PLACERVILLE, Calif. — Hayle Gibson-Stillwell, a Redcrest native identified by local posts as a graduate of Union Mine High School, is competing this week in Las Vegas at the Wrangler National Finals Rodeo — her first appearance at the sport’s championship — and stands out as the only female barrel-racing finalist from California in the 2025 field.
Gibson-Stillwell’s trip to the Thomas & Mack Center is the payoff from a breakout 2025 season in which she finished No. 12 in the WPRA world standings and earned roughly $140,032 across a heavy schedule of regional and national rodeos. Her campaign included more than 80 rodeos and multiple top finishes that together secured a spot among the top 15 barrel racers who qualify for the NFR.
Early life and riding roots: Gibson-Stillwell grew up in a family that raced motocross; she began riding at age 4 and developed her horsemanship through gymkhanas and junior rodeos before moving into the professional barrel circuit. “My parents said when I was a kid I’d be in the truck and I’d see a horse and I’d yell,” she told a national barrel-racing outlet.
Home-bred horse success: A defining element of her rise is Buncha Dinero, nicknamed “Piper,” a home-bred mare Gibson-Stillwell raised and trained herself from a mare purchased off the racetrack. Piper became her season’s top earner and a central reason she reached the NFR.
NFR debut: Gibson-Stillwell arrived in Las Vegas as a first-time qualifier for the Wrangler NFR. Early rounds have been competitive; the NFR leaderboard and round-by-round results are being tracked by major rodeo outlets.
For local readers, Gibson-Stillwell’s appearance at the sport’s premier event highlights a regional success story: a rider with northern-California roots competing on one of the world’s biggest stages for rodeo. Local recognition of her accomplishment has surfaced on community pages and social posts noting a Union Mine High School connection, making her advancement a point of community pride. (That particular school-alumni detail appears in community posts and a public social profile; independent school or district confirmation was not found in major press releases as of this writing.)
Training philosophy and approach
Gibson-Stillwell emphasizes horsemanship and careful management over high-risk tactics. Her string typically includes Piper and two other mares — RDC DancingToTheLead (“Fancy”) and Smiling N Ta Fame (“Sharky”) — that she rotates depending on arena conditions. Her regimen stresses forage-based feeding, comfort measures and conservative handling designed to preserve the horses over a long season. Observers and profile pieces credit that approach with sustaining consistency through a punishing schedule.
“The season unfolded without plans, projections or expectations,”
Gibson-Stillwell said in a recent profile discussing how her rookie NFR berth came together. The sentiment underscores a steady, horse-first progression rather than a pedigree of early superstar billing.Stakes and outlook
The NFR is a 10-day, 10-round championship where consistency can vault competitors into substantial earnings and career-changing exposure. As the only California woman in this year’s barrel-racing field, Gibson-Stillwell carries both the personal milestone of a first NFR and a regional spotlight for West Coast rodeo athletes. Upcoming rounds and final payouts will determine whether this debut turns into a sustained national profile. Results and round summaries are available from established rodeo news outlets and the WPRA.








