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"Near Huancayo, Peru" (And Four Other Mixed Poems)

This time Dennis put all five different poems together; one for his lovely Huancayo, and Montaro Val ... - Dennis Siluk
 

Where is the Fountain of Youth?

We've finally come to the edge of the Fountain of Youth, but still a few steps away from fetching th ... - Bruce Zhang
 

Big Bird Goes Global

Big,yet small. Sesame Workshop is a dichotomy, but this dichotomy is most likely a key ingredient of ... - Christine Pollock
 
 

Guitar - What Guitar Should I Buy?

If you have come to the conclusion that you want to play guitar the next step will be to choose a gu ... - Peter Edvinsson
 

We the Indians

An incident happened with a small boy Prince which rocked all Indians inspired me to write this arti ... - Tarun Bissa
 

Article Writing ?C Why Bother?

There are thousands of articles to be read on the World Wide Web, and many more are being added ever ... - Barbara White
 

Mosaics: An Ancient Art Form

Mosaics have been made for thousands of years. Their beauty, simplicity or intricacy and infinite va ... - Michael Russell
 

The Chinese Art of Cloisonne

Cloisonn was invented centuries ago and has been perfected by the Chinese. Read how these beautiful ... - Jane Roseen
 
 

Index » Creative Arts » History
 

The Rich History of the National Finals Rodeo

 
Author: J Cobb
 

Even though the sport of rodeo has been around almost forever, the National Finals Rodeo, or NFR as it is commonly called, has a much more recent history. The first National Finals Rodeo was held at the Dallas State Fair Grounds in 1959, and since then, the NFR has gone through many interesting changes including a name change in 2001 to the Wrangler National Finals Rodeo.

Said to have been the brain-child of South Dakota legend Casey Tibbs, the idea behind the first ever National Finals Rodeo was to bring together the bets rodeo athletes and the toughest livestock in the world. Many now-famous cowboys competed at that first NFR including Tibbs, Jim Shoulders, Jim Bynum, Jack Buschbom and Dean Oliver. No one quite knew what to expect but hoped for the best since this was the first ever world championship of rodeo. The cowboys who entered competed for the first NFR purse of $50,000!

Shoulders, still considered the most successful cowboy ever with 16 world titles, placed in six bull riding rounds in 1959, walking away with the NFR prize money and the world championships. In 1979, Jim Shoulders was honored in the inaugural class of the Pro Rodeo Hall of Fame in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Placing sixth in the rankings, Tibbs rode in his final saddle bronc riding world championship during that 1959 National Finals Rodeo. Today Tibbs is remembered as the first cowboy to capture the hearts and attention of the media. Tibbs was also inducted into the Hall of Fame, with the additional honor of being depicted in the museum's signature statue " a 20-footer of Tibbs riding a bronc named Necktie.

Jack Buschbom won in the first round of the 1959 National Finals Rodeo's bareback riding and continued on to claim the NFR average crown and world title. Twenty years later, he, too, was inducted into the Pro Rodeo Hall of Fame.

For many years the NFR flourished, spending a few years in Los Angeles and then another 20 years in Oklahoma City. Cowboys still worked toward the what became known as "the Last Rodeo," but the media attention and purses did not really grow until the NFR moved to Las Vegas, Nevada in 1985. The NFR always appealed to those cowboy athletes as a culmination of that year's hard work. With the move to Las Vegas, the appeal doubled " in the form of a total of $1.8 million in prize money.

The performance of rookie calf roper Joe Beaver was arguably the most unpredictably exciting event in that first Las Vegas Finals. Very few had heard of him before that week, but with a roll of Vegas luck Beaver took the world championship and became one of the best known cowboys in rodeo. In that very same 1985 Vegas NFR, roughstock sensation Lewis Field of Elk Ridge, Utah, easily captured the world bareback riding title in what became his first of three world all around championships. The 1998 National Finals Rodeo counted Ty Murray as the new champion when he won an unprecedented seventh world all-around title while Dan Mortenson garnered his fifth world saddle-bronc riding title, falling just one short of Tibbs' long-standing record.

Many rodeos have come and gone since then and world titles can be won and lost in less time than the 8 second buzzer but the excitement never dims at the National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas, and the lights never go down even after the cowboys go home.

 
 
 

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