Don't Worry, Be Happy

Inner Strength with Tyler Worley
Tyler Worley doesn’t get too terribly worked up about much. Here’s how he keeps his cool in every situation.
Tyler Worley riding a sorrel horse and swinging a rope
Worley, 30, has heeled at three NFRs. He’s heeling for brye crites in 2024. | TRJ file photo

We all rope so much, and we’ve run so many steers at this point, it’s really no different for me no matter what’s on the line. If I miss, it for sure won’t be the first time I ever mess up, and it won’t be the last. I try not to put too much pressure on myself because this is what I’m supposed to be doing for a living, and I know I’m working at it. 

If it doesn’t work out the way I think it’s supposed to, there will be another way it will work out. Last year helped me a lot with that—I kept thinking there were big rodeos I had to do good at to get to the Finals, and I’d mess up or it wouldn’t work out but, somehow, other stuff kept happening. I won [the NFR Open in] Colorado Springs—stuff like that you wouldn’t want to count on. I did good at Pendleton, and that’s a place you don’t want to have to count on as your make-it-or-break-it spot. 

WATCH: Conquering Competition Nerves

All we can do is do the best we can. After that, it’s out of our hands. I try to remember that. I’ve missed a lot of steers on big stages, and it doesn’t feel any better or any worse than any other times. It won’t ruin my life if I don’t do well. I don’t do anything crazy. 

I listened to a podcast with Chad Masters—I’ve looked up to him for a long time. And he said he doesn’t watch the team in front of him go. He just looks at his steer in the back. I picked that up—I don’t really go any more in-depth than that. I don’t know why that sticks with me. It helps me to focus a little more. I’ll get a little scattered now and then and not pay attention to what I’m doing, so that little hack helps.

READ: Mindset Matters

For a long time, I tried to think about too many things. I tried to think about my swing, riding my horse, doing all this stuff. And I just got to thinking one day, if you go somewhere in a high-pressure situation, you look back and don’t remember what happened. I try to just remind myself to watch the steer and not worry about too much else. I just rely on muscle memory and all the practice I’ve had. I want to watch the steer, and when he lets me heel him, I heel him. I don’t want to make something happen. Some guys can make a shot happen, but I can’t. I try to let it develop and, when I see a throw, just take it.

—TRJ—

SHARE THIS STORY
CATEGORIES
TAGS
Related Articles
WSG - TRJ freeze frame
freeze frame
Jake Smith Breaks Down Clark County Rodeo Round 1 Win
Berry Berg mounted up and ready to rope
at home with
I Believe a Perfect Rope Will Fix Everything: The Wisdom of Berry Berg
June_2025_NCWHM_1999.025.0973
My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys
Which Kind of Cowboy Are You?
June_2025_IMG_5181 copy
Big Break
Motes’ Big Break: A Last-Minute Trip & A $50,000 Day
Hallle Berry Billie Jack Saebens
Dear Roper
Staying Hooked: An Inside Look at the June 2025 Issue
The Team Roping Journal
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.