The World’s Most
Dangerous Bull
The Greatest Bull To
Ever Buck
These are
both titles given to the bucking bull, Bodacious.
In 1999, Bodacious was inducted into
the ProRodeo Hall of Fame, and in 2017 into the Bull Riding Hall of Fame. Bodacious
was born in 1988 and became infamous in the world of rodeo, not only as one of
the great bucking bulls but also as a sire. Many of his sons and grandsons went
on to become top notch bucking bulls in their own right, including Cat Man Do,
Copperhead Slinger and Scaredy Cat.
No bull in
rodeo history was as feared as Bodacious.
He weighed
in at 1,900-pounds and was a crossbred Charbray who was first bucked in 1992.
In the four
years that Bodacious was hauled to rodeos, he was nearly unrideable. The big
yellow bull bucked off 127 of his 135 riders and became known for a
bone-crushing style that sent many riders to the hospital, including world
champions Tuff Hedeman and Terry Don West.
Bodacious had a distinctive bucking style. He would explode from the chute with such force there were times you could see his belly from the top of the chute. First ridden in 1993, it was two years before another bull rider made a qualified ride.
Only 6 cowboys out of a whopping 135 put together an 8 second ride on the huge 1,900-pound yellow bull.
He was named PRCA Bull of the Year in 1994-95 and top bull of the National Finals Rodeo in 1992 and 1994-95. He was retired during the 10th round of the 1995 National Finals Rodeo.
In the 9th
round of the 1995 NFR, rider Scott Breding tried wearing a hockey mask. However,
this failed to protect him adequately. Bodacious head-butted Breding, breaking
his nose and shattering his eye sockets.
At the finals that year, Hedeman drew
Bodacious one last time. He’d lost 25 pounds and was still healing. In a wise
move, he turned the bull out.
Hedeman called Bodacious, "the baddest bull there has ever been.”
A
few days later, Bodacious was retired from professional bull riding forever. In
1999, Bodacious was inducted into the ProRodeo Hall of Fame, and many know him
as "the greatest bull to ever buck."
Bodacious was 7 years old at
the time he was retired, still in his prime, but his owner said, "I didn’t
want to be the guy who let him kill someone.”
Bodacious
lived out the remainder of his life on owner Sammy Andrews' ranch, where he is
buried and where fans still come to honor him.
He died in 2000 when
a cut was discovered on his foot which caused a bone infection. The medication
used to counter act the bone infection caused his kidneys to fail.
Bodacious was a real star of rodeo being the first bull to have
his own agent and merchandise line.
Have any of
you ever watch Bodacious buck? What an athlete!
The first and 4th picture is NOT BODACIOUS I know! He was my father's bull before Andrew's bought him. He carries a J brand on the right rib, go watch video if you don't believe me.
ReplyDeleteSincerely
Jess Kephart's daughter
Carie Scott
Thank you for bringing that to my attention! I can’t find any decent pictures of Bodacious! Or paintings, posters? It’s a shame..
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