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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 16, 2016)
Page 2B SPORTS East Oregonian Saturday, July 16, 2016 British Open Mickelson maintains lead on rainy day at Troon Phil Mickelson putts and birdies on the 14th green during the second round of the British Open at the Royal Troon Golf Club in Troon, Scotland, on Friday. By PAUL NEWBERRY Associated Press TROON, Scotland (AP) — On a rainy day at Royal Troon, Phil Mickelson fi nally ran into a bit of trouble. He still managed to stay out front in the British Open. After coming within a lipped-out putt of a major championship scoring record in the opening round, Mickelson had to scramble a bit to escape with a 2-under 69 on Friday. He was at 10-under 132 midway through the tournament, heading to the weekend with a shot at becoming the oldest Open champion since Old Tom Morris in 1867. Mickelson turned 46 last month. Morris was 46 years and 102 days old when he triumphed at nearby Prest- wick 149 years ago. Making the turn at the far AP Photo/Peter Morrison end of the course, Mickelson was 3 under for the round, fi ve shots clear of the fi eld and looked on the verge of blowing it open. He nearly made a hole-in-one at No. 8 — the famed “Postage Stamp” hole — his ball BASEBALL: Large, Pepsi avert Damage Continued from 1B Johnny Malcom (1 for 2). Nick Lani pitched a hitless seventh inning to get the save. Hodgen’s stellar pitching continued against City as Morris sat them down in order in each of the fi rst four innings. His offense gave him an early lead, too, and scored four runs in the bottom of the second inning. Bower (2 for 3) tripled to lead off and Mathan Bliss followed with a walk. Then Bower scored as every- body was safe on Jared Beveridge’s grounder to shortstop, and Tyler Chichester made it 2-0 with an RBI single that scored Bliss. A passed ball gave Beveridge the opening he needed, and Avery Deutz made it 4-0 with a single to bring in Chichseter. City broke up Morris’s no-hitter with a hard grounder through the left side in the fi fth, and Morris hit the next batter before giving up another single to load the bases with one out. His defense bailed him out when Bliss scooped a grounder at third and got the force at home for the second out, then Jerome caught a fl y ball in left to end the threat. Morris left after the fi fth and fi nished with two hits allowed, two strikeouts and no walks. St. Pierre threw a scoreless top of the sixth, and then pushed Hodgen past the mercy threshold when he scored on Lani’s two-RBI double in the bottom of the inning. Hodgen continues play in the 26-team bracket today. ——— Game 1 R H E NW 000 100 0 — 1 3 2 HOD 000 400 X — 4 5 1 W — D. Naughton. L — Moran. S — N. Lani. 2B — R. Russell (HOD). Game 2 R H E CTY 000 000 — 0 2 1 HOD 041 012 — 8 8 1 W — W. Morris. L — Highet. 2B — N. Lani (HOD). 3B — N. Bower (HOD). PEPSI 7, DAMAGE 3 — At Seattle, Chris Large overcame a rocky start and settled in to give the Pepsi Diamondjaxx six solid innings on the mound, and Justin Duso and Cameron Sandford each drove in a pair of runs at the plate to lead the Pendleton ball- club in its opener in the 15U bracket at the Battle of the Bats. Large walked the second batter he faced and gave up a two-out double to give Damage Baseball its fi rst run, and Pepsi made two costly errors to allow another to make it 2-0 after the fi rst inning. Both teams were retired in order in the second, and Pepsi scored fi ve runs in the third to take the lead for good. Large led off the inning and was hit by a pitch, then Ryan Stahl (2 for 3) reached on an error and Sandford later doubled to bring them both in to tie the score. Gabe Umbarger followed with a single that brought Sandford in, and he later scored on a single by Duso that made it 4-2. Pepsi added one more run in the frame on a Matthew Demianew ground-out that plated Quinn Doherty (1 for 2, two runs). Damage had chances to trim the lead, but Large stranded runners in each inning and didn’t allow a runner past second the rest of the way. He fi nished with eight strikeouts, two walks and two runs allowed on eight hits. Demianew pitched the seventh and allowed one unearned run on two hits with no strikeouts or walks. The Diamondjaxx continue play in the 22-team bracket today. ——— R 7 3 H 8 8 E 6 3 PDJ 005 020 0 — DMG 200 000 1 — W — C. Large. L — Teets. 2B — C. Sandford (PDJ); Wooley (DMG). rolling right up to the edge of the cup for a tap-in birdie, roughly the length of a postage stamp. But, with the rain coming down harder, the inward nine was tougher on Mickelson. He narrowly missed a gorse bush at No. 12 and took his fi rst bogey of the tourna- ment. He made another at the 15th after driving into the rough and coming up 40 yards short of the green with his approach. He could’ve had a third bogey at the par-3 17th after dumping his tee shot into a deep bunker, but a brilliant sand wedge to 2 feet allowed him to save par. It was a far cry from Thursday, when Mickelson didn’t come close to making bogey on his way to a record-tying 63. He could’ve been the fi rst player to shoot 62 in a major championship, but a 16-foot birdie putt at the fi nal hole lipped out, sending Mickelson’s caddie tumbling to the ground and Lefty grabbing his head in disbelief. As Mickelson headed to the clubhouse to dry off, Henrik Stenson was his closest challenger. The Swede, looking to give his country its fi rst major cham- pionship by a male golfer, turned in the best round of the morning starters with a 65 to close within one shot of the lead. It was Stenson’s best round ever at the Open in his 12th appearance. Mickelson already has fi ve major titles, the most recent coming at the 2013 British Open. Having already won the claret jug, he is more relaxed going into the weekend. “It’s a lot easier having already held it,” Mickelson said. “Winning the Open was the greatest challenge of my career, and I’ve already done it. I would love nothing more than to add another one. But knowing I’ve already done it takes the pressure off.” Mickelson was the eighth player to open a major with a 63. He became only the third to break par in the next round. Among the other early fi nishers, Soren Kjeldsen of Denmark was three shots off the lead after a 68, while defending Open champion Zach Johnson was in the mix again with a 70 that left him fi ve shots behind. NASCAR Retired Gordon could race for Earnhardt next week In this July 2, 2016 fi le photo, Dale Earnhardt Jr. waits by his car before the start of a race at Daytona Interna- tional Speed- way. By DAN GELSTON Associated Press LOUDON, N.H. — Jeff Gordon is ready to pull his fi re- suit out of storage and come off the bench for one more shot at winning one of NASCAR’s crown jewel races. Gordon might not be done, but Junior just might be, at least for the immediate future. Dale Earnhardt Jr. has been parked for this weekend’s NASCAR race and more absences could be ahead. Gordon, the four-time NASCAR champion, could make his retirement a brief one and go for his sixth win at the Brickyard next weekend in Indianapolis if Earnhardt is not cleared to return from concussion symptoms. Earnhardt will sit out Sunday’s race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway and there is no time- table on when NASCAR’s most popular driver might return. While retirement talk for the 41-year-old Earnhardt might be premature, his history of concussions could accelerate the process on when he decides to hang up the helmet. AP Photo/John Raoux Gordon thought he was fi nished, walking away at the end of last season and one fi nal championship run from one of NASCAR’s all-time great careers: 93 wins, four series champion- ships and more than $150 million in winnings. But he is the obvious choice to pinch-drive in the No. 88 Chevrolet for Earnhardt, his former Hendrick Motorsports teammate, at one of his favorite tracks. Gordon won the last of his record fi ve Brickyard 400 victories in 2014. “He’s not a bad person to think about to put in the car,” Hendrick general manager Doug Duchardt said Friday. Gordon, who has called NASCAR races for Fox Sports this season and expressed interest in replacing the departed Michael Strahan as Kelly Ripa’s new “Live” co-host, tweeted he was in France this weekend, which ruled him out for a potential return at New Hampshire. Alex Bowman will drive the 88 on Sunday. If Gordon races next weekend, his fellow drivers certainly don’t expect any rust from the former champ. “Just because you go to the nude beach for a couple of months doesn’t mean you don’t know how to put your underwear back on,” Ryan Newman said. Duchardt said a decision on the Brickyard will likely be made on Wednesday. He did not say if Gordon would continue to drive in the 88 — not his famed No. 24 now helmed by Chase Elliott — should Earnhardt remain out beyond the Brickyard. Duchardt could not say if Earnhardt actually had a concussion and declined to speculate on when he might return. “When Dale is ready, that’s his car to get back into,” he said. Earnhardt missed two races in 2012 when it was determined he had suffered two concussions in six weeks. Earnhardt was involved in a 22-car wreck in Daytona this month and also wrecked last month at Michigan International Speedway. “I appreciate everyone’s support and prayers and will miss my team terribly this weekend. I’m working with some great doctors to get well,” Earnhardt tweeted. SCOREBOARD Baseball MLB AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB Baltimore 52 36 .591 — Boston 50 38 .568 2 Toronto 51 41 .554 3 New York 44 45 .494 8½ Tampa Bay 34 55 .382 18½ Central Division W L Pct GB Cleveland 53 36 .596 — Detroit 47 43 .522 6½ Kansas City 45 44 .506 8 Chicago 45 44 .506 8 Minnesota 32 57 .360 21 West Division W L Pct GB Texas 54 37 .593 — Houston 49 41 .544 4½ Seattle 45 45 .500 8½ Oakland 39 51 .433 14½ Los Angeles 38 52 .422 15½ ——— Friday’s Games Chicago Cubs 6, Texas 0 Boston 5, N.Y. Yankees 3 Baltimore 4, Tampa Bay 3 Detroit 4, Kansas City 2 Cleveland 5, Minnesota 2 L.A. Angels 7, Chicago White Sox 0 Oakland 8, Toronto 7 Houston 7, Seattle 3 Saturday’s Games Texas (Darvish 2-0) at Chicago Cubs (Hammel 7-5), 11:20 a.m. Boston (Rodriguez 1-3) at N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 5-6), 1:05 p.m. Toronto (Dickey 7-9) at Oakland (Gray 3-8), 1:05 p.m. Houston (McCullers 4-3) at Seattle (Iwakuma 9-6), 1:10 p.m. Baltimore (Tillman 12-2) at Tampa Bay (Moore 5-6), 3:10 p.m. Cleveland (Bauer 7-3) at Minnesota (Duffey 5-6), 4:10 p.m. Kansas City (Duffy 4-1) at Detroit (Pelfrey 2-8), 4:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Shields 4-10) at L.A. Angels (Shoemaker 4-9), 6:05 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB Washington 55 36 .604 — New York 48 41 .539 6 Miami 48 41 .539 6 Philadelphia 42 49 .462 13 Atlanta 31 59 .344 23½ Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 54 35 .607 — St. Louis 46 43 .517 8 Pittsburgh 46 44 .511 8½ Milwaukee 38 50 .432 15½ Cincinnati 33 57 .367 21½ West Division W L Pct GB San Francisco 57 34 .626 — Los Angeles 52 40 .565 5½ Colorado 41 48 .461 15 San Diego 39 51 .433 17½ Arizona 38 53 .418 19 ——— Friday’s Games Chicago Cubs 6, Texas 0 N.Y. Mets 5, Philadelphia 3 Washington 5, Pittsburgh 1 Cincinnati 5, Milwaukee 4 Colorado 11, Atlanta 2 Miami 7, St. Louis 6 L.A. Dodgers 13, Arizona 7 San Diego 4, San Francisco 1 Saturday’s Games Texas (Darvish 2-0) at Chicago Cubs (Hammel 7-5), 11:20 a.m. N.Y. Mets (Verrett 3-6) at Philadelphia (Eickhoff 6-10), 4:05 p.m. Pittsburgh (Cole 5-4) at Washington (Roark 8-5), 4:05 p.m. Colorado (Bettis 7-6) at Atlanta (Foltynewicz 3-3), 4:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Nelson 5-7) at Cincinnati (Lamb 1-6), 4:10 p.m. Miami (Koehler 6-7) at St. Louis (Wainwright 8-5), 4:15 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (McCarthy 2-0) at Arizona (Bradley 3-5), 5:10 p.m. San Francisco (Samardzija 9-5) at San Diego (Perdomo 3-4), 5:40 p.m. MiLB NORTHWEST LEAGUE North Division W Tri-City (Padres) 15 Vancouver (Blue Jays) 14 Everett (Mariners) 14 Spokane (Rangers) 13 South Division W Eugene (Cubs) 19 L 13 14 14 16 L 9 Pct. .536 .500 .500 .448 Pct. .679 GB — 1 1 2½ GB — Hillsboro (Dbacks) 14 14 .500 Salem-Keizer (Giants) 13 16 .448 Boise (Rockies) 11 17 .393 ——— Friday’s Games Boise 7, Vancouver 6, 10 innings Hillsboro 9, Everett 7 Eugene 9, Tri-City 7 Spokane 4, Salem-Keizer 3 Saturday’s Games Everett at Hillsboro, 5:03 p.m. Vancouver at Boise, 6:15 p.m. Salem-Keizer at Spokane, 6:30 p.m. Eugene at Tri-City, 7:15 p.m. Sunday’s Games Everett at Hillsboro, 1:05 p.m. Vancouver at Boise, 6:15 p.m. Eugene at Tri-City, 7:15 p.m. 5 6½ 8 Golf British Open Championship Friday At Royal Troon Golf Club Troon, Scotland Purse: $7.74 million Yardage: 7,190 yards; Par: 71 Second Round Phil Mickelson 63-69—132 Henrik Stenson 68-65—133 Soren Kjeldsen 67-68—135 Keegan Bradley 67-68—135 Zach Johnson 67-70—137 Tony Finau 67-71—138 Bill Haas 68-70—138 Charl Schwartzel 72-66—138 Andrew Johnston 69-69—138 Sergio Garcia 68-70—138 Kevin Na 70-69—139 Matt Kuchar 71-68—139 Martin Kaymer 66-73—139 Rafa Cabrera-Bello 68-71—139 Francesco Molinari 69-71—140 Dustin Johnson 71-69—140 J.B. Holmes 70-70—140 Jim Herman 70-70—140 Byeong Hun An 70-70—140 Patrick Reed 66-74—140 Rory McIlroy 69-71—140 KT Kim 70-71—141 Emiliano Grillo 69-72—141 Anirban Lahiri 69-72—141 Tyrrell Hatton 70-71—141 Rickie Fowler 69-72—141 6. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 132.915. 7. (24) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 132.720. 8. (4) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 132.697. 9. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 132.692. 10. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 132.618. 11. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 132.126. 12. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 131.989. 13. (19) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 132.822. 14. (21) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 132.799. 15. (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 132.780. 16. (83) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, 132.683. 17. (42) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 132.471. 18. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 132.278. 19. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 132.241. 20. (88) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 132.057. 21. (13) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 131.724. 22. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 131.678. 23. (23) David Ragan, Toyota, 131.665. 24. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 131.180. 25. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 131.501. Basketball -10 -9 -7 -7 -5 -4 -4 -4 -4 -4 -3 -3 -3 -3 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 Cycling Tour de France Friday At La Caverne du Pont-d’Arc, France 13th Stage A 23.3-mile individual time trial from Bourg-Saint- Andeol to La Caverne du Pont-d’Arc 1. Tom Dumoulin, Netherlands, Giant-Alpecin, 50 minutes, 15 seconds. 2. Chris Froome, Britain, Sky, 1 minute, 3 seconds behind. 3. Nelson Oliveira, Portugal, Movistar, 1:31. 4. Jerome Coppel, France, IAM Cycling, 1:35. 5. Rohan Dennis, Australia, BMC Racing, 1:41. 6. Bauke Mollema, Netherlands, Trek-Segafredo, 1:54. 7. Geraint Thomas, Britain, Sky, 2:00. 8. Jon Izaguirre, Spain, Movistar, 2:02. 9. Tony Martin, Germany, Etixx-QuickStep, 2:05. 10. Stephen Cummings, Britain, Dimension Data, 2:24. Overall Standings (After 13 stages) 1. Chris Froome, Britain, Sky, 58:02:51. 2. Bauke Mollema, Netherlands, Trek-Segafredo, 1:47. 3. Adam Yates, Britain, Orica-BikeExchange, 2:45. 4. Nairo Quintana, Colombia, Movistar, 2:59. 5. Alejandro Valverde, Spain, Movistar, 3:17. 6. Tejay Van Garderen, United States, BMC Racing, 3:19. 7. Romain Bardet, France, AG2R La Mondiale, 4:04. 8. Richie Porte, Australia, BMC Racing, 4:27. 9. Daniel Martin, Ireland, Etixx-QuickStep, 5:03. 10. Fabio Aru, Italy, Astana, 5:16. Motorsports NASCAR Sprint Cup New Hampshire 301 Lineup Race Sunday (TV: NBCSN) At New Hampshire Motor Speedway Loudon, N.H. Lap length: 1.06 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 133.971 mph. 2. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 133.830. 3. (78) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 133.371. 4. (41) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 133.059. 5. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 133.059. WNBA EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct New York 16 7 .696 Atlanta 11 11 .500 Indiana 10 12 .455 Chicago 9 12 .429 Washington 9 13 .409 Connecticut 6 15 .286 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct Los Angeles 20 1 .952 Minnesota 18 4 .818 Dallas 9 13 .409 Phoenix 9 13 .409 Seattle 8 13 .381 San Antonio 5 16 .238 ——— Friday’s Games Los Angeles 98, Connecticut 92, OT Indiana 78, Atlanta 72 Minnesota 88, New York 70 Chicago 84, Dallas 77 Seattle 80, Washington 51 Saturday’s Game San Antonio at Phoenix, 7 p.m. GB — 4½ 5½ 6 6 9 GB — 2½ 11½ 11½ 12 15 Soccer MLS EASTERN CONFERENCE W L NYC FC 8 6 Philadelphia 8 6 Montreal 6 4 New York 7 9 Toronto FC 6 6 New England 5 7 D.C. United 5 7 Orlando City 4 4 Columbus 3 7 Chicago 4 8 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L FC Dallas 11 6 Colorado 9 2 Real Salt Lake 8 6 Los Angeles 8 3 Sporting KC 8 9 Vancouver 8 8 Portland 6 6 San Jose 5 6 Seattle 6 10 Houston 4 9 T 6 5 8 3 6 7 6 9 8 5 Pts 30 29 26 24 24 22 21 21 17 17 GF 31 32 29 28 20 26 17 28 23 16 GA 34 26 26 25 20 33 20 29 29 21 T 4 7 5 8 4 4 8 7 2 6 Pts 37 34 29 32 28 28 26 22 20 18 GF 31 21 29 32 24 31 29 19 19 23 GA 29 13 30 18 24 33 30 21 21 26 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. ——— Friday’s Game Los Angeles 1, Houston 0 Saturday’s Games Columbus at DC United, 4:30 p.m. FC Dallas at Chicago, 6 p.m. Colorado at Sporting KC, 6 p.m. Real Salt Lake at New England, 7 p.m. Vancouver at Orlando City, 7 p.m. San Jose at Toronto, 7:30 p.m. Rodeo PRCA Leaders Through July 10 All-around 1. Ryan Jarrett, Comanche, Okla. $69,029 2. Russell Cardoza, Terrebonne, Ore. $64,376 3. Dustin Bird, Cut Bank, Mont. $62,325 4. Clayton Hass, Terrell, Texas $58,645 5. Josh Peek, Pueblo, Colo. $56,180 6. Shay Carroll, Prineville, Ore. $51,399 7. Ryle Smith, Oakdale, Calif. $50,510 8. Rhen Richard, Roosevelt, Utah $50,317 9. Caleb Smidt, Bellville, Texas $49,736 10. JoJo LeMond, Andrews, Texas $43,154 Bareback Riding 1. Tim O’Connell, Zwingle, Iowa $87,681 2. Caleb Bennett, Tremonton, Utah $83,005 3. Orin Larsen, Inglis, Manitoba $76,828 4. Tanner Aus, Granite Falls, Minn. $75,656 5. Jake Brown, Hillsboro, Texas $68,164 6. R.C. Landingham, Hat Creek, Calif. $63,355 7. Winn Ratliff, Leesville, La. $56,955 8. Evan Jayne, Marseille, France $55,107 9. Jake Vold, Ponoka, Alberta $52,623 10. Ty Breuer, Mandan, N.D. $45,406 Steer Wrestling 1. Jason Thomas, Benton, Ark. $57,588 2. Ty Erickson, Helena, Mont. $56,406 3. Clayton Hass, Terrell, Texas $52,321 4. Tyler Waguespack, Gonzales, La. $50,847 5. Matt Reeves, Cross Plains, Texas $46,850 6. Josh Peek, Pueblo, Colo. $38,118 7. Dakota Eldridge, Elko, Nev. $37,272 8. Jake Rinehart, Highmore, S.D. $36,678 9. Clayton Moore, Pouce Coupe, British Columbia $36,171 10. Baylor Roche, Tremonton, Utah $35,065 Team Roping (header) 1. Kolton Schmidt, Barrhead, Alberta $62,672 2. Riley Minor, Ellensburg, Wash. $54,876 3. Dustin Bird, Cut Bank, Mont. $54,546 4. Clay Smith, Broken Bow, Okla. $53,856 5. Zac Small, Welch, Okla. $52,895 6. Kaleb Driggers, Albany, Ga. $52,492 7. Luke Brown, Stephenville, Texas $50,936 8. Matt Sherwood, Pima, Ariz. $44,714 9. Colby Lovell, Madisonville, Texas $42,854 10. Spencer Mitchell, Williams, Calif. $38,094 Team Roping (heeler) 1. Paul Eaves, Lonedell, Mo. $55,145 2. Russell Cardoza, Terrebonne, Ore. $54,613 3. Brady Minor, Ellensburg, Wash. $53,368 4. Junior Nogueira, Burleson, Texas $52,492 5. Wesley Thorp, Stephenville, Texas $52,240 6. Jake Long, Coffeyville, Kan. $47,591 7. Shay Carroll, Prineville, Ore. $47,207 8. Quinn Kesler, Holden, Utah $44,683 9. Jeremy Buhler, Abbotsford, British Columbia $38,052 10. Justin Davis, Cottonwood, Calif. $36,507 Saddle Bronc Riding 1. Jacobs Crawley, Boerne, Texas $98,565 2. Rusty Wright, Milford, Utah $84,807 3. CoBurn Bradshaw, Beaver, Utah $77,853 4. Allen Boore, Axtell, Utah $61,253 5. Jake Wright, Milford, Utah $60,825 6. Taos Muncy, Corona, N.M. $49,421 7. Jake Watson, Hudsons Hope, British Columbia $49,007 8. Zeke Thurston, Big Valley, Alberta $48,543 9. Clay Elliott, Nanton, Alberta $48,280 10. Heith DeMoss, Hefl in, La. $45,535 Tie-down Roping 1. Hunter Herrin, Apache, Okla. $74,134 2. Timber Moore, Aubrey, Texas $60,394 3. Marcos Costa, Childress, Texas $60,064 4. Ryan Jarrett, Comanche, Okla. $53,207 5. Shane Hanchey, Sulphur, La. $46,727 6. Riley Pruitt, Gering, Neb. $44,796 7. Ryle Smith, Oakdale, Calif. $44,786 8. Reese Riemer, Stinnett, Texas $43,231 9. Caleb Smidt, Bellville, Texas $39,775 10. Rhen Richard, Roosevelt, Utah $35,557 Steer Roping 1. J. Tom Fisher, Andrews, Texas $48,795 2. Rocky Patterson, Pratt, Kan. $42,344 3. Jason Evans, Glen Rose, Texas $34,103 4. Scott Snedecor, Fredericksburg, Texas $33,134 5. Cody Lee, Gatesville, Texas $32,967 6. Chet Herren, Pawhuska, Okla. $31,590 7. Vin Fisher Jr., Andrews, Texas $31,255 8. Jess Tierney, Hermosa, S.D. $29,188 9. Marty Jones, Hobbs, N.M. $28,103 10. Chris Glover, Keenesburg, Colo. $26,527 Bull Riding 1. Sage Kimzey, Strong City, Okla. $88,882 2. Scottie Knapp, Albuquerque, N.M. $66,880 3. Jeff Askey, Athens, Texas $60,702 4. Joe Frost, Randlett, Utah $59,830 5. Cody Rostockyj, Lorena, Texas $56,515 6. Garrett Tribble, Bristow, Okla. $56,398 7. Shane Proctor, Grand Coulee, Wash. $54,448 8. Brennon Eldred, Sulphur, Okla. $52,439 9. Dalan Duncan, Ballard, Utah $51,864 10. Trevor Kastner, Ardmore, Okla. $50,764 Barrel Racing 1. Mary Burger, Pauls Valley, Okla. $98,979 2. Ivy Conrado, Hudson, Colo. $68,812 3. Michele McLeod, Whitesboro, Texas $65,502 4. Jackie Ganter, Abilene, Texas $58,482 5. Sarah Rose McDonald, Brunswick, Ga. $57,740 6. Carley Richardson, Pampa, Texas $57,237 7. Kimmie Wall, Roosevelt, Utah $56,876 8. Taylor Jacob, Carmine, Texas $52,228 9. Mary Walker, Ennis, Texas $52,160 10. Cayla Melby, Burneyville, Okla. $51,109