Lane Frost

Professional

Birthday October 12, 1963

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace La Junta, Colorado, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1989-7-30, Cheyenne, Wyoming, U.S. (25 years old)

Nationality United States

Height 1.8 m

#9045 Most Popular

1963

Lane Clyde Frost (October 12, 1963 – July 30, 1989) was an American professional rodeo cowboy who specialized in bull riding, and competed in the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA).

1981

In Oklahoma, he was the National High School Bull Riding Champion in 1981.

1982

He was the Bull Riding Champion of the first Youth National Finals in Fort Worth, Texas, in 1982.

Frost joined the PRCA and began rodeoing full-time after graduating from high school in 1982.

1984

In 1984, he qualified for his first National Finals Rodeo (NFR).

In his lifetime, Frost made it to the NFR for five consecutive years from 1984 to 1988.

1985

On January 5, 1985, Frost married Kellie Kyle (born 1965), a barrel racer from Quanah, Texas, west of Wichita Falls.

1987

He was the 1987 PRCA World Champion bull rider.

Frost was also the only rider ever to score a qualified ride on Red Rock, the 1987 PRCA Bucking Bull of the Year.

In 1987, he became the PRCA World Champion bull rider at the NFR at age 24.

That same year, the bull Red Rock, owned by Growney Bros. Rodeo Company, was voted PRCA Bucking Bull of the Year.

In 309 attempts, no one had ever successfully ridden him.

1988

In 1988, at the Challenge of the Champions, Frost rode him in seven exhibition matches and was successful in four out of seven tries.

He went on to compete at the Rodeo '88 Challenge Cup held as part of the Cultural Olympiad in association with the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary.

Sometime in 1988, John Growney pondered a special competition between the two 1987 Champions.

Red Rock had never been successfully ridden during his four-year professional career, despite rodeo cowboys making 309 attempts to ride him.

It was decided that Frost and Red Rock would have seven showdowns at different rodeos in states across the West.

The event was titled the "Challenge of the Champions."

Red Rock was brought out of retirement and Frost rode him to the eight-second whistle for a scoring ride for four of the seven matches.

1989

He sustained fatal injuries at the 1989 Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo when the bull Takin' Care of Business struck Frost with his right horn.

He was pronounced dead at a local hospital.

At the time of Lane's birth, his parents lived in Lapoint, Utah.

His father, Clyde, was on the rodeo circuit as a saddle bronc and bareback rider.

His mother, Elsie, went to stay with her parents in Kim, Colorado, and he was born in the hospital in La Junta.

He had an older sister, Robin, and a younger brother, Cody.

Frost started riding dairy calves around age 5–6.

His first rodeo awards were won when he was 10, at the "Little Buckaroos" Rodeos held in Uintah Basin: first in bareback, second in calf roping, and third in the "bull riding" (calf riding) event.

He also competed in wrestling in junior high school.

The family then moved to Oklahoma and he attended Atoka High School in Atoka.

On July 30, 1989, at Cheyenne Frontier Days in Cheyenne, Wyoming, after completing a successful 85-point ride on a Brahma bull named Takin' Care of Business, who was owned by Bad Company Rodeo, Frost dismounted and landed in the mud.

The bull then turned, knocked Frost over, pressed his right horn on Frost's back and pushed him against the muddy arena floor, breaking several of his ribs.

Frost initially rose to his feet, took a couple of steps, waved for help, then fell to the ground; dying on the arena floor from internal injuries caused by the broken ribs.

He was 25 years old.

No autopsy was performed.

He posthumously finished third in the event.

Had he lived, he would have made it to his sixth consecutive NFR.

Takin' Care of Business had previously appeared at NFR.

1990

His last outing was at the 1990 NFR.

1999

He was then retired and put out to stud until he died in 1999.

Frost is buried near his hero and mentor, Freckles Brown, in Mount Olivet Cemetery in Hugo, Oklahoma.