Luke, you’re such a good interviewer. You know how to ask the right questions and get people to want to talk. I noticed that during the Mauney Cast. Keeping the conversation going smoothly.
When I lived in Southern CA, I worked at an Arabian training facility. At that time, Lee Aken's Mom moved next door. While she was in the UK, her prized barrel horse came over and visited us in the middle of the night. She hopped on a plane came straight to the ranch and collected her horse. There were some of us that sent up prayers for Lee when he was injured. When I am in Wyoming, I am a dyed in the wool Friday Nite rodeo fan. Was a lot of fun watching all of those kids grow. Our announcer was the absolute entertainment best, and still is. It is fun following you guys.
@@thelukebranquinhoshow What was really cool was when Lee's Mom's little family members would saddle up their ponies ride over to the local Mexican restaurant grab some lunch and ride on back home.
Can't believe you don't have more followers. Keep up the good work. I enjoy listening to your interviews. Flows like a conversation of two buddies just having a chat.
This is why "Do as I Say, Not as I Do" is actually good advice and a legitimate way to teach and be taught. When someone older and wiser with more experience than you who has achieved the things you want to is teaching or mentoring you, the chances are very high that they're going to be right now often than you are. There are going to be things they tell you to do that they do not necessarily do but you're job as a student is to get everything you can from your teacher and you do that by listening. Now at one time they were probably you and had a teacher telling them to do things that they didn't like but it foucault works out like this...say you're teacher is on you to do 5 things you really just do not want to do. Most of the time after being forced to do all 5 for a long enough period of time you're going to see the benefit from 4 of them and after a while no one is going to get you to be able to go back to your old ways because now you have the experience and understanding. However it's not unlikely that because of your build, your mechanics, your style, your talent, your mentality, or all of those things combined that 1 of those 5 things will work for everyone else, but not for you. Same goes for the kids you're teaching but if they want to be the best they can they've got to buckle down and do everything correctly for long enough that it becomes their normal. Only after that Do you know what's really going to work and what isn't. You can't point to 1 thing JB does that you're told not to do and use that as an excuse for you doing everything just how you damn well please, that is only hurting you. Also to truly know what works better for you and have the most confidence your can, you have to try things the way you don't want to do you don't just know if doesn't work for you, but you know that you know that you know that you know... you're way works best for you. Confidence is a huge part of mastering any skill and you can fake it 9 ways from Sunday but to actually obtain it and make it something that benefits you and takes you too the top.... get ready bc there's a whole hell of a lot of failure on that road.... its the only way.
❤❤ Bobbi here from Illinois watching I just love JB Mooney and plus I love Dale Grimsby❤ my ex-husband from years ago ruined my future I love bulls I love horses I love to ride but he paralyzed me years ago it took a long time for me to learn how to walk again but I’m going to Texas San Antonio and I’m begging my daughter right now to try to get me to see JB Mooney or Dale Griby I that’s ❤❤this is one of my bucket list ❤❤❤JB wife is beautiful I just love watching them together and his son is just priceless
My orthopedic surgeon told me that I would have to use a cane the rest of my life. I told him that I might use one if I lived to be 100. I worked really hard to walk unassisted.
Tell the rest of the story man lol. Did he tell you you wouldn't ever walk without a crane because you tripped on your way to to the bus stop? Or did you get attacked blla monster crocodile on the Australian coast and spend 6 weeks trapped at sea? Was it a bump or a bruise, or is it a touch and go life or death event... come on we need the details!
I was stepping down backwards out of my neighbors hay shed 5:30 in am and stepped into a hole covered by windblown hay. as I was stepping down I was turning toward the stalls I went off balance down I went. Broke my tib and fib.I grabbed a shovel and tried to get to my old GMC Suburban, fell down again and almost passed out. Sat on a small stack of shavings looked at my hands and knees. they looked ok so I crawled on my hands and knees to my vehicle. Thank God for low running boards. I dragged myself up and drove with my left foot home, sat there for a few, dug around the front seat found my old phone called my neighbor. That was when the Steven King Medical Hell began. This little Aisian dr set my leg wrong. Called my neighbor to come and get me out of there before my broken leg killed me. My other neighbor found a ortho surgeon in Encino who gave me a stainless rod and titanium screws. They put my last cast in a wrong position. I got an infection in my leg and had to elevate it over my heart for a couple of months. Then I ended up going to 4 or 5 physical therapy places to get my darn foot so that I could half way stand on it. I thought I was going to hurt forever. My friend Dean brought my horses down to me. I figured out how to carry crutches on wheel chair handles, wheeled down the hill, tied a nylon hay bag around my waist, crutched hay to the horses. threw an aluminum chair over the gate used it for support to muck out the stalls. I sat in it in front of the water trough with a water hose and broom cleaned it and gave them clean water. My little gelding stepped on my bad foot and broke a few of my toes. Now I am a weather reporter because these injuries have been known to get a little out of sorts when the barometric pressure would change. Now I really like your options a whole lot better Lol. My ortho surgeon was one drop down dead gorgeous hunk of eye candy. I will never forget!!
Too bad the video sound wasn't always complete. Would like to have heard more of what JB was saying at times. Otherwise, great video Luke! I'll take Sanderson Ford advertising anytime over Yota or you're Rammin Bow tie commercials...🤣
***BELOW IS A LONG READ BUT VERY WORTH IT IMO*** I detail exactly how much more dangerous bull riding is than most anything else. Thank you and lmk how you like. As far as mainstream sports in the United States, football does not have the most injuries per say, but it does have the worst injuries. With that said, it's quite uncommon for a injury to be considered catastrophic. Catastrophic means that the inury is going to have a very serious impact on the player for the rest of their life. Not like i played for 20 years and now my back hurts, like I was okay, then this one inury happened and since that moment i can't drive because I can't feel or nice my feet below the knee and I have to drag one for behind me everywhere i go for the rest of my life. Now... not only does bull riding have an injury rate over 10 times that of football, but the number of catastrophic injuries are so much higher that no one has bothered to do the math or the studies because it is so clear that whatever 2nd place is....its way, way, waaaaaay behind riding bulls. A football player who has a 20 year career will spend about 19,200 minutes on the field in professional games if they were to play every minute of every game and never get injured. Shane Proctor has more professional bull ride attempts than anyone else, 1826. Of those 1826 attempts he only completed the entire 8 seconds 41% of the time, every other ride was less than that. Even if every ride had lasted the entire 8 seconds he would've only spent a total of 243 minutes riding bulls professionally. Its much more likely that number is closer to 171 minutes.... maybe 3 or 4 total hours over 18 years, the most rides in history and he is 10x more likely to get injured than the football players whos long career on the field isn't 3-4 hours, its more like 300. So a bull riding career, the actual time you're exposed to danger, is 100 times less than the most dangerous mainstream American sport and even at that you're still 10 times more likely to be injured in your 3 hours to their 300. We could stop there but now let me tell you the bad part....Traumatic Fatalities. Again Football remains king in this area among mainstream sports. As a football player in recent years you are accepting this risk that you could be one of the .07 out of 100,000 players that will experience a Traumatic Fatality and die, that's around 1 in a million. This means you won't die 10 years later or from complications during a surgery. It means that you're going to get hit so hard that you never get to say goodbye to anyone. You're going to bleed out internally on the field or your brain stream is going to be snapped from your brain and the lights just go out immediately and forever. What is the rate among bull riders? Just over 4 out of 100,000 bull riders will take their last breath in the arena. Now... .07 and 4 may not seem that much different but what it really means is that you are over 57 times more likely to die in the arena that on the field. JB isn't popular because he's a good bull rider. Just to get on a bull for a living you've got to be by far, one of the toughest sons of bitches on the planet. JB is so popular because when you get all the toughest sons of bitches to have ever drawn breath in one room, JB reigns supreme. He stands head and shoulders over men who stand head shoulders and ass over everyone else who's mother has ever given them life. So if you ever happen to see this man in public, i hope you show him the respect not that he deserves, but the respect he's earned.
Is there a completely correct way to ride a bull? After all , you have to follow the bull's moves and counter them. Now some bulls are going to do things you don't expect. Bushwacker comes to mind.
It woukd be tough to be in the rideo workd as a guy and not be a bull rider. Like there is this super tough, super pipular section of the sport that everyone cares about more than everyone else and your doing something else. Im not saying all rodeo people artnt tough and im sure they live their part if the sport, but it would be tough
I see how a helmet can save you from a lot of of relatively minor injuries like things that require a hand full of stitches but 9 times of 10...i don't see how it saves you from anything catastrophic or life theatening. The one situation that i know id be dang happy to have one in is if that bull decides to bull that Bodacious head but on me. God bless that always looked and looks so rough.
Luke, you’re such a good interviewer. You know how to ask the right questions and get people to want to talk. I noticed that during the Mauney Cast. Keeping the conversation going smoothly.
Outstanding shoe. JB, I truly wish you and your team the best of luck this season.
Thanks for showing JB on your show Luke 🤠👍👍
A super fan here of J B and you also Luke the Branquinho shake will never forget that.🐂🐴🤠
When I lived in Southern CA, I worked at an Arabian training facility. At that time, Lee Aken's Mom moved next door. While she was in the UK, her prized barrel horse came over and visited us in the middle of the night. She hopped on a plane came straight to the ranch and collected her horse. There were some of us that sent up prayers for Lee when he was injured. When I am in Wyoming, I am a dyed in the wool Friday Nite rodeo fan. Was a lot of fun watching all of those kids grow. Our announcer was the absolute entertainment best, and still is. It is fun following you guys.
incredible story... thank you for your support 🙏
@@thelukebranquinhoshow What was really cool was when Lee's Mom's little family members would saddle up their ponies ride over to the local Mexican restaurant grab some lunch and ride on back home.
MORE JB MAUNEY!!
He’s the only rider I know really.
With the exception of John Crimber, who is completely gorgeous.
Thank you Mr B. I will subscribe.
Do you know if there will be any more Mauney casts? Love your podcast by the way
thanks for the support!
Can't believe you don't have more followers. Keep up the good work. I enjoy listening to your interviews. Flows like a conversation of two buddies just having a chat.
tell all your friends!
There needs to be more Mauney cast
it is fun!
Love you &. Your Show here
In 🇦🇺Australia,
&. J.B. Is Wise, &. Still
Simply THE⭐️BEST."‼️
Australia! We have some Australian friends... have you seen our episodes with Ky? Thanks for watching :)
@@thelukebranquinhoshow We are SO PROUD of Ky here in 🇦🇺Australia, &. Love when he's on your Show.🥰
This is why "Do as I Say, Not as I Do" is actually good advice and a legitimate way to teach and be taught.
When someone older and wiser with more experience than you who has achieved the things you want to is teaching or mentoring you, the chances are very high that they're going to be right now often than you are.
There are going to be things they tell you to do that they do not necessarily do but you're job as a student is to get everything you can from your teacher and you do that by listening. Now at one time they were probably you and had a teacher telling them to do things that they didn't like but it foucault works out like this...say you're teacher is on you to do 5 things you really just do not want to do. Most of the time after being forced to do all 5 for a long enough period of time you're going to see the benefit from 4 of them and after a while no one is going to get you to be able to go back to your old ways because now you have the experience and understanding. However it's not unlikely that because of your build, your mechanics, your style, your talent, your mentality, or all of those things combined that 1 of those 5 things will work for everyone else, but not for you. Same goes for the kids you're teaching but if they want to be the best they can they've got to buckle down and do everything correctly for long enough that it becomes their normal. Only after that Do you know what's really going to work and what isn't. You can't point to 1 thing JB does that you're told not to do and use that as an excuse for you doing everything just how you damn well please, that is only hurting you. Also to truly know what works better for you and have the most confidence your can, you have to try things the way you don't want to do you don't just know if doesn't work for you, but you know that you know that you know that you know... you're way works best for you. Confidence is a huge part of mastering any skill and you can fake it 9 ways from Sunday but to actually obtain it and make it something that benefits you and takes you too the top.... get ready bc there's a whole hell of a lot of failure on that road.... its the only way.
JB Mauney is one tough dude!!!
❤❤ Bobbi here from Illinois watching I just love JB Mooney and plus I love Dale Grimsby❤ my ex-husband from years ago ruined my future I love bulls I love horses I love to ride but he paralyzed me years ago it took a long time for me to learn how to walk again but I’m going to Texas San Antonio and I’m begging my daughter right now to try to get me to see JB Mooney or Dale Griby I that’s ❤❤this is one of my bucket list ❤❤❤JB wife is beautiful I just love watching them together and his son is just priceless
Ya Luke!
My orthopedic surgeon told me that I would have to use a cane the rest of my life. I told him that I might use one if I lived to be 100. I worked really hard to walk unassisted.
Tell the rest of the story man lol. Did he tell you you wouldn't ever walk without a crane because you tripped on your way to to the bus stop? Or did you get attacked blla monster crocodile on the Australian coast and spend 6 weeks trapped at sea? Was it a bump or a bruise, or is it a touch and go life or death event... come on we need the details!
I was stepping down backwards out of my neighbors hay shed 5:30 in am and stepped into a hole covered by windblown hay. as I was stepping down I was turning toward the stalls I went off balance down I went. Broke my tib and fib.I grabbed a shovel and tried to get to my old GMC Suburban, fell down again and almost passed out. Sat on a small stack of shavings looked at my hands and knees. they looked ok so I crawled on my hands and knees to my vehicle. Thank God for low running boards. I dragged myself up and drove with my left foot home, sat there for a few, dug around the front seat found my old phone called my neighbor. That was when the Steven King Medical Hell began. This little Aisian dr set my leg wrong. Called my neighbor to come and get me out of there before my broken leg killed me. My other neighbor found a ortho surgeon in Encino who gave me a stainless rod and titanium screws. They put my last cast in a wrong position. I got an infection in my leg and had to elevate it over my heart for a couple of months. Then I ended up going to 4 or 5 physical therapy places to get my darn foot so that I could half way stand on it. I thought I was going to hurt forever. My friend Dean brought my horses down to me. I figured out how to carry crutches on wheel chair handles, wheeled down the hill, tied a nylon hay bag around my waist, crutched hay to the horses. threw an aluminum chair over the gate used it for support to muck out the stalls. I sat in it in front of the water trough with a water hose and broom cleaned it and gave them clean water. My little gelding stepped on my bad foot and broke a few of my toes. Now I am a weather reporter because these injuries have been known to get a little out of sorts when the barometric pressure would change. Now I really like your options a whole lot better Lol. My ortho surgeon was one drop down dead gorgeous hunk of eye candy. I will never forget!!
Luke when you interview,we really don’t need reminded of your successes over and over. Like your show tho👍
Totally agree
All in good fun and the competitive spirit! Thanks for watching and enjoying the show
This guy is the best wish he could still ride best to u j.b mauney
Dang... Sanderson ford got more time than the podcast.. 40 min pocast 25 min Sanderson Ford.. They are getting their moneys worth for sure..
ask and you shall receive...... you might notice a few less ;)
Appreciate y’all 🤘🍻
appreciate YOU
People who are gym fit have no chance against work fit that’s a fact, they are out of puff in two seconds
Too bad the video sound wasn't always complete. Would like to have heard more of what JB was saying at times. Otherwise, great video Luke!
I'll take Sanderson Ford advertising anytime over Yota or you're Rammin Bow tie commercials...🤣
hard getting service way out on his ranch... someone get Starlink on the phone
Idk what’s worse Tandy pissing off JB or JB pissing off Tandy 😂😂
BATTLE ROYALE
@@thelukebranquinhoshow HA HA 🤣
You didn't stay in my truck love JB
I think JB would be a good candidate for stem cell treatment I bet it would help heal some of his injuries seeing how it’s helping Ronnie Coleman
JB could have 2 more pbr buckles but he always road the toughest bull in the short go
***BELOW IS A LONG READ BUT VERY WORTH IT IMO*** I detail exactly how much more dangerous bull riding is than most anything else. Thank you and lmk how you like.
As far as mainstream sports in the United States, football does not have the most injuries per say, but it does have the worst injuries. With that said, it's quite uncommon for a injury to be considered catastrophic. Catastrophic means that the inury is going to have a very serious impact on the player for the rest of their life. Not like i played for 20 years and now my back hurts, like I was okay, then this one inury happened and since that moment i can't drive because I can't feel or nice my feet below the knee and I have to drag one for behind me everywhere i go for the rest of my life. Now... not only does bull riding have an injury rate over 10 times that of football, but the number of catastrophic injuries are so much higher that no one has bothered to do the math or the studies because it is so clear that whatever 2nd place is....its way, way, waaaaaay behind riding bulls. A football player who has a 20 year career will spend about 19,200 minutes on the field in professional games if they were to play every minute of every game and never get injured. Shane Proctor has more professional bull ride attempts than anyone else, 1826. Of those 1826 attempts he only completed the entire 8 seconds 41% of the time, every other ride was less than that. Even if every ride had lasted the entire 8 seconds he would've only spent a total of 243 minutes riding bulls professionally. Its much more likely that number is closer to 171 minutes.... maybe 3 or 4 total hours over 18 years, the most rides in history and he is 10x more likely to get injured than the football players whos long career on the field isn't 3-4 hours, its more like 300. So a bull riding career, the actual time you're exposed to danger, is 100 times less than the most dangerous mainstream American sport and even at that you're still 10 times more likely to be injured in your 3 hours to their 300. We could stop there but now let me tell you the bad part....Traumatic Fatalities. Again Football remains king in this area among mainstream sports. As a football player in recent years you are accepting this risk that you could be one of the .07 out of 100,000 players that will experience a Traumatic Fatality and die, that's around 1 in a million. This means you won't die 10 years later or from complications during a surgery. It means that you're going to get hit so hard that you never get to say goodbye to anyone. You're going to bleed out internally on the field or your brain stream is going to be snapped from your brain and the lights just go out immediately and forever. What is the rate among bull riders? Just over 4 out of 100,000 bull riders will take their last breath in the arena. Now... .07 and 4 may not seem that much different but what it really means is that you are over 57 times more likely to die in the arena that on the field.
JB isn't popular because he's a good bull rider. Just to get on a bull for a living you've got to be by far, one of the toughest sons of bitches on the planet. JB is so popular because when you get all the toughest sons of bitches to have ever drawn breath in one room, JB reigns supreme. He stands head and shoulders over men who stand head shoulders and ass over everyone else who's mother has ever given them life. So if you ever happen to see this man in public, i hope you show him the respect not that he deserves, but the respect he's earned.
Is there a completely correct way to ride a bull? After all , you have to follow the bull's moves and counter them. Now some bulls are going to do things you don't expect. Bushwacker comes to mind.
adding this to our next round of Ask Luke questions!
LUKE miss you shaking your butt😅
Williams Maria Garcia Steven Wilson James
Why would J.B. need an assistant coach? He's got Jagger.
It woukd be tough to be in the rideo workd as a guy and not be a bull rider. Like there is this super tough, super pipular section of the sport that everyone cares about more than everyone else and your doing something else. Im not saying all rodeo people artnt tough and im sure they live their part if the sport, but it would be tough
Thomas Maria Perez Sarah Brown Carol
I see how a helmet can save you from a lot of of relatively minor injuries like things that require a hand full of stitches but 9 times of 10...i don't see how it saves you from anything catastrophic or life theatening. The one situation that i know id be dang happy to have one in is if that bull decides to bull that Bodacious head but on me. God bless that always looked and looks so rough.
Clark Paul Walker Deborah Garcia Anna
Gonzalez Betty Gonzalez Patricia Garcia Betty
To much about yourself Luke your interview is JB
I hope JB can bring back the toughness in this sport. sport. Riders are too soft now.
😂 how long have you been a fan?
@@J.B.Mauney years
@@christyamis2231 how can I reach out to you? Mail?
@@christyamis2231 that's good, what's your mail
What's your mail