He continued to do rodeo whenever he had the time to do so. After meeting with a local attorney and cattle rancher in the local area, Mullins spoke to his friends about starting a new “club” that would be a club for rodeo within different high school areas (NHRSA 1). After it starting in one location, today high school rodeo is in places from Austria all the way to different Canadian provinces. Along with 41 U.S. states. Membership in high school rodeo has soared to 10,500 members who compete in over 1,000 different rodeos across the world yearly. The yearly average of contestants continues to increase and will until one day there is no rodeo. Those who grow to the age level of not being able to complete, if good enough, go onto college level rodeo. (NIRA 1)
College rodeo formed a little after high school rodeo came about. “At a meeting on November 6th, 1948, in Alpine, Texas, twelve schools came together to discuss the creation of the National INtercollegiate Rodeo Association. Decided at that meeting was the need for a constitution, which was then established at a second meeting held in February 1949,” (NIRA 1). This constitution that was being discussed formed a constitutional committee that developed