NFR winner credits CNFR for saddle bronc riding championship
Knowing Taos Muncy, his 2007 saddle bronc riding world championship might never sink in.
Just like he said his College National Finals Rodeo win in June wouldn't sink in.
Just like he said his Cheyenne Frontier Days win in July wouldn't sink in.
"It's
kinda unreal, just like all the rest of 'em," Muncy said on Saturday
after clinching the gold buckle at the National Finals Rodeo in Las
Vegas. "You hope for it, you expect it sometimes � you know, you
always have your goals � but I never seen it comin' this fast. It's
real shocking to actually do well here."
"Do well" is an understatement.
Muncy,
the 20-year-old wunderkind from Corona, N.M., finished second in the
aggregate standings and shot from fourth in world standings to first as
his three biggest competitors fell off.
For the first few days
at Las Vegas' Thomas & Mack Center, Muncy was overwhelmed by the
magnitude of the event. The bright lights, the 17,000-plus fans, the
legendary field.
But he said, if anything, the memories of the
CNFR at the Casper Events Center settled him down for the rest of the
Finals. Winning the college championship gave Muncy some idea of the
pressure that he'd find in Vegas.
"You try to qualify for the
high school finals and then the college finals, and then you're on,"
said the Oklahoma Panhandle State cowboy, who won $91,755 in Las Vegas
and $201,133 for the year. "It's a stepping stone � you get in that
pressure situation at the CNFR, first."
Unlike Muncy, bull rider
Ted Bert of Cal Poly-San Lois Obispo said that no other rodeos can
compare to the Finals. Bert won the first go-round at the CNFR and
ultimately finished ninth, but that was no match for the glitz and
glamour of Sin City.
"None, honestly," Bert said of any
comparison between the two events. "This is a whole different deal.
Sure, any big rodeo's gonna prepare you for averages if you ride
consistently. But I don't know if there is anything to prepare you for
this.
"It's a different deal when you ride down that tunnel, I'll tell you."
Like
Muncy, Bert found his jaw on the floor as he peered around the arena
early in the week. Not that it affected him � Bert rode his first two
bulls, collecting more than $15,000 and rode five for the week,
finishing fourth in the aggregate standings.
Along with fellow
NFR competitor, Steven Dent (Ranger College), who won $6,214 and
$73,469 for the year, Muncy and Bert represent a new influx of talent
into the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association.
These new
cowboys have professional attitudes that come along with professional
paychecks, 10 times what they made just 30 years ago.
"Rodeo has
come a long way," calf roper Houston Hutto said. "The junior rodeos are
getting bigger, the high school rodeos are getting bigger. You could
easily say a new era is coming in."
Added five-time all-around
champion Trevor Brazile: "I see a lot of talent come up, and I've seen
a lot of guys who are more business-minded trying to get the job done.
They try not to shorten their careers by acting ignorant. Shoot, if you
don't do well in this business, then you have to get a real job."
Posted at 02:40 pm by nfrfinalsrodeo