How to Watch the 2024 Women’s Rodeo World Championship

2024 Women’s Rodeo World Championship Championship Round to be broadcast LIVE on CBS Sports Network on May 18.
Cheyenne Wimberley turns a barrel at the Women's Rodeo World Championship.
Cheyenne Wimberley won over $63,000 at the 2023 WRWC. | Photo by Bull Stock Media.

Find out how to watch the 2024 Women’s Rodeo World Championship (WRWC) taking place May 13–18 at the renowned Cowtown Coliseum and AT&T Stadium.

The 2024 WRWC will launch with the official Back Number Ceremony on May 12, and viewers can watch live coverage as athletes compete to win the title of 2024 Women’s Rodeo World Champion as the event culminates inside the home of the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys on May 18 during the 2024 PBR (Professional Bull Riders) World Finals: Unleash The Beast – Championship

Fans will be able to watch the action daily on Cowgirl Channel, Cowboy Channel, Cowboy Channel + App and PBR RidePass on Pluto TV. The landmark event’s Championship Round on May 18 from AT&T Stadium will then be featured LIVE on CBS Sports Network during the telecast for the PBR World Finals: Unleash The Beast – Championship.

“The motto of WRWC is ‘Cowgirls Supporting Cowgirls’ and The Cowgirl Channel is the perfect home for all WRWC coverage, complimented by the Cowboy Channel and PBR RidePass on Pluto TV,” said Linsay Rosser Sumpter, WRWC Commissioner. “We are also thrilled to announce another match-up with CBS Sports Network bringing women’s rodeo to primetime. In 2021, we witnessed a record-breaking 2.4 million viewers tune in to watch the WRWC, and we are determined to take it to new heights this year at the PBR World Finals.”

For four days, hundreds of the world’s best women in rodeo will compete in four disciplines, battling it out in one of the most exciting female-only live sporting events, going head-to-head in team roping, breakaway roping, and barrel racing. A collective $750,000 will be on the line, with $182,500 being paid out in each discipline and each event champion leaving AT&T Stadium with a minimum of $60,000.

How to Watch the 2024 WRWC

May 12EventBroadcast
7:00PM CT | 8:00 PM ET  Back Number CeremonyRidePass on Pluto TV, Cowgirl Channel, Cowboy Channel+
May 13EventBroadcast
2:00PM CT | 3:00 PM ET  Round OneRidePass on Pluto TV, Cowgirl Channel, Cowboy Channel+
May 14EventBroadcast
10:00AM CT | 11:00AM ETRound TwoRidePass on Pluto TV, Cowgirl Channel, Cowboy Channel+
May 15EventBroadcast
9:00AM CT | 10:00AM ETRound TwoRidePass on Pluto TV, Cowgirl Channel, Cowboy Channel+
May 16EventBroadcast
10:00AM CT | 11:00AM ETShowdown RoundRidePass on Pluto TV, Cowgirl Channel, Cowboy Channel+
May 18EventBroadcast
PBR World Finals IntermissionChampionship RoundRidePass on Pluto TV, CBS Sports Network

Cowboy Channel airdates and times to be announced.

There will be a 30-minute pre-show before each performance for the 2024 Women’s Rodeo World Championship, followed by a buckle ceremony at the Cowboy Channel Bar located in the Historic Fort Worth Stockyards. The buckle ceremony will be aired 30 minutes after each show from May 13 to 16.

Before the WRWC storms back to the Lone Star State, fans can tune in to Countdown to AT&T Stadium every Thursday on Cowgirl Channel and the Cowboy Channel+ App. Please check local listings for times and updates.

Tickets for the WRWC, PBR World Finals

The WRWC championship tickets for May 18 are still available. They can be purchased at the AT&T Stadium Box Office, online at ATTStadium.com, SeatGeek.com and PBR.com/WorldFinals, or by phone at 1-800-732-1727.

Who was the 2023 WRWC Pro barrel racing champion?

Cheyenne Wimberley proved that consistency reigns supreme at the Women’s Rodeo World Championship in Fort Worth, Texas, earning the $60,000 event championship on Saturday, May 20 aboard Flingin Fast.

Wimberley climbed aboard Fast Flingin Dash, or “Blue Duck,” for the WRWC. Their first run was a 13.414 on Thursday, and on Friday morning they followed that up with a 13.302 that kept them solid in the aggregate, finished No. 2 behind college student Jordan Driver and earned Wimberley $1,000. Wimberley made the most nosie in Friday night’s Semifinals when she smoked a 13.096 behind 19-year-old Laura Mote’s arena record of 12.967….”

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