💥 Reno Event Listings & Poster Art 💥
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💥 Reno Event Listings & Poster Art 💥
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ding Tour stop features 40 of the world’s best professional bull riders and 40 of the best bulls in the country. With pyrotechnics, Xtreme action, rock and roll, eight seconds of the best pro bull riding and a purse of $54,000 of added money, it’s an evening fans will not want to miss.
lessamp; The Broken Bones and The Wood Brothers take the stage at Grand Sierra Resort's Grand Theatre. Masters of Southern soul and Americana, St. Paul and The Broken Bones and The Wood Brothers will join forces for a performance on Thursday, June 19, 2025.
lessf Run Golf Club! Early bird pricing is available for non-members until March 31, and members will receive discounted pricing beyond the end of March. If you’re not a golfer but want an opportunity to mingle with fellow young professionals, social tickets are also available for purchase.
Date: Friday, June 20, 2025
Time: 8 AM Shotgun Start
Location: Wolf Run Golf Club, 1400 Wolf Run Rd, Reno, NV 89511
Ticket Pricing:
- Early Bird/Members: $150 for individual, $600 for foursome, $45 social ticket
- Non-members: $200 for individual, $700 for foursome, $60 social ticket
l team competition to be held Friday, June 20, 2025 at 8:00 am at the Reno Livestock Events Center Indoor Arena. To maintain the high standard and quality of the competition, Reno Rodeo will only allow 10 teams the opportunity to compete in this year’s competition. Competition will begin at 8:00 a.m. in the order of draw.
The Judges Meeting will be held Thursday June 19, 2025 at 5:30 p.m. in the DOC Bar which is located inside the indoor arena building at the West End upstairs. The review of drill criteria with the judges and drill masters will be done.
2025 DRILL TEAM COMPETITION APPLICATION
2025 DRILL TEAM MANEUVERS
Drill Divisions:
You can list your team’s divisions that you are registered as.
Example: Junior, Mixed or Senior but this is an open competition. Everyone is listed as the same classification.
OPEN DRILL TEAM COMPETITION AWARDS
First Place $ 5,000Second Place $ 2,500Third Place: $ 1,000
The winner shall be determined by adding together the scores of the three judges and dividing by three. The team with the highest average is to be declared the winner, next highest average, second, and the next highest average, third, etc.
All places first, second and third are final at the time of the awards. Due to the pressing time schedule, any contested scores and/or complaints will be assessed and will be used to improve next year’s competition. However, the results of this competition are FINAL!
Entry Fees:
Drill Competition: $300 per Drill Team
For further information, contact: Reno Rodeo Association
Attention: DRILL TEAM COMPETITION
Bill Summy (775)-240-3251
PO. Box 12335
Reno NV 89510
ore the performance on June 20–27.
Four teams of three kids, between the ages 8-14 years old, will compete.
During the race two kids have to rope and halter the pony and the third has mount and ride.
Teams are timed with the longest ride deemed the winner.
pete in the rodeo. There are only 8 – 12 slots in each rodeo performance for each event, when more contestants enter than can compete in the performances; they compete in the “slack”
lessthe saddle, or “cantle,” as the horse bucks. The rider then snaps his feet back to the horse’s neck a split second before the animal’s front feet hit the ground.
Other factors considered in the scoring are the cowboy’s control throughout the ride, the length of his spurring stroke and how hard the horse bucks.
Disqualification results if, during the eight seconds ride, the rider touches the animal, himself or his equipment with his free hand, if either foot slips out of a stirrup, if he drops the bronc rein, or if he fails to have his feet in the proper “mark out” position at the beginning of the ride.
the bulldogger leaves too soon and breaks the barrier, he receives a 10-second penalty.
The steer wrestler is assisted by a hazer, another cowboy on horseback tasked with keeping the steer running in a straight line.
When the bulldogger’s horse pulls even with the steer, he eases down the right side of the horse and reaches for the steer’s horns. After grasping the horns, he digs his heels into the dirt. As the steer slows, the cowboy turns the animal, lifts up on its right horn and pushes down with his left hand.
After the catch, the steer wrestler must either bring the steer to a stop or change the direction of the animal’s body before the throw or is disqualified. The clock stops when the steer is on his side with all four legs pointing in the same direction.
Steer wrestling is often known as the “big man’s event” and with good reason; at the 1995 NFR in Las Vegas, the average steer wrestler weighed in at 223 pounds.
t find him at the Reno Rodeo. Headers need quickness like brain surgeons need medical training. To win money at the most professional rodeos, team roping headers must accomplish a myriad of duties in less time than it takes the average person to yawn.
First of all, headers must charge out of the box on horseback (without breaking the barrier), chase down a fast-racing steer and rope him around his protected horns, neck or “half-head,” a partial horn-neck catch. Then the header must turn the steer to the left, giving his partner, called a heeler, a chance to rope the steer’s hind feet. The run is completed when the steer is secured, and the team ropers’ horses are facing each other on opposite sides of the steer.
HEELING:In rodeo’s only true team event, two ropers – a “header” and a “heeler,” work together to catch a steer. After making his catch, the header rides to the left, taking the steer in tow. The heeler moves in and ropes both hind legs. Catching only one hind leg results in a five-second penalty. If the heeler tosses his loop before the header has changed the direction of the steer and has the animal moving forward, it’s called a “crossfire,” and it results in disqualification.
f that runs fast or kicks hard can foil a roper’s finest effort.
After the calf is given a head start, horse and rider give chase, ropes the calf, then dismounts and runs to the animal. After catching and flanking the calf, the cowboy ties any three of the animal’s legs together using a “pigging string” he carries in his teeth. If the calf is not standing when the contestant reaches it, the cowboy must allow the animal to stand, then flank it.
When the cowboy completes his tie, he throws his hands in the air as a signal to the judge. He then remounts his horse and allows the rope to become slack. The run is declared invalid if the calf kicks free within six seconds.
A ten-second penalty is added if the calf roper breaks the barrier at the beginning of the run.
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