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Williams Lake, B.C., bullfighter has no regrets after being injured while helping thrown rider

Williams Lake, B.C., bullfighter has no regrets after being injured while helping thrown rider

CBC
Saturday, April 22, 2023 01:20:19 AM UTC

Cody Call from Williams Lake, B.C., is recovering from a dislocated shoulder after he stepped in to save a rider that was thrown off a bull in the Indoor Spring Classic Rodeo.

He works as a bullfighter, and it's his job to protect a fallen competitor.

Call has been competing in the sport for the last six years. He grew up in a rodeo family and made the transition after spending years playing hockey semi-professionally. 

Over the weekend, he was involved in a dramatic rescue of a rider at the Williams Lake rodeo. He told Daybreak Kamloops fill-in host, Doug Herbert about the experience.

The following transcript has been edited for clarity and length.

I know people are very familiar with bull riders, rodeo clowns, but bullfighter — most people will think sort of in Spain with a sword and a cape. What exactly is your job as a bullfighter?

So my job is a bullfighter, especially North American bullfighting is probably a cross between a rodeo clown and a Spanish bullfighter. My job is to distract the bull and give the cowboy enough time to get away safely.

Are you wearing some sort of protection there?

Yeah, it's kind of a cross between a bull rider vest and a motocross vest, then on the bottom, we basically wear modified football pads.

Take us back to the spring classic. Walk us through what you're up to there.

As the rider came off, he wasn't in a great spot. That bull has got quite a bit of what we like to call "snort" to him. He's fairly aggressive, and he was up against the fence in a not-so-safe position, and as he was coming in, I was left with kind of one choice: go or not go.

In my business, you can either be a cowboy or a coward; you can't be both. I chose to be a cowboy, and I jumped in front of the bull and, unfortunately, he won the contest and got the better of me and had me up against the fence for a little bit, but I like to think of it as all in a day's work. 

What happened to you? 

When you see a wreck of that magnitude, you expect to see some more bruising and maybe some more injuries, but I came out pretty lucky on my end with just a dislocated shoulder and a few fractures up in the shoulder area that the doctors here in Williams Lake got taken care of quite quickly.

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