Feild qualified for the
National Finals Rodeo (NFR) for the first time in 2008, and then again in 2009 and 2010. During the 2011 season, Feild earned $319,986, a record for members of the
Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA). According to Feild, the second championship was more difficult to win than the first. "I don't know why, but I found that to be true. To come here and stay on top the whole time in Vegas and stay strong was tough. Bareback riding is simple. It's just having the right mindset. Feild completed the 2013 season with $239,465, enough to make him the world champion bareback rider. He also won the aggregate title at the NFR, with a combined score of 823. This win made him the first cowboy to win three consecutive aggregate titles, and the first bareback rider to win three consecutive world titles since 1975. 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. Feild competed at the NFR again in 2015. He won or placed second in five of the first nine rounds. 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. He drew Times Up for the last round. His score of 77 placed him outside the money-earning top six. Peebles won the bareback world title and Feild came in second. In 2015, Feild joined 54 other elite rodeo competitors to launch the
Elite Rodeo Athletes (ERA). As part of the ERA, he expected to earn more money than that competing in fewer than half the number of rodeos annually, potentially allowing him to stay healthier and extend his rodeo career. In 2016, the PRCA won the lawsuit. Feild, along with other world champions such as Lowe and
Trevor Brazile were denied PRCA membership, prohibiting them from competing at PRCA rodeos and rendering them ineligible for the National Finals Rodeo in 2016. The ERA went out of business after only one competitive season, and Feild returned to compete in the PRCA. On February 25, 2018, the annual
RFD-TV's The American was held again in the
AT&T Stadium in
Arlington, Texas. Feild rode C5 Rodeo Company's Virgil, the reining Bareback Horse of the Year. Feild and Orin Larsen tied in the first round of the short-go with a score of 88.25. In the second round, Feild posted the highest score of 90.75, Larsen posted 88.50, and Steven Dent posted 85.00. 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. Feild's ride of 90.75 points brought him the big prize. He shared the prize with Cort Scheer, who won saddle bronc riding and Matt Reeves, who won
steer wrestling. Feild won The American again in 2020. At the NFR held in
Arlington, Texas, Feild competed again in December 2020. On December 20, in Round 10, Feild got a reride decision on his first horse. All the cowboys had to wait for the end of the round and Field's reride for the winner of the round and the championship. Feild delivered a 91-point ride on Junior Bonner to win the round and the championship, his fifth world championship. 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. He also won second in the bareback riding average and won the Ram Top Gun Award. Feild won The American for the third and final time in 2023. Feild qualified for the NFR a total of 13 times (2008 through 2015 and 2018 through 2022). In 2023, he missed qualifying for the NFR; finishing 16th in the PRCA world standings. In November 2023, Feild announced his retirement from professional bareback riding at the age of 36. ==Personal life==