Prepping the body for the bucking; more rodeo athletes buckle down
CALGARY — Coy Robbins once thought running long distances was good training for riding a bull.
When he attended a spring training camp organized by the Canadian Pro Rodeo Sport Medicine Team, the 24-year-old from Camrose, Alta., learned endurance running was the opposite of what he should be doing.
Social media is full of images and videos of professional athletes churning battle ropes and jumping on boxes to train for their sport.
What’s your workout when your equipment on the field of play is not static, but a live animal who wants to buck you into the dirt?