Here are the 10 most dangerous bulls of rodeo history
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Bull riding has been one of the most popular sports in the Midwest for as long as memory serves.
For those [endSpeech]who are really into the culture, both riders and spectators, bull riding is a lot more than just a sport. It is a proper lifestyle. People live for bull riding [endSpeech]and enjoy everything there is about bull riding, from the top riders to the bulls that dump their riders within mere seconds. It is because of these supreme four-legged mammals that this game has been thriving for hundreds of years.
Number 10: Bushwacker
Bushwacker, at 750 pounds and outfitted with a nasty temperament, is an absolute force to be reckoned with. But besides the brawn, he's also quick, smart, and unpredictable. This is why many regard him as the greatest bull to compete in rodeo. During his six-year career in PBR, Bushwacker has only been written the requisite eight seconds twice in his 66 outs. Once in 2009 his debut year by Thiago peguito and in 2013 by rodeo legend JB money. However,[endSpeech] most riders can only manage to hold on to Bushwacker for3.3 seconds.
Number 9: Red rock
Red rock is one of rodeo's most famous bowls. Because in the 309 outs during his PRCA career, between 1983 and 1987, he was never ridden a single time. The red rock was unreadable.
Not because he was mean or temperamental, but because he was smart. He could somehow sense a writer's moves and then pull a swift and effective counter-attack. It wasn't until red rock made a brief return from retirement in 1988 that he was written. In this one-off challenge of the champions, 1987's PRCA world champion rider lane frost was pitted against the red rock for seven rides. Frost managed to ride red rock not just once, but four times out of seven.
Number 8: Tornado
One of the first truly legendary bulls in the rodeo in six years and 220 outs tornado threw every single rider who attempted the last eight seconds. Often, writers who drew his name opted out. It wasn't that he was particularly nasty or ill-tempered. In fact, his owner Jim's shoulders said he was incredibly docile out of the arena, grazing in the field. The sixteen-hundred-pound bowl strengths were his muscularity, agility, and ability to spin quickly and change direction at the drop of a hat. When the tornado was finally ridden in 1968 by the late, great Warren, granger, freckles brown, the rafters shook.
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