Some Riders Say Cheyenne Frontier Days Isn't The Same After Eliminating Slack

For the first time in more than a century, Cheyenne Frontier Days won’t have slack competition, which is for overflow competitors. Although some are saddened by the move, the rodeo says it has outgrown its ability to handle the hundreds of extra riders.

JM
Julie Mankin

July 18, 20265 min read

Cheyenne
For the first time in more than a century, the “Daddy of ’em All” Cheyenne Frontier Days Rodeo won’t have slack competition. Many contestants say it just ain’t the same without it, and some even now call it “The Stepdaddy.”
For the first time in more than a century, the “Daddy of ’em All” Cheyenne Frontier Days Rodeo won’t have slack competition. Many contestants say it just ain’t the same without it, and some even now call it “The Stepdaddy.” (Provided Photo)

The 130th annual “Daddy of ’em All” Cheyenne Frontier Days Rodeo that began Friday looks far different to some usual contestants.

Even the cowboy who could “still make Cheyenne” in George Strait’s 1996 country hit might not be aiming his truck “toward that Wyoming line” today.

That’s because entries at the Cheyenne Frontier Days Rodeo will be down by about 70%.

Morning slack competition, which drew hundreds of athletes in each timed event and made Cheyenne the world’s largest pro rodeo, has been eliminated.

Slack is for overflow competitors for events that draw dozens more entries than spots in the main performances. Slack usually happens early mornings or late nights, typically for timed events.

This week, just 72 of the sport’s winningest contestants (and champions of nine rodeos as far away as Oregon and Arizona) were invited to enter each event.

Before this year’s rodeo, it wasn’t unusual to see 200 or more contestants in timed slack event rounds.

The change was announced last winter as a way to help ease horse-trailer-parking congestion and create a more manageable schedule for the event’s thousands of volunteers.

Also announced was the Frontier Days Committee’s purse increase, bringing total prize money at the 10-day rodeo to $960,000.

  • Colton Fritzlan from Rifle, CO, in the bull riding at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo on Friday, July 17.
    Colton Fritzlan from Rifle, CO, in the bull riding at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo on Friday, July 17. (Matt Idler for Cowboy State Daily)
  • Bullfighter Cody Webster fights a bull after a ride with barrel and barrelman Cody Sosebee in the barrel at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo on Friday, July 17.
    Bullfighter Cody Webster fights a bull after a ride with barrel and barrelman Cody Sosebee in the barrel at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo on Friday, July 17. (Matt Idler for Cowboy State Daily)
  • Anita Ellis, from Blackfoot, ID runs the barrels for a time of 17.87 seconds to win the barrel racing at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo on Friday, July 17.
    Anita Ellis, from Blackfoot, ID runs the barrels for a time of 17.87 seconds to win the barrel racing at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo on Friday, July 17. (Matt Idler for Cowboy State Daily)
  • Shelby Boisjoli‑Meged from Calgary, AB chases her calf in the breakaway at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo on Friday, July 17.
    Shelby Boisjoli‑Meged from Calgary, AB chases her calf in the breakaway at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo on Friday, July 17. (Matt Idler for Cowboy State Daily)
  • Dalton Walker from Bertram, TX, jumps off his horse to wrestle his steer in the steer wrestling at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo on Friday, July 17.
    Dalton Walker from Bertram, TX, jumps off his horse to wrestle his steer in the steer wrestling at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo on Friday, July 17. (Matt Idler for Cowboy State Daily)
  • Trenton Smith from Bigfoot, TX, in the tie-down roping at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo on Friday, July 17.
    Trenton Smith from Bigfoot, TX, in the tie-down roping at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo on Friday, July 17. (Matt Idler for Cowboy State Daily)
  • Trenton Smith from Bigfoot, TX, in the tie-down roping at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo on Friday, July 17.
    Trenton Smith from Bigfoot, TX, in the tie-down roping at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo on Friday, July 17. (Matt Idler for Cowboy State Daily)
  • Sage Newman from Melstone, MT, rides his horse for a score of 87 points to win the saddle bronc riding at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo on Friday, July 17.
    Sage Newman from Melstone, MT, rides his horse for a score of 87 points to win the saddle bronc riding at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo on Friday, July 17. (Matt Idler for Cowboy State Daily)
  • Riley Kittle from Woodland, AL, and Trey Yates from Pueblo, CO, competed in the team roping at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo on Friday, July 17. Riley and Trey had the fastest time of the day with an 8.3-second run.
    Riley Kittle from Woodland, AL, and Trey Yates from Pueblo, CO, competed in the team roping at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo on Friday, July 17. Riley and Trey had the fastest time of the day with an 8.3-second run. (Matt Idler for Cowboy State Daily)

Breaking Point

Still, area barrel racer Kate Spaur Devore recently went viral with a simple social media post: “Goodbye to the Daddy.”

“Cheyenne closed the door on many of the very contestants who helped build its reputation as the ‘Daddy of ’em All,’” Devore said.

CFD is typically the third-richest rodeo in the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association’s regular season, behind Houston and San Antonio.

Because rodeo is a pay-to-play sport, accessibility to Cheyenne’s fat paychecks was known to provide the confidence and capital to launch a newcomer’s career, if not save a veteran’s entire season.

Cheyenne Frontier Days CEO Tom Hirsig said he understands eliminating slack competition is a huge change for the 130-year-old rodeo, but the world’s largest outdoor rodeo had simply outgrown its ability to handle the hundreds of slack riders.

“People are upset they’re not able to come,” he said. “But we simply have no room for those big rigs anymore.”

He also mentioned that rodeos have to absorb stock charges without help from contestants. The cost of fresh cattle today is sky-high and can’t be recaptured.

It’s a price that’s multiplied for every additional bovine chased down Cheyenne’s long arena.

Devore referenced the same sandy arena’s starring role in Garth Brooks’ 1995 hit song “The Beaches of Cheyenne” when she wrote, “So many dreamed of dancing on that stage. We came in droves, paid our entry fees, and took our chances.

“Every year seemed to produce another Cinderella story.”

“Honestly, there is no more Daddy of ’em All,” said veteran barrel racer Kelly Yates, whose late father was a Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA) director for eight years.
“Honestly, there is no more Daddy of ’em All,” said veteran barrel racer Kelly Yates, whose late father was a Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA) director for eight years. (Provided Photo)

From Slack To Hall Of Fame

Ote Berry, for instance, was 22 in July 1985 and about to go to work in a hay field when he won the bulldogging event in Cheyenne, which propelled the South Dakota native into his first National Finals Rodeo and a Hall-of-Fame career as one of the greatest of all time.

Eliminating the slack competitions at CFD is a fundamental change for the historic rodeo, many competitors say.

“Honestly, there is no more Daddy of ’em All,” said veteran barrel racer Kelly Yates, whose late father was a Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA) director for eight years.

Yates turned pro at age 13 and has made as many competitive runs in Cheyenne as any contestant.

Along with her brother and father, both Hall-of-Fame ropers, she’s competed at the NFR.

But lately, she only competes at the finals of the PRCA’s Mountain States Circuit, which includes Cheyenne Frontier Days.

This year, Yates earned a coveted berth into Frontier Days via her 2025 circuit earnings. But she said it “won’t do her any good.”

Now that Cheyenne’s entries are so limited, its paychecks aren’t counted toward circuit standings, but only world standings.

Anita Ellis, from Blackfoot, Idaho, runs the barrels for a time of 17.87 seconds at the Cheyenne Frontier Days Rodeo in its first day Friday, July 17, 2026.
Anita Ellis, from Blackfoot, Idaho, runs the barrels for a time of 17.87 seconds at the Cheyenne Frontier Days Rodeo in its first day Friday, July 17, 2026. (Matt Idler for Cowboy State Daily)

Sudden Death

The limit on entries comes seven years after another major shift was made to CFD’s competition format that had some athletes changing the famed rodeo’s nickname to “The Stepdaddy.”

Traditionally, each of 12 rodeo athletes advanced to Cheyenne’s lucrative finals based on his or her two combined scores or times.

In 2019, the rodeo switched to sudden-death tournament brackets as a way to make changing weather conditions fairer for contestants and make results easier for spectators to follow.

Its popularity has been questionable.

Contestants now make Cheyenne’s finals based on money earned, with the losers able to take a mulligan and advance via the Wild Card Round. That means cowboys can make Cheyenne’s esteemed short round despite an earlier no-score or no-time.

Yates said she and her family members noticed fewer spectators in the grandstands when they competed last year. This year, there will be a lot fewer contestants.

Finally, the new format makes it impossible for athletes to trade at Cheyenne when they have scheduling conflicts at the simultaneous California Rodeo Salinas.

Thus, some pros are skipping Cheyenne for Salinas, which still accepts hundreds of competitors and offers a traditional competition format at Big Week.

“There’s no Daddy,” Yates said. “There’s just a Cheyenne rodeo, limited.”

Julie Mankin can be reached at: jm@outwestmedia.net

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Julie Mankin

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