Graney: Sky is limit for NFR rookie bull rider named Creek
Updated December 6, 2021 - 10:57 pm
I’m not sure the fear factor ever really disappears. Not when 36 percent of the injuries are considered severe. Not when fractures are the most common while concussions and neck ailments compromise another 10.6 percent.
Then there are those other pesky head and facial mishaps.
“You deal with it at every level,” Creek Young said. “I struggled with it when I was moving up each division and getting on bigger stock. There is always a little fear to it.
“They’re animals. There’s no telling what kind of day they’re going to have. They can change their minds at any minute. You just don’t want it to be the wrong one.”
Yeah. Animals that tip the scale at 2,000 pounds.
His name is Creek and he’s a professional bull rider. So let that “up the creek,” braided-leather handle of irony sink in for a second. He’s also just 21 and the Resistol Rookie of the Year, having qualified for his first National Finals Rodeo at Thomas & Mack Center.
This was the goal when beginning the season, what he wanted, what he planned for most. He didn’t have much success to start before winning his first rodeo. Then one victory became two and two became three and he totaled nine before arriving in Las Vegas.
He says the key is to take it one bull at a time.
Is there any other way given the danger? Look what happened to star bull rider J.B. Mauney on Friday. He was knocked off unconscious. Such is not the life to look ahead.
An old soul
Young’s father died when he was 2 and his mother when he was 11. He was raised by an aunt in Rogersville, Missouri.
“When he was little, he’d ask very deep questions. He was like an old man in a young man’s body,” his aunt, Michelle Porter, told the Rodeo News. “He loves his quiet time and is contemplated and focused. He has a strong moral compass and has this wisdom about him that’s like an old man. It’s impressive.”
His showing so far in Las Vegas has been an up-and-down journey with the up part being most impressive. Young won the third go-round with a score of 92 and the $29,827 that came with it.
He wouldn’t record a score those first two nights — eight seconds can seen a lifetime on one of those hefty animals, friends — and didn’t make the whistle again Monday.
Perhaps that was because Young was atop Cliff Hanger, who no one has ridden to time in nine outings this season.
Big Ol’ Cliff seems to be giving them hell, all right.
Still, Young finds himself fourth in the world standings.
“I’m excited for the big moments like this, regardless of how things go,” he said. “I’ll enjoy it and see how many bulls we can get rode. If we can get our share, we’ll see what happens. I should at least place well in the average.”
Don’t get comfortable
The next obvious question: How good can he be? Bull riding is not for the faint of heart or weak of back. It’s hardly a career based on longevity.
If you get 10 professional seasons under your Bauer helmet and make a decent living, you’re far ahead of most. Young already seems on such a path.
“As long as he stays healthy and keeps working,” said Derrion, the 28-year-old brother of Creek and a former bull rider. “He can’t get complacent and comfortable just making Rookie of the Year. He has to keep that same drive and passion for the sport that he has now.
“Make it a priority. Don’t get distracted. Keep his head straight. If he does all that, the sky is the limit. He can do whatever he wants in this sport.”
I’m not sure the fear factor ever really disappears.
But one of the sport’s highest levels hasn’t stopped Young.
His name is Creek and he’s a bull rider.
Of course he is.
Ed Graney is a Sigma Delta Chi Award winner for sports column writing and can be reached at egraney@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-4618. He can be heard on “The Press Box,” ESPN Radio 100.9 FM and 1100 AM, from 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. Monday through Friday. Follow @edgraney on Twitter.
Utah's Feild gets bareback riding prize
Well, they saved the best for last in bareback riding, didn't they?
Kaycee Feild was last out in his event Monday night to kick off the fifth go-round of the National Finals Rodeo at the Thomas & Mack Center. He answered by scoring a 91.0 atop Famous Dex, denying Cole Franks and his 90 the top prize of $26,996.
"When guys go out there and you see those big scores put up, it adds to the fire," Feild said. "You have to step up your game. You have to throw more caution to the wind. You can't ride as correct. You just have to grit your teeth and let it all hang out."
Feild, the star cowboy from Genola, Utah, is a five-time world champion with a sixth such buckle nearly in his grasp. He's also the first cowboy to win three consecutive bareback riding average titles.
There might be another one of those this year, as well.
Feild now leads the NFR's average at 439.5/5 and the world standings with $230,127. That's nearly $38,000 ahead of Tilden Hooper, who finished third Monday.
"We're only half way through this," Feild said. "I've made some big jumps, but other guys can also later this week. Just keep my head down and stay focused and build my ride.
"(Famous Dex) was awesome. I knew I had my hands full tonight on that horse. When he's breathing fire, he doesn't want to be in there. He wants me off his back. That was a really fun horse. Hard neck. Just bury my chin and don't get thrown off."
It doesn't appear to be an issue with Feild that often.
Even on the hard-necked ones.
Other fifth go-round winners:
— Tyler Pearson, Atoka, Okla., in steer wrestling (3.60).
— Coleman Proctor, Pryor, Okla., and Logan Medlin, Tatum, NM in team roping (3.8).
— Ryder Wright, Milford, Utah, in saddle bronc riding (91).
— Marty Yates, Stephenville, Tex., in tie-down roping (7.3).
— Emily Miller-Beisel, Weatherford, Okla., in barrel racing (13.43).
— Stetson Wright, Milford, Utah, in bull riding (94.5).
Ed Graney, Las Vegas Review-Journal