Feb. 23 was like any other short-go at La Fiesta de los Vaqueros, full of hootin鈥 and hollerin鈥, dirt and dust, and plenty of cold, hard cash.
Alberta鈥檚 Curtis Cassidy took home more than $6,000 as the All-Around Champion that day. Jesse Wright, part of the legendary saddle-bronc riding dynasty out in Milford, Utah, won more than $4,000 on the day. Ky Hamilton, a bull rider from all the way in Mackay, Australia, took first place on the afternoon, and for the event, racking up an impressive 175.5 points on two steers.
For 蜜柚直播 Rodeo general manager Gary Williams, it was yet another feather in another cap.
But over 1,000 miles away in Houston, just before one of rodeo鈥檚 premier events, trouble was brewing.
On Feb. 27, an attendee at the Houston Rodeo World鈥檚 Championship Bar-B-Que brought COVID-19 into the facility. Eight days later, it was canceled.
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The 蜜柚直播 Rodeo ended up being the last major rodeo of the season.
鈥淲e got in by the skin of our teeth,鈥 Williams said. 鈥淥f course, we didn鈥檛 know it then.鈥
But now, with the pandemic threatening some of the most important rodeos of the summer, Williams and his barebacking brethren are worried about the future of the sport they love most.
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This time of year is essentially the rodeo offseason. There are good little rodeos all over 鈥 including this weekend鈥檚 Cave Creek Rodeo 鈥 but for the most part, cowboys kick off their boots and rest their aching bones for much of April and May.
By June, though, competitors are raring to go, especially when the Reno Rodeo rolls around.
Not this year, though.
Reno has been canceled, a decision general manager George Combs said 鈥渨as not an easy decision.鈥
鈥淲e had hoped the state and nation鈥檚 recovery from this pandemic would allow for community events by mid-June and this would be something the region could look forward to,鈥 Combs said in a statement. 鈥淯nfortunately, this global crisis has forced us all to make sacrifices and work through this unprecedented situation. After many discussions with leading government and health authorities, as well as the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association, we are certain that this is the right action.鈥
The shuttering of the Reno Rodeo was a shock to the cowboy community.
Now, Williams said rodeoers are worried that the granddaddy of them all 鈥 the Cheyenne Frontier Days in Cheyenne, Wyoming 鈥 is going to be shut down as well.
鈥淚 haven鈥檛 spoken to anyone in Cheyenne, but I know they鈥檙e in jeopardy,鈥 said Williams of the late-July extravaganza, which draws fans from all over the world. 鈥淭he governor has said no concerts, and the Cheyenne committee said we need those concerts to be viable.鈥
Frontier Days CEO Tom Hirsig told in April that a decision would have to be made by early June about whether to cancel the event for the first time in its 124-year history. The Calgary Stampede, another one of rodeo’s premier events — scheduled to kick off on July 3 — has already been canceled for the first time in its 97-year history.
鈥淭hen you take the Fourth of July 鈥 Greeley (Colorado) is canceled, St. Paul, Oregon, is canceled,鈥 Williams said. 鈥淣obody knows where this thing is gonna go.鈥
And just like that, with the heart of its season in peril, a sport that doubles as a lifestyle worries if it鈥檒l ever be the same again.
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Life on the road is not easy.
Just ask Marana鈥檚 Sherry Cervi, one of the area鈥檚 most successful athletes regardless of sport.
But Cervi, the Women鈥檚 Professional Rodeo Association鈥檚 all-time highest-earning athlete, was eagerly anticipating this season鈥檚 summer slate. Her husband, team roper Cory Petska, had just found a new partner and was looking to get back to the National Finals Rodeo 鈥 the Super Bowl of rodeo 鈥 in December in Las Vegas.
Now, with Reno and other prominent jackpots shelved, they are reassessing their 2020 plans.
鈥淭he unknown is what鈥檚 hard,鈥 Cervi said by phone. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 for the whole country, though. I鈥檓 not just saying rodeo.鈥
Cervi and her husband are up in Wisconsin, helping Cervi鈥檚 parents put out cattle. This would be her downtime, anyway.
But the summer planning starts early. Or, at least, it would have.

In this photo taken with a slow shutter speed, barrel racer Sherry Cervi from Marana, Ariz., competes during the seventh go-round of the 2014 National Finals Rodeo.
鈥淣ormally, we would鈥檝e made our RV and stall reservations for Reno in April, planning for June,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hen we鈥檇 be planning where we鈥檇 go (for) Fourth of July.鈥
What makes things particularly difficult are not just the closings of several prominent rodeos, but the smaller jackpots that make life on the road financially viable. Good rodeoers don鈥檛 just hunt for beaucoup bucks at the big events. Gas money is earned in tiny towns all over the West.
鈥淭he Fourth of July, we鈥檙e used to going to eight to 10 rodeos around that time,鈥 Cervi said. 鈥淢aybe we get one or two this year.鈥
Cervi has been on the phone with some of her fellow racers, and she hears the strain in their voices.
鈥淔or the people who make their money in rodeo, they鈥檙e finding side jobs now,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he talk from some of the contestants is we wish we knew (that), yes, we are going to have, say, 20 rodeos, or not. A lot of people would just go get a job, or plan on doing something else. We鈥檙e basically waiting week by week. You don鈥檛 want to commit and then see they announce a rodeo is on.鈥
For now, Cervi and Petska wait. What else can they do, other than herd cattle?
鈥淭he week of Reno, not going out for that, it鈥檚 going to be like, 鈥榃ow, this is really happening,鈥欌 she said. 鈥淟iterally a week before this hit, my husband got a new team roping partner, and they decided they鈥檇 start at Reno and try to make the finals.鈥
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That鈥檚 just this year.
What about next year?
鈥淲e鈥檙e just as nervous as anyone,鈥 Williams said. 鈥淚 was just on a video conference call with San Antonio, and they do their season ticket renewals, and they鈥檙e including language about canceling next year.鈥
Even if the 蜜柚直播 Rodeo is allowed to proceed in February, will fans have a desire to gather in large crowds?
There sure is an appetite for the cowboys themselves. Williams said the Cave Creek Rodeo, which concludes Sunday, expected more than 600 entrants; in a normal year, the small event would draw maybe 200. Regulations are in place for the competitors, including mandatory temperature testing. Anything over 100.3 degrees, and contestants will be drawn out and removed from the grounds.
But, Williams said, at least the show is going on.
鈥淭his is going to be their moment in the sunshine,鈥 Williams said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the biggest thing that鈥檚 ever happened to Cave Creek. But there won鈥檛 be anyone there to see it.鈥
That鈥檚 because the event is closed to the public, the stands empty.
How is that going to change going forward?
It鈥檚 on Williams鈥 mind.

Gary Williams
鈥淭he big bugaboo 鈥 and it鈥檚 not just us, it鈥檚 all sports 鈥 is trying to figure out how social distancing works with grandstands,鈥 Williams said. 鈥淥ne of the PRCA guidelines is you can鈥檛 have any seating within 6 feet of the arena; well, that eliminates our whole first row of boxed seats. A lot of those people have had those boxes for 30 years. We鈥檙e going to have to move them. Then it becomes, can you get enough people in there to make it feasible?
鈥淭hat鈥檚 what a lot of rodeos are wrestling with.鈥
Normally the only wrestling in rodeo is with steers.
What Williams and Co. wouldn鈥檛 give for those simpler times, when the scariest thing to imagine was a snorting 1,200-pound animal.