

A junior rodeo competitor asks the bull rider to autograph his flak jacket.
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Outlaw spits chew into a disposable Coke cup when he has too much in his mouth to casually discard on the floor. The younger Outlaw has a daughter named Cashleigh Blake Outlaw. Outlaw started riding calves when he was four his dad was an amateur bull rider.

Outlaw must win Saturday's wild-card draw in order to qualify for Sunday's finals.Ĭowboy characteristics extend beyond the leaderboard. The bulls have had the better of him at Stampede, though. He's attempted to ride 63 bulls in 2017, making it eight seconds 26 times, according to the PBR. He's ranked fifth in the Professional Bull Riders' world standings and has won $110,795.63 at PBR events so far this year. It is a logical deduction, backed by facts. Outlaw says, "because it is my name." He doesn't say it in a conceited way. "Chase is a pretty good cowboy name," Mr. He's a steer wrestler, like his brother Curtis. Five of the 120 adult competitors at Stampede are named Cody, including Alberta boy Cody Cassidy. Read more: Canada's strongest woman prepares for Calgary StampedeĬody is the most common name here. Read more: How Steven Peebles became bareback riding's indestructible cowboy Read more: For politicians, the Calgary Stampede is a lesson in western attire Outlaw says, "there are a lot of Calebs and Codys." Ryan Dirteater and Stetson Vest are fine cowboy names, but they are castaways in this rodeo's alphabetical ocean. Here, 23 per cent of the rodeo's cowboys and cowgirls sport names that start with hard or soft "C" sounds. Chase Outlaw is from Arkansas and speaks with an accent that could serve as a second piece of I.D.Ĭhase Outlaw is at the Calgary Stampede, where his name is nothing special. Chase Outlaw sprinkles sentences with "yes, ma'am," "no, ma'am," and punctuates them by spitting tobacco juice on the floor. Chase Outlaw is his real name and bull riding is his real job.
