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2B Daily News – Tuesday, January 31, 2012 Super Bowl Notebook INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Patriots receiver Matt Slater knows better than to take a Super Bowl trip for granted. His father, Jackie Slater, was an offensive lineman for the Los Angeles Rams who played in the Super Bowl after the 1979 season. The Rams lost to the Pittsburgh Steelers, and Jackie Slater never went back to a Super Bowl in a Hall of Fame career that last- ed until 1995. ''I think that was one of the biggest things that he kind of missed on his career is he never won a world cham- pionship,'' Matt Slater said. ''I knew how much that meant to him because he was a huge team guy.'' Dad already has offered son some advice about handling the pressure in the week leading up to the game. ''He told me just to do everything I can to prepare myself for the game on Sunday so that I can live with no regrets,'' the fourth-year player from UCLA said. ''And realizing that this opportunity is not guaranteed to me in my career again, so just to do every- thing I can to take advantage of the opportunity and maximize it so, at the end of the day, I have no regrets at all.'' Matt Slater wasn't around when his father played in the Super Bowl — he was born in 1985 — but Jackie's vivid memories have connected Matt to the experience. ''Even to this day, he talks about the game, and he can almost call off every play to you and just remember the ebb and flow of the game,'' Matt Slater said. ''It meant a lot to him. Unfortu- nately it didn't work out for him, but it's definitely a memory he has and will have as long as he lives.'' —— PUMPIN' UP THE VOLUME: Super Bowl quarterbacks Tom Brady and Eli Manning are hardly what you'd call brash or loud-mouthed. So it might take a bit of creativity to pump up the volume this week. Leave it to New York's tabloid newspapers to get things rolling: The Daily News and Post both had front- and back-page photos and headlines Monday about what Brady said at the New England Patriots' send-off rally before flying to Indianapolis. The Post's back cover blares ''TOM'S TAUNT,'' and another head- line reads, ''Brady tells pep rally: Come back for bigger party after Supe.'' The front cover shows a picture of Brady in his helmet and uniform, his mouth agape, and carries the tag, ''Patriot games: Tom talks trash.'' Not to be outdone, the Daily News teases its story with a box on the front page showing a head shot of New England's QB and its own all-caps title, ''BRADY'S BASH.'' It also reads, ''QB already planning Super parade'' — with the word ''already'' in italics. That paper's back cover carries a picture of Brady and a main headline reading, ''PARTY OF JIVE,'' then speaks directly to Manning and his teammates, saying, ''Hey Giants, Brady already talking about a victory bash.'' The outlandish and bragging (wink, wink) statement by Brady that brought all of this attention? Speaking to a crowd of about 25,000 Patriots fans at the team's sta- dium Sunday, Brady said: ''Hopefully we'll have a lot more people at our party next weekend.'' ——— SALUTE TO SERVICE: Ten- nessee Titans owner Bud Adams and Baltimore Ravens coach John Har- baugh are the finalists for the NFL's first Salute to Service Award. The winner will be recognized at the inaugural NFL Honors event that will air on NBC on Saturday and the USAA will make a $25,000 contribu- tion in the winner's honor to the aid societies representing all five military branches. Adams served in the U.S. Navy from 1942-46. As Tennessee's owner, he frequently has recognized the ser- vice men and women of nearby Fort Campbell, home to the Army's 101st Airborne Division, the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (Night Stalkers) and the 5th Special Forces Group (Green Berets). Harbaugh was instrumental in Bal- timore's decision to institute a Military Appreciation Day, an annual event which was established during his first training camp with the team. Since then, an estimated 2,000 service mem- bers have enjoyed preferred seating and opportunities to meet with players and coaches during Ravens' camp. —— TICKET PRICES: More than 2,100 Super Bowl tickets are currently available on the Official NFL Ticket Exchange by Ticketmaster. Ticket Exchange said the average ticket has sold for $4,346. The list price for its highest remaining ticket is $15,343, while the lowest is $2,375. Deciphering the Super Bowl: XLVI is Greek to kids NEW YORK (AP) — Kids LOL and OMG each other all the livelong day, but ask them to decipher the XLVI of this year's Super Bowl and you might as well be talking Greek. They may know what X means, or V and I, but Roman numerals beyond the basics have largely gone the way of cursive and penmanship as a sub- ject taught in the nation's schools. Students in high school and junior high get a taste of the Roman system dur- ing Latin (where Latin is still taught, anyway). And they learn a few Roman numerals in history class when they study the mon- archs of Europe. But in elementary school, ''Roman numerals are a minor topic,'' said Jeanine Brownell of the early mathematics develop- ment program at Erickson Institute, a child-develop- ment graduate school in Chicago. That's not how Joe Hor- rigan remembers it. ''I went to Catholic school. I still have bruised knuckles from not learning them,'' said the NFL histo- rian and spokesman for the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio. What's wrong with good ol' 46 to describe this year's Super Bowl between the Giants and the Patriots on Sunday? '''Number 46,' it just kind of sounds like an inventory. 'Inspected by Joe,''' said Joe, who is LX years old. ''Those Roman numerals, they're almost like trophies.'' Any football fan worth his weight in nachos will find a way to figure out the Super Bowl number from one year to the next, but shouldn't kids have some sense of the Romans as an actual numbering system? ''My son is in first grade and this recently came up when we were clock shop- ping,'' said Eileen Wolter of Summit, N.J. ''He couldn't believe they were real numbers. They only ever get used for things like copyrights or sporting events, which in my hum- ble opinion harkens even further back to the gladiato- rial barbaric nature of things like the Super Bowl.'' Gerard Michon isn't much of a football fan, either, but he keeps a close eye on Super Bowls over at Numericana.com, where he dissects math and physics and discusses the Roman system ad nause- am. Starting with Super Bowl XLI in 2007, he has been getting an abnormal number of game-day visits from football fans with a sudden interest in Roman numerals. On the day of last year's Super Bowl XLV, so many people visit- ed that Michon's little serv- er crashed. When the dust cleared, he had logged 15,278 hits, more than 90 percent landing on ''XLV.'' ''Last year was total madness,'' Michon said, in part ''because so many people were wondering why VL isn't a correct replacement for XLV.'' When the Super Bowl started, the games were assigned simple Roman numerals ''that everybody knows,'' he said. Now ''it looks kind of mysterious.'' The use of Roman numerals to designate Super Bowls began with game V in 1971, won by the Baltimore Colts over the Dallas Cowboys 16-13 on Jim O'Brien's 32-yard field goal with five seconds remaining. Numerals I through IV were added later for the first four Super Bowls. ''The NFL didn't model after the Olympics,'' said Dan Masonson, director of the league's corporate com- munications. Instead, he said, the Roman system was adopted to avoid any confusion that might occur because of the way the Super Bowl is held in a dif- ferent year from the one in which most of the regular season is played. Bob Moore, historian for the Kansas City Chiefs, credits the idea of using Roman numerals to Lamar Hunt, the late Chiefs owner and one of the godfathers GOLF 1. Luke Donald 2. Rory McIlroy World Golf Ranking ENG 9.75 NIR 7.98 3. Lee Westwood ENG 7.58 4. Martin Kaymer GER 6.08 5. Steve Stricker USA 5.84 6.Webb Simpson USA 5.23 7. Adam Scott AUS 5.16 8. Charl Schwartzel SAF 5.07 9. Dustin Johnson USA 4.89 10. Jason Day 11. Graeme McDowell NIR AUS 4.75 4.69 12. Matt Kuchar USA 4.55 13. K.J. Choi KOR 4.36 14. Nick Watney USA 4.36 15. Brandt Snedeker USA 4.04 16. Phil Mickelson USA 3.89 17. Tiger Woods USA 3.84 18. Sergio Garcia ESP 3.83 19. Hunter Mahan USA 3.77 20. Justin Rose ENG 3.73 of the modern NFL. (Histo- ry also credits Hunt with coming up with the name ''Super Bowl'' for the big game.) ''The Roman numerals made it much more impor- tant,'' Moore said. ''It's much more magisterial.'' Or as Michon put it: Quid quid latine dictum sit, altum videtur — ''Any- thing stated in Latin looks important.'' Linsey Knerl, who is homeschooling her five children in Tekamah, Neb., is teaching them Roman numerals, showing her old- est — who is 13 — how to decipher chapter numbers while reading ''Oliver Twist.'' ''I realize that it may not seem to be the most cultur- ally relevant thing you can teach kids these days,'' she said. ''But if kids can get what LOL and ROFL mean, things like XXII should be a piece of cake." NHL WESTERN CONFERENCE Pacific Division WL OT Pts GF GA SHARKS 24 11 5 53 118 94 Kings 21 15 7 49 93 95 Dallas 23 17 1 47 114 119 Phoenix 20 17 7 47 111 114 Ducks 13 22 6 32 104 135 Central Division WL OT Pts GF GA Chicago 26 13 5 57 144 127 St. Louis 25 12 6 56 112 92 Detroit 27 15 1 55 138 101 Nashville 24 15 4 52 118 117 Columbus 11 26 5 27 101 142 Northwest Division WL OT Pts GF GA Vancouver 28 14 3 59 147 110 Minnesota 22 16 6 50 103 110 Colorado 23 20 2 48 117 127 Calgary 20 19 5 45 109 127 Edmonton 16 22 4 36 112 121 EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division WL OT Pts GF GA N.Y.Rangers 27 10 4 58 118 86 Philadelphia26 12 4 56 142 124 New Jersey 24 17 2 50 119 124 Pittsburgh 21 17 4 46 124 112 N.Y. Islanders15 20 6 36 98 129 Northeast Division WL OT Pts GF GA Boston 28 11 1 57 148 77 Ottawa 24 15 6 54 143 144 Toronto 22 15 5 49 135 131 Buffalo 18 19 5 41 107 123 Montreal 16 20 7 39 110 119 Southeast Division WL OT Pts GF GA Florida 21 13 8 50 109 116 Washington 22 17 2 46 119 120 Winnipeg 20 18 5 45 112 126 Tampa Bay 17 21 4 38 115 146 Carolina 15 23 7 37 118 150 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. —————————————————— Tuesday's games Columbus at San Jose, 7:30 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Carolina, 4 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at New Jersey, 4 p.m. Ottawa at Boston, 4 p.m. Toronto at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. Winnipeg at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Buffalo at Montreal, 4:30 p.m. Washington at Tampa Bay, 4:30 p.m. Nashville at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Anaheim at Phoenix, 6 p.m. Detroit at Calgary, 6 p.m. Colorado at Edmonton, 6:30 p.m. Chicago at Vancouver, 7 p.m. Wednesday's games N.Y. Rangers at Buffalo, 4:30 p.m. Pittsburgh at Toronto, 4:30 p.m. Washington at Florida, 5 p.m. Dallas at Anaheim, 7:30 p.m. Columbus at Los Angeles, 7:30 p.m. A pre-Super Bowl refresher on Roman numerals I equals 1 V equals 5 X equals 10 L equals 50 C equals 100 D equals 500 M equals 1,000 Roman numerals are usually arranged in descending value and added up from left to right. But when a small- er number is placed before a larger one, the smaller value is sub- tracted from the larger one to the right. For example: IV is 4, XL is 40 and CM equals 900. So MCMXLIV is 1944. NBA WESTERN CONFERENCE Pacific Division Clippers Lakers Phoenix WL Pct GB 11 6 .647 — 12 9 .571 1 7 12 .368 5 WARRIORS 612 .333 5.5 KINGS 614 .300 6.5 Southwest Division WL Pct GB 13 8 .619 — Dallas San Antonio 13 9 .591 .5 Houston Memphis Oklahoma City 16 3 .842 — Denver Utah Portland Minnesota 10 11 .476 7 EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division Philadelphia 15 6 .714 — Boston New York New Jersey 7 14 .333 8 Toronto Miami Atlanta Orlando WL Pct GB 9 10 .474 5 7 13 .350 7.5 7 14 .333 8 Southeast Division WL Pct GB 16 5 .762 — 15 6 .714 1 12 9 .571 4 Washington 4 17 .190 12 Charlotte Central Division Chicago Indiana 18 5 .783 — 13 6 .684 3 Milwaukee 9 11 .450 7.5 Cleveland Detroit 8 11 .421 8 4 18 .182 13.5 —————————————————— Monday's results Chicago 98, Washington 88 Miami 109, New Orleans 95 Milwaukee 103, Detroit 82 Minnesota 120, Houston 108 Philadelphia 74, Orlando 69 San Antonio 83, Memphis 73 Dallas at Phoenix, late Oklahoma City at L.A. Clippers, late Portland at Utah, ;ate Today's games Sacramento at Golden State, 7:30 p.m. Atlanta at Toronto, 4 p.m. Boston at Cleveland, 4 p.m. New Jersey at Indiana, 4 p.m. Detroit at New York, 4:30 p.m. Denver at Memphis, 5 p.m. Charlotte at L.A. Lakers, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday's games Chicago at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Washington at Orlando, 4 p.m. Detroit at New Jersey, 4:30 p.m. Toronto at Boston, 4:30 p.m. Indiana at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Miami at Milwaukee, 5 p.m. Oklahoma City at Dallas, 5 p.m. Phoenix at New Orleans, 5 p.m. Houston at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m. Charlotte at Portland, 7 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Utah, 7:30 p.m. 3 18 .143 13 WL Pct GB 12 9 .571 1 10 10 .500 2.5 New Orleans 4 17 .190 9 Northwest Division WL Pct GB 14 6 .700 2.5 11 7 .611 4.5 12 8 .600 4.5 WAIT (Continued from page 1B) anything.'' The loss still reverberates for former Patriots line- backer Rosevelt Colvin. ''It was like getting punched in the stomach,'' he said. "I still can't watch the highlights from that game because of the opportunity we missed out on was so grand Having come this far before is immeasurably helpful, according to Justin Tuck, the leader of the Giants' defense whose return to health and form has keyed New York's resur- gence. He says the experi- ence of four years ago in the Arizona desert will benefit everyone. ''The only thing that I tell the younger guys is make football football,'' Tuck said. ''Don't make this game big- ger than it has to be. Every- body around you is going to make it bigger, but we have to concentrate on why we're going out there. There's going to be a lot of parties. There's going to be a lot of people pulling at your coat- tail. Listen, if you go out there and you handle your business and you win this game, you can party all you want to after that. ''For me, personally, the first time I went to a Super Bowl I approached it as such — as a once in a lifetime thing.'' For Tuck, it wasn't. And while the defense he leads to Indianapolis isn't quite as overwhelming as the unit that made life miserable for Tom Brady in '08, it has been reinvigorated as the Giants surged to the NFC championship. It also is just as deep as the group that sacked Brady five times, hit him nine more — Osi Umenyiora claimed he had that many hits alone — and unnerved the usually unflap- pable star. Today, it's Tuck, Umenyiora, All-Pro Jason Pierre-Paul, Dave Tollefson and linebacker Mathias Kiwanuka, who compare favorably with Umenyiora, Tuck, Michael Strahan, Jay NCAA The Top Twenty Five The top 25 teams in The Associated Press' college basketball poll, with first- place votes in parentheses, records through Jan. 29, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and previous ranking: Record Pts Prv 1. Kentucky (63) 21-1 1,623 1 2. Syracuse (2) 22-1 1,550 3 3. Ohio St. 4. Missouri 19-3 1,498 4 19-2 1,363 2 5. North Carolina 18-3 1,331 7 6. Baylor 7. Duke 8. Kansas 19-2 1,310 6 18-3 1,250 8 17-4 1,178 5 9. Michigan St. 17-4 1,098 10 10. Murray St. 21-0 979 11 11. UNLV 12. Florida 20-3 936 12 17-4 861 14 13. Creighton 20-2 803 15 14. Georgetown 16-4 762 9 15. Marquette 18-4 682 17 16. Virginia 17-3 578 19 17. San Diego St. 18-3 566 13 18. Saint Mary's 21-2 472 21 19. Wisconsin 17-5 415 25 20. Indiana 17-5 395 16 21. Florida St. 14-6 375 23 22. Mississippi St. 17-5 329 18 23. Michigan 16-6 305 20 24. Gonzaga 17-3 141 — 25.Vanderbilt 16-5 102 — Others receiving votes: Harvard 69, Louisville 65, Kansas St. 40, West Virginia 12, Wichita St. 9, Nevada 6, Notre Dame 6, Southern Miss. 5, Iowa St. 3, Long Beach St. 3, Iona 2, UConn 2, Illinois 1. Top 25 Schedule Monday's result No. 4 Missouri 67, Texas 66 Today's games No. 1 Kentucky vs. Tennessee, 4 p.m. No. 5 N. Carolina at Wake Forest, 6 p.m. No. 9 Michigan State at Illinois, 4 p.m. No. 15 Marquette vs. Seton Hall, 5 p.m. No. 16 Virginia vs. Clemson, 4 p.m. No. 19 Wisconsin at Penn State, 5 p.m. No. 25 Vanderbilt at Arkansas, 6 p.m. Wednesday's games No. 14 Georgetown vs. UConn, 4 p.m. No. 21 Florida St. vs. Georgia Tech, 4 p.m. No. 20 Indiana at No. 23 Michigan, 3:30 p.m. No. 13 Creighton vs. Illinois St., 5:05 p.m. No. 8 Kansas vs. Oklahoma, 6 p.m. No. 6 Baylor at Texas A&M, 6 p.m. No. 17 San Diego St. vs. Boise St., 7 p.m. No. 11 UNLV vs. Colorado St., 7:30 p.m. Thursday's games No. 7 Duke at Virginia Tech, 4 p.m. No. 10 Murray St. vs. SE Missou St., 5 p.m. No. 12 Florida vs. South Carolina, 6 p.m. No. 18 Saint Mary's vs. San Diego, 7 p.m. No. 24 Gonzaga at BYU, 8 p.m. Friday's games No games scheduled Saturday's games No. 1 Kentucky at South Carolina, 3 p.m. No. 2 Syracuse vs. St. John's at Madison Square Garden, 9 a.m. No. 3 Ohio St.at No. 19 Wisconsin, 11 a.m. No. 4 Missouri vs. No. 8 Kansas, 6 p.m. No. 5 North Carolina at Maryland, 1 p.m. No. 6 Baylor at Oklahoma St., 10:30 a.m. No. 10 Murray State at UT-Martin, 4 p.m. No. 11 UNLV at Wyoming, 1 p.m. No. 12 Florida vs. No. 25 Vandy, 10 a.m. No. 13 Creighton at Northern Iowa, 2 p.m. No. 14 Georgetown vs. S. Florida, 8 a.m. No. 15 Marquette at Notre Dame, 10 a.m. No. 16 Virginia at No. 21 Florida St., 10 a.m. No. 17 San Diego State vs. TCU, 7 p.m. No. 20 Indiana at Purdue, 4 p.m. No. 22 Mississippi St. vs. Auburn, 1 p.m. No. 24 Gonzaga at Pepperdine, 7 p.m. Sunday's games No. 7 Duke vs. Miami, Noon No. 9 Mich. St. vs.No. 23 Michigan, 10 a.m. Alford and LB Antonio Pierce in 2008. Other than head coaches Belichick and New York's Tom Coughlin, that is the most common element between the two Super Bowls. ''It's been a strength of their team for as long as I can remember,'' Brady said. ''Michael Strahan, as great of a player as he was, I think we played them in 2003 and they were still harassing the quarterback. It seems like they always have guys who can rush the quarterback. Justin Tuck is as good as they come. Osi week in and week out, he's a player who can ruin a game for an offense. You look at the group they have now, and they have a ton of depth at the defensive line position.'' Controversial receivers Randy Moss and Plaxico Burress have been replaced by skilled playmakers like tight ends Rob Gronkowski and Aaron Hernandez in New England, wideouts Hakeem Nicks and Victor Cruz in New York. Eli Man- ning no longer is a question as Giants quarterback, and has carried the offense much the way running backs Bran- don Jacobs and Ahmad Bradshaw did in the past. Lawrence Tynes kicked the Giants into the Super Bowl in overtime in '08 and — incredibly — this year, too. Wes Welker led the Patriots with 112 catches that season and had 122 in this one. Sixteen Giants remain from the 17-14 Super Bowl victory, and only seven Patri- ots are still around. Similarities and differ- ences, all juicy elements for Giants-Patriots II. Here we go again. RODEO Pro Rodeo Leaders All-around 1. Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas $10,529 2.Landon McClaugherty, Tilden, Texas $8,688 Bareback Riding 1.Wes Stevenson, Lubbock, Texas $22,305 2. Jared Keylon, Uniontown, Kan. $9,164 3. Caleb Bennett, Morgan, Utah $7,755 4. Ryan Gray, Cheney, Wash. 5. Steven Dent, Mullen, Neb. $6,484 $6,254 6. Casey Colletti, Pueblo, Colo. $5,751 7. Bobby Mote, Culver, Ore. 8.Cimmaron Gerke, Odessa, Texas 9. Matt Bright, Azle, Texas 10. Kaycee Feild, Payson, Utah Steer Wrestling $4,819 $4,648 $4,606 $4,574 1. Dean Gorsuch, Gering, Neb. $10,382 2.Justin Blaine Davis, Argyle, Texas 3.Les Shepperson, Midwest, Wyo. $8,890 4.Termaine Debose, Anderson, Texas 5.Ben Goodman, Beaumont, Texas 6. Billy Bugenig, Ferndale $9,240 $7,998 $7,668 $7,646 7.Straws Milan, Cochrane, Alberta $7,537 8. Beau Clark, Bozeman, Mont. $7,005 9. Ethen Thouvenell, Napa 10. Jake Shaw, Marshall, Texas Team Roping (header) 1.Colby Lovell, Madisonville, Texas $6,744 $6,402 2.Ty St.Goddard, Browning, Mont. $10,793 3.Tyler Magnus, Mason, Texas 4. Nick Sartain, Dover, Okla. $11,539 $7,569 $6,968 5. Dustin Bird, Cut Bank, Mont. $6,718 6.Kelsey Parchman, Cumberland City, Tenn. $6,508 7.Shane Philipp, Washington, Texas 8. Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas 9.Manny Egusquiza Jr., Madison, Ga. $5,700 10.Tyler Wade, Terrell, Texas 11. Spencer Mitchell, Colusa $5,461 Team Roping (heeler) 1.Ryle Whitford, Browning, Mont. $10,793 2.Ryan Motes, Weatherford, Texas 3. Justin Copp, Justin, Texas 4.Tyler Barton, Buckner, Ark. $8,043 $7,550 $7,169 5. Kollin VonAhn, Durant, Okla. $6,968 6.B.J. Campbell, Aguila, Ariz. $6,718 7.Cole Davison, Madisonville, Texas 8.John Philipp, Washington, Texas 9. Patrick Smith, Midland, Texas 10.Brandon Bates, Valley Springs, Texas Saddle Bronc Riding 1.Cody DeMoss, Heflin, La. 2. Jesse Wright, Milford, Utah 3. Cole Elshere, Faith, S.D. 7.Tyrel Larsen, Inglis, Manitoba $11,032 $9,688 $9,606 4. Cody Taton, Mud Butte, S.D. $9,268 5. Cody Wright, Milford, Utah 6. Joaquin Real, Woody $8,960 $7,410 $6,580 8.Kyle Thomson, Lundbreck, Alberta $5,734 9. Chad Ferley, Oelrichs, S.D. $4,712 10.Townsend Prince, Livermore, Colo. $4,412 Tie-down Roping 1.Justin Maass, Giddings, Texas 2. Riley Pruitt, Gering, Neb. $14,854 $13,917 3. Shank Edwards, Tatum, N.M. $11,891 4. Houston Hutto, Tomball, Texas $8,873 5.Jerome Schneeberger, Ponca City, Okla. $7,341 6. Jerrad Hofstetter, Portales, N.M. $6,363 7. Shane Hanchey, Sulphur, La. $6,228 8. E.J.Roberts, Stephenville, Texas 9. Clint Cooper, Decatur, Texas $6,127 $5,406 10. Doug Pharr, Resaca, Ga. $5,385 Steer Roping 1. Chet Herren, Pawhuska, Okla. $7,913 2. Cecil Wilson, Boise City, Okla. $4,674 3. Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas 4. Jay Peters, San Antonio, Texas $4,651 5.Landon McClaugherty, Tilden, Texas $4,498 6.Tony Reina, Wharton, Texas $4,671 7.Buster Record Jr., Buffalo, Okla. $4,233 8. Cody Lee, Gatesville, Texas 9.Kim Ziegelgruber, Edmond, Okla. $3,666 10. Dan Fisher, Andrews, Texas $4,409 $4,120 $3,451 Bull Riding 1. Seth Glause, Cheyenne, Wyo. $16,401 2.Brett Stall, Detroit Lakes, Minn. $15,535 3. Douglas Duncan, Alvin, Texas $11,893 4. Cody Teel, Kountze, Texas 5. Jacob O'Mara, Prairieville, La. $10,205 6.Trey Benton III, Rock Island, Texas 7. J.W. Harris, Mullin, Texas $10,054 8. Cody Samora, Cortez, Colo. $10,035 9.Tyler Willis, Wheatland, Wyo. $7,585 10. Clayton Foltyn, El Campo, Texas Barrel Racing 1. Brittany Pozzi, Victoria, Texas 2.Benette Barrington-Little, Ardmore, Okla. $17,460 3.Carlee Pierce, Stephenville, Texas $17,584 $11,909 4.Paige Conrado, Hudson, Colo. $11,055 5.Callie Chamberlain, Colorado City, Texas $8,454 6.Shelley Morgan, Eustace, Texas 7.Morgan Figueroa, Bandera, Texas 8. Kendra Dickson, Aubrey, Texas $7,160 9. Linda Vick, Hesperia $8,135 $7,774 $7,102 $7,036 $11,122 $10,162 $6,086 $5,863 $5,705 $5,642 $5,863 $5,705 $5,627

