Oklahoma Bull Rider Rowdy Lee Swanson Dies at 20 after Rodeo Injuries Here Are the Details

July 2024 · 2 minute read

Recently, Rowdy Lee Swanson, an Oklahoma Bull Rider, passed away after sustaining injuries in the sport. He was sadly only 20-years-old when he died.

Last Thursday, September 17, 2020, Rowdy Lee Swanson succumbed to the injuries he sustained after a bull he was riding bucked him off at a rodeo in Texas. The incident passed away on the same day he sustained his injuries.

However, the injuries he sustained during the recent rodeo were not described in reports. Neither was Swanson’s actual cause of death.

A monochrome rodeo cowboy in a white hat riding a bronco | Photo: Shutterstock/Quattrophotography

WHERE WAS THE RODEO HELD

The rodeo was held at the Palo Pinto County Livestock Association’s PRCA Rodeo in Mineral Wells, Texas. The Oklahoma State Rodeo coach, Cody Hollingsworth, confirmed the young man’s death on a Twitter post.

Alongside a photo of Swanson smiling while wearing his rodeo attire, Hollingsworth wrote: "With a heavy and aching heart, I am saddened to announce that the OSU Rodeo Team has lost one of our own, Rowdy Swanson." The coach noted how the bull rider had been a big part of their rodeo family and that he would be sorely missed.

A cowboy competing in a bull-riding competition at a country rodeo | Photo: Shutterstock/Jackson Stock Photography

COACH & CEO MOURN ROWDY’S DEATH

Hollingsworth also shared his thoughts with Swanson’s family. The late athlete was majoring in animal sciences at the university and he was born in Duncan, Oklahoma.

In a statement, PRCA CEO George Taylor said: “We are deeply saddened by the passing of Rowdy Swanson at the ProRodeo in Mineral Wells, Texas.” He vowed to keep Swanson’s family in their thoughts and prayers.

A cowboy competing in a bull-riding event at a country rodeo | Photo: Shutterstock/Jackson Stock Photography

RODEO IS DANGEROUS

In 2011, a study confirmed that rodeo was among the world's most dangerous sports. Bull riders subject themselves to riding 900-kilogram bulls and the sport could lead to death as seen in Swanson’s case.

RODEO STUDY BY EPIDEMIOLOGIST

STUDY’S FINDINGS

Butterwick discovered that nearly twenty out of every hundred thousand rodeo contestants could suffer a fatal injury. For football, the same rate was less than one in every hundred thousand players.

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