[1][2] He is the first cowboy to win three consecutive bareback riding average titles at the National Finals Rodeo (NFR).
[4] He is the son of Lewis Feild, who was the world all-around rodeo champion three years in a row in the 1980s.
[1] As a child, Feild and his brother, Shadrach, often traveled with their father as he rode the rodeo circuit.
[8] For several years, beginning in 2009, Feild volunteered with the Wrangler National Patriot Program and had traveled to the Middle East to visit American troops over the Memorial Day holiday.
[9] During the 2011 season, Feild earned $319,986, a record for members of the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA).
[8] At the 2012 National Finals Rodeo, Feild again won the bareback riding average title and the world championship, beating Will Lowe.
[10] In 2013, Feild and fellow Utahn rodeo cowboy, bull rider Wesley Silcox began working with Cowboy Outfitters USA to offer free rodeo camps to teenagers interested in improving their bull and bronc riding skills.
[13] Feild again clinched the world title as a bareback rider in 2014, edging out Austin Foss.
He was only the second man to win four consecutive world championships at the NFR, after Leo Camarillo, a team roper header who won from 1968 through 1971.
Going into the tenth and final round, Feild had a lead of $34,000 on each of his competitors, but was second in the average standings, behind Steven Peebles.
[17] In response, the PRCA changed its bylaws, prohibiting their members from owning shares in the ERA.
Feild rode C5 Rodeo Company's Virgil, the reining Bareback Horse of the Year.
[20] Feild won $100,000 for his bareback win and a share of the $1 million side-pot as a qualifier, equal to $433,333.33.
[22][23] At the 2021 NFR in Las Vegas, Feild won his sixth PRCA bareback riding world championship, breaking the previous record of five held by Joe Alexander and Bruce Ford.