Start of something new
Is the WCRA Going Away? Organization Announces Major Transition and New Leadership

WCRA infused over $21 million into the rodeo athlete ecosystem, delivered the sport to national television, and pioneered new standards in competition and production

Martha Angelone was the 2023 WCRA Rodeo Corpus Christi Champion... will she repeat in 2024?
Photo courtesy WCRA.

The World Champions Rodeo Alliance (WCRA) announced today that it will complete its organizational mission and transition operations to new leadership effective August 1, 2025.

While WCRA as an organization sunsets, its core initiatives will continue under new leadership to ensure continued opportunity in youth, women’s, and open rodeo competition.

This transition will solely impact WCRA’s open rodeo competition and will not affect women’s or youth rodeo initiatives. Moving forward, the Professional Bull Riders (PBR) will oversee and continue all operations related to the Women’s Rodeo Championships (WRC), more details to follow. Additionally, the World Championship Junior Rodeo (WCJR) will continue to be produced by the Lazy E Arena, with the competition format being released shortly.

The Breakaway Roping Journal has a trove of WCRA event coverage here, if you’re feeling nostalgic.

“Our mission from the very beginning was simple: to make rodeo better,” said WCRA President Bobby Mote. “There was no blueprint when we started—just a shared belief that the sport and its athletes deserved more. We set out to do something bold, something that hadn’t been done before. Today, open rodeo athletes have more opportunities and pathways than ever before. In our eyes, that’s mission accomplished. We’re incredibly proud of the impact we’ve made and deeply grateful to everyone who believed in the vision along the way.”

Nominations for both the Women’s Rodeo World Championship (W26) and the 2026 World Championship Junior Rodeo (DY26) are now open through the Virtual Rodeo Qualifier.

Since 2018, WCRA has infused more than $21 million into the rodeo athlete ecosystem, brought rodeo to national television audiences, and pioneered a number of competition and production innovations. These include the implementation of instant replay for every ride and run, hand-raking and halfway drags in barrel racing, point deduction markouts in roughstock events, and rules like mishandling and the three-second tie—many of which are now widely adopted across the sport.

The organization was instrumental in elevating the profile of breakaway roping and was the first to offer a truly equal platform for women in rodeo. WCRA played a key role in expanding the sport’s reach, including the historic 2021 Women’s Rodeo World Championship broadcast on CBS, which became the highest-rated rodeo program in history with 2.4 million viewers.

All inquiries related to the transition can be directed to [email protected].

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