Houston Chronicle

Attendance records fall as lights go out on rodeo

2.6 million turn out over 20 days to enjoy competitio­n, concerts, livestock, fried foods

- By Keri Blakinger and Lindsay Ellis

The Houston Rodeo busted through its all-time attendance record by drawing 2.6 million this year, bolstered by a massively popular Go Tejano Day concert and three weeks of beautiful Texas weather.

Thousands of Texans snagged last-minute fried Oreos, snuck closing peeks at livestock in NRG Center and took final trips on the 65-foot SkyRide overlookin­g it all as the nearly three-week rodeo roped in its final hours Sunday.

“The Monday before the show started, I sent out an email with the subject line: Best. Show. Ever,” said Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo CEO Joel Cowley. “And I think we accomplish­ed that.”

This year’s festivitie­s broke records for single-day attendance total, Go Tejano Day paid rodeo/ concert attendance and day one barbecue contest attendance.

“I think we did a great job this year, operationa­lly,” Cowley said. “The show went really, really well, but any time you bring 2.6 million people through the gates, there will be some unexpected things.”

A shooting scare sparked an evacuation during the rodeo’s second week, although no one was injured. Days later, a chuck wagon driver ended up in the hospital after a nasty spill during a race. Reports of the Border Patrol’s presence stoked fear in the Latino community, although the agency was on scene only to recruit potential employees.

Still, Cowley branded the rodeo a massive success, citing the nearly 33,000 livestock and horse show entries as a point of

pride. A new foal and mare presentati­on, which showcased a bronco matriarch and her offspring, was “well-received,” he said

And the organizati­on explored new ways to use technology to interact with guests, even letting rodeogoers use an app to vote on a grand champion market steer. More than 357,000 people mentioned the event on social media.

Looking ahead, the 2018 show could offer even more attraction­s, including a new performanc­e stage in NRG Stadium. Other changes would be announced later in the year, Cowley said.

For many concert-goers, the biggest 2018 attraction will be opening and closing shows by country legend Garth Brooks.

“That’s pretty exciting,” Cowley said with a grin.

By the numbers

During this year’s event, vendors and animal handlers churned out much excitement of their own. Nearly five dozen piglets and 20 calves were born. Visitors ate 47,480 tamales, 38,000 cinnamon rolls and 41 miles of turkey legs. (That would span 3 miles longer than Loop 610.)

Carnival-goers scarfed down two fields of corn, two orchards of apples and 6 miles of hamburgers. Lost-and-found volunteers collected a hearing aid, a baby shoe and dozens of licenses and credit cards.

A boy’s 1,339-pound steer, the reserve grand champion, sold to country music star Zac Brown for $330,000. Two bottles of wine sold for a combined $275,000 at an internatio­nal wine competitio­n. And the Rodeo committed just over $26 million to youth and education in Texas.

Eighty semitraile­rs of teddy bears found new homes with prize-winners. A man won his wife two of those stuffed animals, whom she named Squishy and Cow Lee.

Logan Wagnon, 18, asked his girlfriend to senior prom with a poem: Roses are red, class winners are blue, we’d be named grand champion if I went to prom with you. She said yes.

Parents pushed tiny tykes in strollers, pointing excitedly at the rides around them. Families waited in line for artery-destroying concoction­s from scorpion pizza to fried cheesecake on a stick.

“You wanna win something?” Jass Foy asked her 5-year-old son, Ty Jones, as they strolled up to the first booth inside the gate Sunday afternoon.

Sporting a cowboy hat and a red plaid shirt, Ty gave the wheel a spin and walked away with a red bandanna, perfectly matching his Western getup.

A few yards down the midway, 17-year-old Kylie Williams hoisted a freshly won giant stuffed unicorn over her head with a smile.

“She came back specifical­ly for this, and I said, ‘You’re not gonna win this,’” her mother Taanya Bell said.

The Katy family turned up for the rodeo three times this year, catching concerts bye The Chainsmoke­rs, Luke Bryan and Zac Brown.

“We came back today for the Zac Brown show,” Bell said.

“No, I came back for the unicorn,” Williams interrupte­d.

‘Biggest and the best’

Inside NRG Center, vendors did brisk last-day business. Rick Bishop of Western Tradition carefully shaped and brushed cowboy hats for sale, just as he has every year since 1979.

“Black is still my No. 1 seller,” he said, adding that year’s numbers were about the same as last year’s.

Veronica Ambriz of Ambriz Jewelry in Fredericks­burg said she and her husband sold “lots and lots” of necklaces at what is typically their last event of the season after months on the road.

“We’re like marathon runners. We start our season at Frontier Days in Cheyenne in July,” she said.

Then they wind through the country, with stops at rodeos and fairs all across the midwest.

“But you know Houston is our favorite — it’s the biggest and the best.”

 ?? Elizabeth Conley / Houston Chronicle ?? Competitor­s line up Sunday on the final day of the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo.
Elizabeth Conley / Houston Chronicle Competitor­s line up Sunday on the final day of the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo.
 ?? Yi-Chin Lee photo / Houston Chronicle ?? Elizabeth Hill of Seagoville loads her Holstein cow, Pippi, into the trailer to head home Sunday after the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo.
Yi-Chin Lee photo / Houston Chronicle Elizabeth Hill of Seagoville loads her Holstein cow, Pippi, into the trailer to head home Sunday after the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo.
 ??  ?? Workers roll up carpeting that helped protect the NRG Center floor after livestock are removed on the last day of the nearly three-week event.
Workers roll up carpeting that helped protect the NRG Center floor after livestock are removed on the last day of the nearly three-week event.

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