get the tissues
Meant to Be: Bailey Patterson Secures Hometown Pendleton Round-Up Win With Angel at Her Side

Bailey Patterson captured the breakaway roping title at the 2025 Pendleton Round-Up, winning in front of her hometown crowd on her longtime mare Stella—a victory made even more meaningful by the memory of her late mother.

Bailey Patterson and Stella break the rope off on short round Saturday at the Pendleton Round-Up.
Bailey Patterson and Stella break the rope off on short round Saturday at the Pendleton Round-Up. Photo by Click Thompson

Bailey Patterson found eternal hometown glory on the grass at the Pendleton Round-Up in Oregon on Sept. 13, finishing a two-head aggregate in 6.2 seconds, amassing a total of $15,475.

For Patterson, the win was not only redemption for her Reserve Championship in 2022, but a bittersweet reminder of the woman who pushed to buy Patterson’s mare “Stella” nearly 15 years ago—her late mother Kelly.

The win came alongside Patterson’s daily balancing act, too—mothering two boys, running a household and working nights as a registered nurse in a surgical unit.

“To win Pendleton—it means everything. The memories, the people, the horse, my mom—it all came together this year. This is one I’ll never forget.” – Bailey Patterson

Bailey Patterson’s Pendleton

Patterson turned in a 2.7-second run in the first round and a 3.5 in the short round for a total of 6.2 on two head. The winnings, paired with her $11,249 won on the Columbia River Circuit thus far launched her to No. 1 in the Circuit standings with more than $26,000 won.

“I’m the breakaway director for our circuit, so I help our stock contractor with the calves the bring,” Patterson explained. “Brent Palmer and Jade Smith worked with me to cut off the fastest calves. We’d seen these calves at Kennewick and Ellensburg, so when I got my [draw] for the first round and saw the video, I was excited. But at Pendleton, you can’t really prepare fully, you just have to react.”

2025 was Patterson’s fifth time competing on the grass, and fourth time making the short go on Stella, registered as JW Trapper Tuff.

“In the short go, I had a list of the calves I wanted, and I drew one of them,” Patterson said. “You try to be confident, but at Pendleton, there are so many variables. [I won] with probably the worst loop I’ve ever thrown there, but Stella worked like she always does, and to win it—it’s hard to put into words.”

Stella came into Patterson’s life nearly 15 years ago, when Kelly was heavily campaigning to purchase quality rodeo horses for her kids.

“My cousin Brady bought her originally, she was a heel horse from Wade Wheatley,” Patterson said. “Brady thought she’d made a calf horse, and after my mom watched me roper on her, she’s like, ‘We need her.’ I’ve been the the Circuit Finals on her, amateur championships, and now, Pendleton.”

In a poetic turn of events, Kelly is still listed as the owner on Stella’s papers.

“To win Pendleton on Stella after losing my mom this spring—I know she was there,” Patterson said, choking up.

At 20 years old, Stella has proven she can compete with the best out on the grass.

Pendleton’s unmatched aura

Short-go Saturday at Pendleton is one of rodeo’s most electric stages, and Patterson had her biggest supporters in the stands. Her sons, Pryor (6) and Bray (3), celebrated the win alongside their dad, Trevor, who was there at the back end to pump her up before her final run.

“My oldest wore my buckle around the house the next day,” Patterson laughed. “He told my husband, ‘This is Mom’s, but now it’s mine.’”

The support stretched beyond her family. Messages poured in after her victory—“more texts than I’ve ever seen on my phone at once,” Patterson said—and her win became a viral moment among the Pendleton community, who were proud to see one of their own conquer the Round-Up.

And for Patterson, the short-round atmosphere was just as special as the buckle.

“Short-go Saturday is awesome—it’s always packed, and you want to watch every event,” Patterson said. “They had me signing autographs in the back, and all I could think was, ‘I don’t want to miss anything out there.’”

As if the buckle and hometown ovation weren’t memorable enough, Patterson added a daring exclamation point during her victory lap. Despite advice to go around, she spurred her borrowed horse at the famous Pendleton rail.

“Everyone tells you not to jump the rail, but I thought, ‘I won Pendleton—I want to try it,’” Patterson laughed. “That horse stopped [before the rail] and I almost went off the side. I was thinking ‘I can’t fall off at Pendleton!’ It’ll be a story I never forget.”

CATEGORIES
TAGS
SHARE THIS ARTICLE
RELATED ARTICLES
Josie Conner_Hali Williams_2025_Kimes MDB_Andersen
Money Money Money
Phenoms Josie Conner, Hali Williams Split $230K, Kimes Ranch Million Dollar Breakaway Championship
Maddy Deerman_2025_Kimes MDB_Andersen
Astounding
23.58 on 10! Maddy Deerman-Jacobs Clinches Kimes Ranch Million Dollar Breakaway Average Title, Earns $100K
Bradi Good has one NFBR under her belt and it hungry for more.
Finale
Everything You Need to Know About the 2025 National Finals Breakaway Roping
Josie Conner and Hali Williams decided to share the Kimes Ranch Million Dollar Breakaway High-Money Championship with $115K won each.
It's tiiiiime
Williams, Conner Earn High Money, Deerman Takes Average: 2025 Kimes Ranch Million Dollar Breakaway Results
Maddy Deerman and Cheyanne McCartney are still in the average game at the 2025 Kimes Ranch Million Dollar Breakaway, while Josie Conner leads money won by a mile.
The best is yet to come
Lion's Share Still on the Table—Who Stands to Earn the Most? Kimes Ranch Million Dollar Breakaway Finale
Josie Conner and her two-time Horse of the Year "Dutch" broke the rope of in 1.88 seconds in Round 3 of the Kimes Ranch Million Dollar Breakaway.
1.78 🔥
Josie Conner Stacks $45K on Night 1 of Kimes Ranch Million Dollar Breakaway Finals
GET UPDATES

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Name*
Country*

Additional Offers

Additional Offers
The Breakaway Roping Journal
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.