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Anaheim, California – Get out with two hands if you ever be in a professional bull assembly event.
The Pyrotechnics, with a close action with almost 2,000 pounds. The bulls that fight and the riders cling to life, waiting febrily to arrive eight seconds, everything that a show that you should see at least once in your life.
Fox Nation broadcast Friday’s event in association with PBR, giving Outkick an inner look at the “hardest sport of land.”
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LOOK:
On Friday night (September 6) marked day 1 of the weekend stay of PBR in California, which is a joke in itself, and mocked during the show.
Bull riding … seen as a totally American sport … visiting the coast?
Let’s go now, partner.
Anaheim, Nashville or the Bermuda triangle: PBR showcase is a clock.
LOOK:
Of course, there is a system of points that will take two readings in a brochure to completely understand. But you will be forgiven for forgetting those rules and just looking at the mass beasts that are stirred and twisted, while the runners, most less than six feet and less than 200 pounds. – Try desperately to endure.
The riders were not afraid.
They are the type of men who pray before the event, the necks leaned in their chest with plenary to the Lord, then load to conquer a bull.
PBR has been packing sands since ’92.
The work is “simple”: travel for eight seconds. The score runs up to 100 points: 50 for how good the bull is cost, 50 for how good the rider handles it. And in the team series, those walks are added for squadrons of five men fighting City vs. City
This is how you get clashes such as Ridge Riders in Arizona with the Austin Gamblers, or Nashville Stampede facing the Carolina Cowboys.
Competing between teams, runners, MC and Beasts offer a program that any sports fan can appreciate.
Burning fans could argue: They are alone here to compete, not act.
Incorrect, these guys bring it.
A rider even made a setback from the protective railing, with fans by joining the fun from the seats. See the beasts closely at the Honda Center in Anaheim brought memories of listening to the ear that accelerates serious digger in a Monster Jam event. Maybe it’s about being close to Angel Stadium, just three miles away, where that 2004 memory lives.
In PBR, you will hear Motley Crue, Kid Rock and the tastes that explode on the speakers. You will see fireworks before the game. You will even see the border patrol agents who work as Bull Tamers, hugged by a crowd that is 100 percent American red blood.
Beyond the astonishment of seeing fans to pray together, encourage themselves together and meet around chaos, the highlight was the shark cage.
Fans can enter, cowboy hats and tecovas, and enjoy the spectacle of the seats, no doubt.
But digging deeper, Outkick entered the shark cage to see the bulls closely.
At one time, a dishonest bull crashed into the shark cage, a cage protected by thick bars that rise from the earth. The boom impact released a collective gasp from the crowd.
Sitting within this small complex with four others, on snacks to fit, we were closer than anyone to the beasts.
Even on a quieter Friday on Friday (the day to go), fans hugged the show and showed that PBR has a home in southern California.
As for the winners, Arizona Ridge runners dominated. The Colby Yates coach, together with the team director and the Yellowstone actor, MO brings a lot, said he taught his riders to adopt the emotion and pressure to compete in Anaheim.
The coach Yates spoke with Outkick after the event: “We are really excited because every time we arrive in Anaheim, we know that this is close to our house. So we love to come here. We left a little more about fans because they know we are close, so it is quite special for us.”
“It was excellent,” Mo brings a lot of aggregate. “Keyshawn [Whitehorse] I did a great job with the boys. I mean, the boys [Ridge Riders] They are super athletes. And, of course, the crowd here, the energy of the crowd only adds another element and emotion to athletes too. So it’s just a great combination. “
In Anaheim, buck buck, the crowd and the heartbeat of the heart of the United States feel stronger than ever.