Las Vegas Review-Journal

PBR World Finals a tight fit

Six top-ranked bull riders in contention for championsh­ip

- By Betsy Helfand Las Vegas Review-journal

PBR CEO Sean G leason expects this week’s PBR World Finals to be the most highly contested in his 18 years with the organizati­on.

The World Finals return to Las Vegas from Wednesday through Sunday at T-mobile Arena, and with so many riders closely packed in, there could be a new leader almost every night.

“We’re looking forward to one to the most competitiv­e and exciting World Finals in our history,” G leason said.

“If the Velocity Tours were any indication, these guys came to ride.”

H ere are five things to look for as the competitio­n kicks off:

Who will come out on top?

Derek Kolbaba will begin the event leading the pack, followed closely behind by Eduardo Aparecido (142.5 points back) and Cooper Davis, last year’s World Champion (174.17 points back).

Jess Lockwood comes in in fourth place and Kaique Pachecho in fifth, both within 500 points of Kolbaba. In sixth, Chase Outlaw is 1135.84 points behind the leader.

“We have six riders that are roughly within 1,000 points of the leader, Derek Kolbaba, and that’s the most riders that we have had that close in recent history,” G leason said. “The most we’ve had dating back almost 10 years is three riders that had that close of a gap between them for the world championsh­ips.”

Close bucking bull race As close as the rider race is, the World Champion Bucking Bull competitio­n is even closer.

Pearl H arbor is 11-1 this year, bucking off 91.67 percent of riders. Right behind is Sweetpro’s Bruiser, last year’s World Champion Bull.

It’s a virtual tie between the two with Pearl H arbor just .04 ahead with a world average of 46.38 to Bruiser’s 46.34.

“That’s closer than I can remember,” G leason said.

Sage Kimze enters the arena

Sage Kimzey, the threetime reigning PRCA champion, made the most of his Velocity Tour Finals invite.

Kimzey went 4-for-4 over the weekend at South Point Arena to win the Velocity Tour Finals and earn a bid to his first World Finals.

“H e obviously proved he’s

one of the best bull riders in the world this past weekend, riding all of his bulls at the Velocity Tour Finals,” G leason said. “I think that if he can keep that momentum moving forward and he wins some rounds or places high in some rounds and scores some points, it’s going to have an effect on obviously … the world standings.”

One month later on the Strip

The World Finals will kick off a month after the mass shooting on the Strip, and PBR plans to open the competitio­n with a celebratio­n of Las Vegas.

“We’ll acknowledg­e and recognize a lot of the first responders that are so great and important to the city, and then we’ll celebrate PBR’S history in Las Vegas over the past 24 years,” G leason said.

PBR holds its World Finals in Las Vegas every year.

“It’s our second home, if you will, (and) certainly an important part of PBR’S history and so we’re going to celebrate that as well as this great city that you guys all live in,” G leason said.

Other events

While bull riding is the main event, there will also be music both inside and outside the arena throughout the week.

That includes performanc­es from Chase Rice, Night Ranger and Joe Nichols.

Riders will have meet and greets, there will be the Monster Energy Party Zone at Toshiba plaza, a Western G ift Expo at the South Point Arena and an official World Finals after party at PBR Rock Bar.

Contact Betsy Helfand at bhelfand@reviewjour­nal. com. Follow @Betsyhelfa­nd on Twitter.

 ?? Chase Stevens ?? Las Vegas Review-journal Follow @csstevensp­hoto Stetson Lawrence rides Pearl Harbor in championsh­ip round of the PBR World Finals at the T-mobile Arena last November.
Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-journal Follow @csstevensp­hoto Stetson Lawrence rides Pearl Harbor in championsh­ip round of the PBR World Finals at the T-mobile Arena last November.

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