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PERFORMERS
PRCA Pro Rodeo
Sept. 7 at 7:00 PM • Sept. 8 at 1:00 PM
Event Details
Join us for 2 Days of FREE PRCA Rodeo (with your admission ticket into the fair)
Saturday, September 7th at 7:00PM
Sunday, September 8th at 1:00PM
Bareback riding, steer wrestling, tie-down roping, saddle bronc riding, breakaway roping, team roping, barrel racing, & bull riding.
Beer Garden during the rodeo.
The Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA) is deeply committed to the proper care and treatment of the livestock used in the rodeo. The Livestock Welfare Program is extensive and covers many aspects including livestock care standards, education, research, outreach, and government relations.
Professional rodeo action consists of two types of competitions - rough stock events and timed events - and an all-around cowboy crown. Each competition has its own set of rodeo rules and order of events.
Rodeo 101- Roughstock Events
In the rough stock, events bareback riding, saddle bronc riding and bull riding a contestant’s score is equally dependent upon his performance and the animal’s performance. To earn a qualified score, the cowboy, while using only one hand, must stay aboard a bucking horse or bull for eight seconds. If the rider touches the animal, himself, or any of his equipment with his free hand, he is disqualified.
In saddle bronc and bareback riding, a cowboy must “mark out” his horse; that is, he must exit the chute with his spurs set above the horse’s shoulders and hold them there until the horse’s front feet hit the ground after the initial jump out of the chute. Failing to do so results in disqualification.
During the regular season, two judges each score a cowboy’s qualified ride by awarding 0 to 25 points for the rider’s performance and 0 to 25 points for the animal’s effort. The judges’ scores are then combined to determine the contestant’s score. A perfect score is 100 points.
Rodeo 101- Timed Events
In timed events steer wrestling, team roping, tie-down roping, barrel racing, and steer roping; cowboys and cowgirls at “the other end of the arena” compete against the clock, as well as against each other. A contestant’s goal is to post the fastest time in his or her event. In steer wrestling and the roping events, calves and steers are allowed a head start. The competitor, on horseback, starts in a three-sided fenced area called a box. The fourth side opens into the arena.
A rope barrier is stretched across that opening and is tied to the calf or steer with a breakaway loop. Once the calf or steer reaches the head-start point - predetermined by the size of the arena - the barrier is automatically released. If a cowboy breaks that barrier, a 10-second penalty is added.