, 0-0-0-0-87.75-0-0-0-87.75-22 Points.

    1. Tate Pollmeier, 0-0-0-0-87.5-0-0-0-87.50-16 Points.
    2. Silvano Alves, 0-0-0-0-86.25-0-0-0-86.25-13 Points.
    3. Guilherme Valleiras, 0-0-0-0-84.75-0-0-0-84.75-10 Points.

    (tie). Koltin Hevalow, 84.75-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-84.75-22 Points.

    1. Keyshawn Whitehorse, 0-0-0-0-0-84.5-0-0-84.50-28 Points.
    2. Brady Turgeon, 0-0-0-0-0-83.25-0-0-83.25-24 Points.

    Kaique Pacheco, 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

    Daniel Keeping, 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

    Luciano De Castro, 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

    Rafael Henrique dos Santos, 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

    Mason Taylor, 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

    Eli Vastbinder, 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

    Manoelito de Souza Junior, 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

    Marcelo Procopio Pereira, 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

    Brady Oleson, 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

    Jess Lockwood, 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

    Wyatt Rogers, 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

    Casey Roberts, 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

    Bob Mitchell, 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

    Chase Outlaw, 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

    Dakota Louis, 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

    Aaron Williams, 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

    Vitor Losnake, 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

    Tyler Manor, 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

    Claudio Montanha Jr., 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0.00

     

    2023 PBR World Standings

    (Place, Rider, Events, Wins, Top 5’s, Points, Total Winnings)

    1. Rafael Jose de Brito, 26, 2, 8, 1,338.00, $1,516,705.81
    2. Jose Vitor Leme, 16, 3, 10, 1,051.00, $304,781.67
    3. Kaique Pacheco, 25, 3, 10, 980.00, $254,512.67
    4. Wingson Henrique da Silva, 21, 0, 4, 851.50, $258,185.00
    5. Dalton Kasel, 22, 4, 8, 792.66, $181,355.67
    6. Dener Barbosa, 22, 2, 5, 780.83, $185,641.67
    7. Andrew Alvidrez, 26, 2, 5, 707.00, $176,951.67
    8. Boudreaux Campbell, 25, 0, 7, 686.66, $142,354.67
    9. Cooper Davis, 21, 2, 4, 679.50, $145,426.00
    10. Ramon de Lima, 16, 1, 3, 664.50, $182,653.33
    11. Eduardo Aparecido, 25, 1, 5, 631.50, $127,941.14
    12. Jesse Petri, 28, 1, 5, 624.00, $162,724.81
    13. Braidy Randolph, 18, 0, 3, 491.00, $123,182.67
    14. Daniel Keeping, 24, 2, 3, 434.33, $115,753.33
    15. João Ricardo Vieira, 21, 0, 4, 433.00, $81,444.33
    16. Tate Pollmeier, 21, 0, 4, 405.25, $71,652.81
    17. Keyshawn Whitehorse, 24, 0, 2, 371.25, $57,051.33
    18. Colten Fritzlan, 20, 1, 2, 340.66, $83,517.48
    19. Luciano De Castro, 16, 0, 3, 339.50, $55,814.67
    20. Kyler Oliver, 14, 0, 5, 329.00, $69,556.67
    21. Silvano Alves, 27, 0, 4, 327.00, $51,012.00
    22. Chase Dougherty, 13, 1, 1, 296.83, $80,626.67
    23. Josh Frost, 4, 0, 0, 287.50, $160,005.00
    24. Thiago Salgado, 14, 0, 3, 277.50, $36,385.00
    25. Rafael Henrique dos Santos, 22, 1, 2, 274.50, $51,403.67
    26. Mason Taylor, 16, 0, 1, 264.50, $37,848.00
    27. Derek Kolbaba, 18, 0, 1, 251.50, $65,188.33
    28. Austin Richardson, 12, 0, 2, 246.50, $69,828.67
    29. Ezekiel Mitchell, 23, 0, 1, 245.00, $31,365.14
    30. Eli Vastbinder, 23, 1, 2, 233.50, $63,726.00
    31. Dawson Branton, 9, 0, 0, 207.00, $41,241.67
    32. Lucas Divino, 5, 0, 3, 200.50, $36,989.14
    33. Guilherme Valleiras, 8, 1, 2, 197.00, $58,243.62
    34. Manoelito de Souza Junior, 24, 0, 1, 194.00, $24,513.00
    35. Marcelo Procopio Pereira, 14, 0, 1, 189.00, $20,813.33
    36. Koltin Hevalow, 24, 0, 0, 184.50, $21,196.33
    37. Marcus Mast, 18, 0, 0, 180.50, $26,245.00
    38. Brady Oleson, 11, 1, 1, 167.00, $49,880.33
    39. Sandro Batista, 13, 0, 2, 166.50, $21,514.67
    40. Brady Turgeon, 7, 0, 2, 160.00, $25,976.00
    41. Jess Lockwood, 4, 0, 2, 159.00, $37,375.67
    42. Wyatt Rogers, 22, 0, 0, 157.25, $19,745.95
    43. Flavio Zivieri, 14, 0, 2, 156.66, $37,732.67
    44. Casey Roberts, 12, 0, 1, 149.00, $33,136.00
    45. Bob Mitchell, 11, 0, 1, 135.00, $15,163.00
  • MEMORIAL SERVICE FOR LEGENDARY COWBOY LARRY MAHAN  ANNOUNCED FOR MAY 16

    MEMORIAL SERVICE FOR LEGENDARY COWBOY LARRY MAHAN ANNOUNCED FOR MAY 16

    ProRodeo Hall of Famer Larry Mahan, arguably the biggest superstar in rodeo history, passed away on May 7. He was 79.

    His service will be broadcast live on the Cowboy Channel, hosted by Justin McKee. The service will be held Tuesday, Tuesday, May 16 at 6:00 p.m. (doors open at 5 p.m.) at Cowtown Coliseum in the Fort Worth Stockyards. Open seating will be available to the public. Friends, family, World Champion rodeo contestants, PBR World Finals qualifiers and NFR qualifiers are asked to meet at The Barn Meeting Hall at The Drover Hotel at 5 p.m. and will be escorted to floor seating.

     

    Mahan was the all-around world champion in 1966-70 and 1973. He also was the bull riding champ in 1965 and 1967. He qualified for the NFR a combined 26 times from 1964-75 in bareback riding, saddle bronc riding and bull riding. He was inducted in the inaugural class of the ProRodeo Hall of Fame in Colorado Springs, Colo., in 1979.

    The loss of Mahan weighed heavy on fellow ProRodeo Hall of Famer, Ty Murray, a nine-time world champion.

    “I think he meant a lot to the sport of rodeo, and he meant a lot to me,” Murray said. “He was my hero. He was my superman when I was a little boy. I did a paper when I was in fifth grade, they said if you could wish anything for the world what would it be. I misunderstood the question. I thought it meant if there is anything you could do in the world, what would it be? I said I wanted to break Larry Mahan’s records. I still have that assignment today with me.”

    Murray acknowledged Mahan was far more than his idol.

    “He took me under his wing when I was 13,” Murray said. “I went and lived with him that summer and he didn’t really teach me anything about riding. He never really even mentioned anything about riding but taught me a lot about not being shy when people want to interview you and to try and give thoughtful answers and tell them what it is like because most people can’t fathom what it is like to ride a bull or a bucking horse. He taught me the importance of all that stuff, which was really a big help for me in my career because growing up, if it didn’t have to do with being a cowboy, I didn’t care about it.

    “I think he was a pioneer in that realm of sponsorship and doing things that no cowboys had ever done. I think he did some commercials for athletic wear, and beer commercials and all kinds of stuff. He kind of paved his own way. He didn’t just follow suit like so many people do in all different walks of life. Everybody is monkey-see, monkey-do and I feel like he was a guy who knew what he wanted to do, and he knew what he wanted to try and get done. He had a love for it, and he had a passion for it, and he went and did it.”

    Murray said he spent two hours with Mahan on Friday morning May 5, at his home in Valley View, Texas.

    “He couldn’t really move, and I just sat with him, and just spent some time with him,” Murray said. “I would hold on to his hand and he would squeeze my hand. He knew I was there. It’s a tough deal because he has been a really important part of my life. He was my hero. He set records that I wanted to make as benchmarks for myself to try and see what I could accomplish. He took me under his wing. He showed me the world is a lot bigger than just the rodeo arena.”

    Bobby Steiner, the 1973 PRCA Bull Riding World Champion, also spent time with Mahan on Friday.

    “I flew up to his place and got to see him and Sid (Steiner) and Rocker (Steiner) got to see him (Thursday),” Bobby said. “I have been a close friend to Larry, and he is my hero. We rodeoed at the same time. He is eight years older than me, but he was in his heyday when I was doing my thing. He is the biggest thing that ever hit rodeo – ever. Not only was he great but he also was the kind of guy who was on the Tonight Show and all kinds of stuff. He was known by the world and he’s the biggest rodeo cowboy that has ever been.”

    Murray believes what made Mahan so special is his passion.

    “I think it was love,” Murray said. “When you have a passion for something and love it so much then that generally makes it easier to get good at it, because it is something that you love and crave, and you think about it all the time without trying to. I know that was him. The challenge of riding bucking animals is something he loved. He was built right for it. He was a competitor. You have to be lucky as well to be able to be like a Michael Jordan of the sport. If Michael Jordan was born 5-foot-2, things would have been really different.

    “I think he (Larry) had the right body type. I think he had the right mind for it. I think he had a powerful mind and I think it takes a powerful mind to be able to compartmentalize things and be able to stay in a space where you’re focused and fluid in a car crash-type, scary environment. That takes a person with a pretty good command over their thoughts and emotions.”

    Steiner offered this assessment of what made Mahan unique.

    “Seriously, he was different,” Steiner said. “He had a spark in his eye, and he had the greatest smile. Everybody around rodeo knew he was the big thing. He carried himself different. You have heard about the ‘It Factor,’ and he had the ‘It Factor.’ When he pulled up, the secretaries loved him, the stock contractors loved him, the judges loved him, the people loading the stock loved him. It didn’t make any difference because he had the gleam in his eye because he was Larry Mahan.”

    Steiner went on to say, “In my lifetime, I have seen things happen in different deals. There will never be another Elvis Presley. I’m not saying Mahan was on that level as far as worldwide, but he was that in rodeo. He was the Elvis that has never been resurrected. He flew in his own airplane. He spoke to everybody. The aura that was with him when he first cracked out was huge. I had never seen anything like it. He was good to me, and he was good to everybody. He was just a winner. He was very classy. He looked great on everything he got on. He had a distinct style.”

    In the world of rodeo, there will likely never be another Larry Mahan according to Murray.

    “I don’t think so,” Murray said. “He was a special individual, he sure was to me. I was thinking about it this morning, him and I have been friends for 41 years. He was good to me from the time I was 13. I think he helped rodeo. The reason I went on Dancing With the Stars was because of Mahan. That all came from him. He’s the one that taught me not to be shy about that stuff and that’s how you reach a bigger audience. I know that the influence Larry had on me made it to where I was able to earn more outside the arena than I was in the arena, through sponsorships and different partnerships with big companies. I feel like if I had not known Larry and the influence that he had on me, that could have been very different.”

    Steiner echoed Murray’s sentiments.

    “I remember Larry had white boots and so I got white boots,” Steiner said. “In 1971, he came to me, and he knew I was a little out there as well, and he said, ‘Hey let’s grow our hair.’ He got noticed way more than me because he was on a huge stage. He just felt that needed to be done. Seriously, two years after that everybody did the hair thing. He wasn’t scared to step outside the box and let other people in. I was forever grateful that he asked me as a kid to grow my hair long with him. He wore fur coats. He was the Hollywood cowboy, but everybody loved him. He was the biggest thing that ever hit the sport – ever.”

    Legendary ProRodeo Hall of Fame announcer Bob Tallman also paid tribute to his longtime friend Mahan.

    “Larry and I have known each other for 52 years,” Tallman said. “He was Elvis before Elvis knew who he was. He surrounded himself with some of the most brilliant people as attorneys and writers and film people and music people and rodeo people. When he and Bobby Steiner first started letting their hair grow I remember it very well. They used to make him ride in the slack because of his long hair, Bobby Steiner as well. He knew he could beat them in the slack as well as he could in the performance. He was unique. He was retro before the term was ever used in the boot business, hat business, clothing business, and rodeo business. He was the truest all-around cowboy that we have ever had. He says, and if he could communicate today he would tell you the same thing, he thinks the greatest cowboy who ever lived is Phil Lyne. When he and Phil made the movie The Great American Cowboy (in 1973) he and Phil Lyne were the competitive parts of it and he always said, ‘I can’t warm Phil Lyne up. He can rope calves, he can trip steers, he can team rope, he can ride bulls, and broncs and bareback horses.

    “Larry had an aura about him and a following. People moved to him like a magnet. He never lost his thrill of what he was doing, but he also could go and compete. He was a little bit of Jim Shoulders, he was a little bit of Casey Tibbs and he was all Larry Mahan. He just had so much raw talent.”

     

    FORT WORTH, TEXAS (May 10, 2023) — A Memorial Service in Fort Worth, Texas will be held for Larry Mahan, a truly legendary cowboy who passed from our world to heaven on Sunday, May 7 at his home in Valley View, Texas with family by his side. He was 79.

    The Service, hosted by Justin McKee, will be held Tuesday, May 16 at 6:00 p.m. (doors open at 5 p.m.) at Cowtown Coliseum in the Fort Worth Stockyards. Open seating will be available to the public. Friends, family, World Champion rodeo contestants, PBR World Finals qualifiers and NFR qualifiers are asked to meet at The Barn Meeting Hall at The Drover Hotel at 5 p.m. and will be escorted to floor seating.

    Though he was referred to as “the first rock star of rodeo” with vast accomplishments in the arena as a saddle bronc rider, bareback rider and bull rider during a career that brought six All-Around World Championships (five in a row from 1966-70) and two bull riding World Championships in the PRCA, Mahan was the rare embodiment of a modern authentic American cowboy. More than a rodeo competitor, he was a powerful ambassador for the Western lifestyle.

    Mahan would be inducted into ProRodeo Hall of Fame’s inaugural class in 1979. Later, he became a member of PBR’s Ring of Honor and was recognized with the Ty Murray Top Hand Award for his significant and lasting contributions to enhance the sport of rodeo and its heritage. He has been inducted into every Western hall of fame of significance.

    Even with all his successes in and out of the arena, Larry Mahan was as generous of spirit, giving of his time, and humble as a cowboy could be. The Memorial Service will remember and celebrate a man who inspired and touched countless people and will continue to do so even as he is no longer with us.

    PBR would like to thank the American Paint Horse Association for working to rearrange their scheduled Cowgirl Gathering events to make Cowtown Coliseum available for this Memorial Service.

    There will be a reception following the memorial service for friends, family, World Champion rodeo contestants, PBR World Finals qualifiers and NFR qualifiers courtesy of The Cowboy Channel at Tannehill’s Tavern in the Stockyards featuring a special performance by Annie Bosko.

    In lieu of flowers, a foundation will be set up in Larry Mahan’s name. Details on the foundation, and how to donate, will be released at a later date.

    The memorial service will be broadcast live on The Cowboy Channel and re-aired throughout the week following.

  • 1 SEED LEADERBOARD ATHLETES ANNOUNCED FOR DIRECT BERTH  TO THE FINAL ROUNDS OF 2023 WOMEN’S RODEO WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP IN FORT WORTH, TEXAS

    1 SEED LEADERBOARD ATHLETES ANNOUNCED FOR DIRECT BERTH  TO THE FINAL ROUNDS OF 2023 WOMEN’S RODEO WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP IN FORT WORTH, TEXAS

    PBR Team Series’ Texas Rattlers Set to Award Cash Bonus to Texas Female Athletes

     

    AUSTIN, Texas – Ahead of the 2023 Women’s Rodeo World Championship (WRWC), the event the list of athletes advancing directly to the Showdown Round and Triple Crown of Rodeo Round on May 20, was today announced. The seven athletes earned the direct berth courtesy of their No. 1 standing on the W23 leaderboard.

     

    The WRWC is the largest event purse in the history of women’s rodeo and will pay out $750,000 in 2023 while crowning World Champions in both the Pro and Challenger classifications in the following disciplines: Team Roping (Heading and Heeling), Breakaway Roping, and Barrel Racing.

     

    Qualifying rounds of competition will be held May 18-19. The Top 12 in each roping event (Team Roping and Breakaway Roping) will advance to the May 18 Showdown Round to meet the leaderboard No. 1. The Top 3 from the Showdown Round will progress to the Triple Crown of Rodeo Round to duke it out for the $60,000 prize.

     

    Barrel racers will be exempt from the Showdown Round, with 12 athletes advancing directly to the Triple Crown of Rodeo Round. Detailed advancement can be found here.

     

    Those athletes that earned an automatic berth to the Showdown Round and Triple Crown of Rodeo Round are:

     

    Team Roping Pro: Bev Robbins (Header | Tuscumbia, Alabama) and Jessy Remsburg (Heeler | Muscle Shoals, Alabama)

    Team Roping Challenger: Sydney Ball (Header | Max Meadows, Virginia) and Sally Ball (Heeler | Max Meadows, Virginia)

    Barrel Racing Challenger:Annika Ruth (Rolla, Missouri)

    Breakaway Roping Pro: Martha Angelone (Cross Junction, Virginia)

    Breakaway Roping Challenger: Rylie Romero (Welsh, Louisiana)

     

    *Note: The No. 1 seeded Barrel Racing Pro athlete declined to enter the 2023 Women’s Rodeo World Championship.

    These athletes secured their berths by achieving the No. 1 position on the 2023 Women’s Rodeo World Championship Leaderboard, including nominated competition efforts at events from April 2022 to April 2023.

     

    Of these No. 1-seeded athletes, Angelone is the lone contender to have previously been crowned a Women’s Rodeo World Champion.

     

    The WRWC also announced that they have joined forces with the PBR (Professional Bull Riders) Team Series’ Texas Rattlers, who are based in Fort Worth, to honor Texas resident cowgirls competing at the 2023 event. A cash bonus will be presented to the Texas resident cowgirl who earns the most amount of points in one discipline at this year’s event.

     

    All female athletes entered will be eligible to win the Honorary Texas Rattlers Cowgirl Cash Bonus Award and will be given the option to wear a Team Texas patch during the WRWC competition.

     

    The 2023 Women’s Rodeo World Championship will be broadcast daily on PBR’s RidePass on Pluto TV and Cowgirl Channel.

     

    Tickets for the 2023 Women’s Rodeo World Championship are on sale now and start at $20. They can be purchased at the Cowtown Coliseum Box Office or online at cowtowncoliseum.com.

     

    The 2023 event is part of the inaugural Women’s Rodeo World Championship Week, the richest women’s-only week of competition in Western sports, held during the 2023 PBR World Finals: Unleash The Beast. The week-long schedule of events is slated to pay out $1.145 million in prize money, affording more than 800 women’s competitors the chance to compete for life-changing payouts. The Women’s Rodeo World Championship Week will feature three marquee events, including the 2023 Women’s Rodeo World Championship, an NBHA (National Barrel Horse) one-day event, and The Cowgirl Gathering.

     

    Since launching in May 2020, the WRWC has awarded more than $2.25 million in new money to women’s rodeo athletes. For more information about the WRWC, visit wrwc.rodeo.

     

    -WRWC-

    ABOUT WRWC

    The Women’s Rodeo World Championship (WRWC) is the largest annual purse for a women’s rodeo event and will payout more than $750,000 in 2023 while crowning World Champions in the Women’s Rodeo disciplines; Team Roping, Breakaway Roping, and Barrel Racing. An all-around champion will also be crowned. WRWC is a culmination of a year-long race of women’s rodeo events worldwide. Athletes qualify for the WRWC by earning points and leaderboard positions using the VRQ (Virtual Rodeo Qualifier). The 2023 championship event will occur at the historic Cowtown Coliseum May 18-20.