Though Pickett achieved much of his arena glory with Zack Miller and his 101 show, the black cowboy was 35 years old before he joined-- middle-aged for the strenuous bulldogging event.
32.
I'm not sure how much time passed _ I was too excited to keep track of that _ but after the bass had made several bulldogging power dives, I almost had it near the boat.
33.
There's so much I didn't know about Bill Pickett-- from the prejudice he endured to what motivated him to invent his unique bulldogging style of biting the lip of the steer he was wrestling.
34.
When the wild-eyed bulldogging steers, waving foot-long horns, skid into the pen where the saddle bronc riders are getting ready, the cowboys wave them away with cheerful annoyance like the neighbor's poodle.
35.
Federation cowboys rode bareback broncos and bulls, roped calves and wrestled steers-- originally called bulldogging and pioneered by the black western legend Bill Pickett, among the most famous rodeo performers ever-- and barrel-raced for three days.
36.
When 20-year-old Ote Berry decided to wrestle steers at big-time rodeos in the 1980s, he wanted to learn from the best so he moved from Nebraska to Checotah, Okla ., billed as the world's bulldogging capital.
37.
Jack Nicholson and Sean Penn, building on their " Crossing Guard " collaboration, team up again in " The Pledge, " with Penn behind the camera as director and Nicholson up front as a retired cop bulldogging an unsolved homicide.
38.
While I was fighting the 7-footer, Fraser and our partner, professional baseball player Jerry Goff, each hooked, landed and released 5-and 6-footers, the fish jumping, sprinting and bulldogging, all at once, out of control.
39.
He had won the saddle-bronc competition in Pendleton in 1917, 1919, and 1923 and came second in 1915 and 1929 . Canutt won the steer bulldogging in 1920 and 1921, and won the All-Around Police Gazette belt in 1917, 1919, 1920 and 1923.
40.
Colas ( tails ) is bulldogging the Mexican way, in which a mounted charro first salutes the crowd and then sprints alongside a running steer, taps it on the rump with his right hand, grabs the tail, wraps it around the charro's right leg, and veers his horse to the left, thus flipping the animal to the ground.