In just a few weeks, NRG Stadium will host the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo, and while Lowe wasn't planning on coming here, local bull riders are remembering him.
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Lowe was bucking his way through bull riding, ranked 18th in the world, until his career ended tragically.
A bull stomped on Lowe, killing him at a competition in Denver on Tuesday night.
"Beyond words, my heart, my prayers go out to his wife and his family," said Rebecca Innerarity, whose son, Zachary, was injured in a bull riding incident in 2005.
Lowe's death is a painful reminder of the level of danger in the sport.
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Innerarity could never watch when her son was riding.
"I just couldn't," she explained. "There was something in me that I could not do it. I know that he loved to do it and I wasn't going to stand in his way, but he knew Mama could not watch it."
Rebecca says her son still suffers from the incident and has bouts of short-term memory loss.
The good news is that Zachary is doing much better, holding a full-time job.
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Bull rider Mason Lowe dies after being stomped in Denver competition
Bull rider dies after being stomped in Denver competition