sport involving a series of contests and exhibitions derived from riding, roping, and related skills developed by cowboys during the era of the range cattle industry in northern Mexico and the western United States (1867–87).
The five standard rodeo events are calf roping, bull riding, steer wrestling (bulldogging), saddle bronc-riding, and bareback bronc-riding. (A bronc [bronco, broncho, or bucking bronco] is an unbroken range horse picked for its resistance to training and its tendency to buck, or throw, its rider.) Two other events are recognized for championships: single-steer roping and team roping. There is no ban on additional contests, and there are usually contract acts—professional specialty performances such as trick riding, fancy roping, and other exhibitions. The barrel race, a saddle horse race around a series of barrels, is a popular contest for cowgirls. Steer decorating is seen in junior contests. Prize money may be offered in a wild-horse race, wild-cow milking, trick and fancy riding, or a contest for cutting horses (horses trained to separate cattle from a herd).
The participants pay entry fees, and the prize money won is their only compensation. More than half of all rodeos are independent of state and county fairs, livestock shows, or other attractions, and many are held in arenas devoted to the purpose. The equipment, however, is simple and may be improvised.
Rodeo developed as an American sport confined mainly to Mexico, the United States, and Canada. Rodeos had their origin in the United States when cowboys would gather together in the “cowtowns” at the end of cattle-driving trails and vie for the unofficial title of best bucking-horse rider, roper, and so on. As the cowboys' occupation was curtailed in scope by the railroads and by fencing, the contests became regular, formal programs of entertainment. Many Western towns and areas claim the distinction of being the first place to hold a rodeo in the United States, among them Cheyenne, Wyo., in 1872 and Winfield, Kan., in 1882, but such early contests were merely exhibitions of riding and roping skills and not the highly organized shows that modern rodeo became. Denver, Colo., is traditionally accepted as the birthplace of paid spectator rodeo, in October 1887. The Pendleton (Ore.) Round-Up started in 1910, and the Calgary Stampede in 1912. The latter has been an annual event since 1919. But the oldest annual show of all is Cheyenne Frontier Days, which has been presented each year since 1897.
In 1903 Bill Pickett, a black cowboy from Texas, leaped for the horns of a steer to save his horse from being gored and wrestled the steer to the ground, biting its upper lip in a bulldog grip. He found he could repeat the act, which became known as bulldogging—or, more politely, steer wrestling, after rodeo rules eliminated the lip biting. His employers Zack T. and George L. Miller in 1907 organized the Miller Bros. 101 Ranch Real Wild West show, which employed, as well as Pickett, such notables as Lucille Mulhall, called the first cowgirl and world's lady champion in roping and tying wild steers; Tom Mix, silent-movie cowboy actor; and Guy Weadick, who organized the first Calgary Stampede.
In 1929 the Rodeo Association of America, an organization of rodeo managers and producers, was formed to regulate the sport. The contestants themselves took a hand in 1936 after a strike in Boston Garden and organized the Cowboy Turtles Association—“turtles” because they had been slow to act. This group was renamed the Rodeo Cowboys Association (RCA) in 1945 and the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA) in 1975. Its rules became accepted by most rodeos. Amateur rodeo grew in popularity, and the National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association, formed in 1948, has 80 member schools. Some 500 secondary school, 4-H Club, Future Farmers of America, and other junior rodeos are held annually. The National High School Rodeo Association, which was formed in 1959, is a federation of 31 state and two Canadian provincial organizations. In the last quarter of the 20th century, the number of rodeos, attendance, and purse money all increased, and women competed in their own rodeos, adding such traditional men's events as calf roping, bareback bronc riding, and bull riding to the traditional women's event, barrel racing.
The calf for roping and the steer for wrestling are released from chutes, an innovation since early rodeos. These are timed events. The calf must be roped and thrown, and any three feet tied together. In the steer-wrestling contest, a hazer helps to keep the steer moving straight forward. The wrestler must throw the steer with head and all feet in line. In calf roping, championships have been won in 16 s, but it has been done in well under 15 s. In steer wrestling, 11 s is championship time, but less than 10 s is on record.
In riding events the contestant is mounted before the chute gates are opened. The rider must stay on the animal for 8 s, holding on with one hand only. Judging, on a point system, is based on the performance of the animal as well as that of the contestant. Broncos are not trained to buck, and the rules of professional rodeo ban cruelty. In all riding events the contestant is disqualified if he touches the animal or its rigging with his free hand. All-around championships and championships in each of the standard events are determined each year at the National Finals Rodeo on the basis of a long-established point-award system.
Don Russell
The five standard rodeo events are calf roping, bull riding, steer wrestling (bulldogging), saddle bronc-riding, and bareback bronc-riding. (A bronc [bronco, broncho, or bucking bronco] is an unbroken range horse picked for its resistance to training and its tendency to buck, or throw, its rider.) Two other events are recognized for championships: single-steer roping and team roping. There is no ban on additional contests, and there are usually contract acts—professional specialty performances such as trick riding, fancy roping, and other exhibitions. The barrel race, a saddle horse race around a series of barrels, is a popular contest for cowgirls. Steer decorating is seen in junior contests. Prize money may be offered in a wild-horse race, wild-cow milking, trick and fancy riding, or a contest for cutting horses (horses trained to separate cattle from a herd).
The participants pay entry fees, and the prize money won is their only compensation. More than half of all rodeos are independent of state and county fairs, livestock shows, or other attractions, and many are held in arenas devoted to the purpose. The equipment, however, is simple and may be improvised.
Rodeo developed as an American sport confined mainly to Mexico, the United States, and Canada. Rodeos had their origin in the United States when cowboys would gather together in the “cowtowns” at the end of cattle-driving trails and vie for the unofficial title of best bucking-horse rider, roper, and so on. As the cowboys' occupation was curtailed in scope by the railroads and by fencing, the contests became regular, formal programs of entertainment. Many Western towns and areas claim the distinction of being the first place to hold a rodeo in the United States, among them Cheyenne, Wyo., in 1872 and Winfield, Kan., in 1882, but such early contests were merely exhibitions of riding and roping skills and not the highly organized shows that modern rodeo became. Denver, Colo., is traditionally accepted as the birthplace of paid spectator rodeo, in October 1887. The Pendleton (Ore.) Round-Up started in 1910, and the Calgary Stampede in 1912. The latter has been an annual event since 1919. But the oldest annual show of all is Cheyenne Frontier Days, which has been presented each year since 1897.
In 1903 Bill Pickett, a black cowboy from Texas, leaped for the horns of a steer to save his horse from being gored and wrestled the steer to the ground, biting its upper lip in a bulldog grip. He found he could repeat the act, which became known as bulldogging—or, more politely, steer wrestling, after rodeo rules eliminated the lip biting. His employers Zack T. and George L. Miller in 1907 organized the Miller Bros. 101 Ranch Real Wild West show, which employed, as well as Pickett, such notables as Lucille Mulhall, called the first cowgirl and world's lady champion in roping and tying wild steers; Tom Mix, silent-movie cowboy actor; and Guy Weadick, who organized the first Calgary Stampede.
In 1929 the Rodeo Association of America, an organization of rodeo managers and producers, was formed to regulate the sport. The contestants themselves took a hand in 1936 after a strike in Boston Garden and organized the Cowboy Turtles Association—“turtles” because they had been slow to act. This group was renamed the Rodeo Cowboys Association (RCA) in 1945 and the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA) in 1975. Its rules became accepted by most rodeos. Amateur rodeo grew in popularity, and the National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association, formed in 1948, has 80 member schools. Some 500 secondary school, 4-H Club, Future Farmers of America, and other junior rodeos are held annually. The National High School Rodeo Association, which was formed in 1959, is a federation of 31 state and two Canadian provincial organizations. In the last quarter of the 20th century, the number of rodeos, attendance, and purse money all increased, and women competed in their own rodeos, adding such traditional men's events as calf roping, bareback bronc riding, and bull riding to the traditional women's event, barrel racing.
The calf for roping and the steer for wrestling are released from chutes, an innovation since early rodeos. These are timed events. The calf must be roped and thrown, and any three feet tied together. In the steer-wrestling contest, a hazer helps to keep the steer moving straight forward. The wrestler must throw the steer with head and all feet in line. In calf roping, championships have been won in 16 s, but it has been done in well under 15 s. In steer wrestling, 11 s is championship time, but less than 10 s is on record.
In riding events the contestant is mounted before the chute gates are opened. The rider must stay on the animal for 8 s, holding on with one hand only. Judging, on a point system, is based on the performance of the animal as well as that of the contestant. Broncos are not trained to buck, and the rules of professional rodeo ban cruelty. In all riding events the contestant is disqualified if he touches the animal or its rigging with his free hand. All-around championships and championships in each of the standard events are determined each year at the National Finals Rodeo on the basis of a long-established point-award system.
No comments:
Post a Comment