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Related: About this forumProRodeo legend Larry Mahan Passes Away
PRORODEO LEGEND LARRY MAHAN PASSES AWAY
ProRodeo Hall of Famer Larry Mahan, arguably the biggest superstar in rodeo history, passed away on May 7. He was 79.
Mahan was the all-around world champion in 1966-70 and 1973. He also was the bull riding champ in 1965 and 1967. He qualified for the NFR a combined 26 times from 1964-75 in bareback riding, saddle bronc riding and bull riding. He was inducted in the inaugural class of the ProRodeo Hall of Fame in Colorado Springs, Colo., in 1979.
The loss of Mahan weighed heavy on fellow ProRodeo Hall of Famer, Ty Murray, a nine-time world champion.
"I think he meant a lot to the sport of rodeo, and he meant a lot to me," Murray said. "He was my hero. He was my superman when I was a little boy. I did a paper when I was in fifth grade, they said if you could wish anything for the world what would it be. I misunderstood the question. I thought it meant if there is anything you could do in the world, what would it be? I said I wanted to break Larry Mahan's records. I still have that assignment today with me."
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Charles Lee Ray
44 subscribers
10,659 views May 25, 2016
Larry Mahan boots
"How those Larrys holding up?"
Landon Proctor
4.61K subscribers
6,864 views May 24, 2015
How those Larry's holdin' up?
SomedayKindaLove
(1,105 posts)Now a Ramblin' Jack Elliot said:
I got these lines in my face
Tryin' to straighten out the wrinkles in my life
When I think of all the fools I've been
It's a wonder that I've sailed this many miles
To which Larry Mahan replied,
He said, "The sweet bird of youth
Was sittin' on my shoulder yesterday
But she's always changin' partners
And I always knew she'd up and fly away"
Stayin' up all night
In the Driskill Hotel
Ramblin' Jack and Mahan
Was cowboy'd all to hell
The room smelled like bulls
The words sound like songs
Now there's a pair to draw to boys
I would not steer you wrong
So ol' Ramblin' Jack said:
He said, "I recall a time
I set my soul on fire just for show
All it ever taught me was
The more I learn the less I seem to know"
Ol' Mahan crawled out from behind a couch and said:
"Jack, as far as I can see
Mistakes are only horses in disguise
Ain't no need to ride 'em over
'cause we could not ride them different if we tried
Stayin' up all night
In the Driskill Hotel
Ramblin' Jack and Mahan
Was cowboy'd all to hell
The room smelled like bulls
The words sound like songs
Now there's a pair to draw to boys
I would not steer you wrong
Source: LyricFind
Songwriters: Guy Clark / Richard C Leigh
Ramblin' Jack & Mahan lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC
SomedayKindaLove
(1,105 posts)mahatmakanejeeves
(60,945 posts)His eight championships made him a legend to his fans. His mod style, swashbuckling lifestyle and flirtations with Hollywood made him a star.
Larry Mahan competing in Oklahoma City in 1974. Football had Joe Namath, boxing had Muhammad Ali and rodeo had Larry Mahan, said a fellow member of the National Rodeo Hall of Fame.Credit...Associated Press
By Alex Williams
May 18, 2023
Larry Mahan, an eight-time rodeo world champion and swashbuckling showman who was once called rodeos first matinee idol, and who brokered that reputation into side careers as a Hollywood actor, a country singer and a purveyor of must-have cowboy boots, died on May 7 at his home in Valley View, Texas. He was 79. ... Bobby Steiner, a friend and a fellow member of the National Rodeo Hall of Fame, said the cause was bone cancer.
Even without his oft-noted rock-star swagger, Mahan (pronounced MAY-han) would have qualified as a titan of the sport. Competing in bull riding, saddle bronc riding and bareback riding, he won six World All-Around Cowboy championships in the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association, including five in a row from 1966 to 1970. ... He added another in 1973, and he also won world bull-riding championships in 1965 and 1967.
Ah, but the swagger. Mahan emerged as a new-breed competitor in the mod 1960s and the breezy 1970s. ... With his flared double-knit slacks and Cassini shirts, The Austin American-Statesman observed in 1971, he was the antonym of the old cowhand from the Rio Grande bit.
He climbed onto bulls and broncs wearing shoulder-brushing locks, as well as silk shirts and chaps in a rainbow of colors. Away from the arena, he carried himself like the star he was tooling around in a Jaguar, traversing the country in his twin-engine Cessna, appearing as Johnny Carsons guest on The Tonight Show. Some likened him to Elvis Presley.
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Branching into Western wear, he developed a line of cowboy togs including signature boots that became as coveted among lonesome-trail types as prime Air Jordans are among sneakerheads. (Josh Brolins character asks for a pair of Larry Mahans, size 11, when shopping for fresh clothes in the 2007 film No Country for Old Men.) ... He also made his matinee-idol reputation at least a tad literal, studying acting in Los Angeles and appearing in The Honkers, a 1972 rodeo drama starring James Coburn and Slim Pickens; Sixpack Annie, a racy 1975 drive-in special; and The Good Old Boys, a star-studded 1995 television western directed by and starring Tommy Lee Jones. {snip} Perhaps his biggest mark on popular culture came in 1973, when he was the subject of The Great American Cowboy, which won the Academy Award for best documentary feature.
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