Hayle Gibson-Stillwell and Piper Rewrite the Calgary Stampede Record Book
Hayle Gibson-Stillwell delivered one of the defining performances of the 2026 Calgary Stampede on Sunday.
Gibson-Stillwell and her mare, Buncha Dinero (aka Piper) completed the barrel pattern in 16.56 seconds during te July 12 semifinals, producing the fastest run of the week and one of the quickest times ever seen in Calgary.
The run did more than move Gibson-Stillwell forward in the competition.
It quickened a standard that had already been challenged earlier in the week, illustrating the extraordinary level of horsepower and precision on desplay at this year’s Stampede. At this level, records are not falling becuase riders are taking reckless chances. They are falling because small improvements in a horse’s stride, footing, positioning, and responsiveness can separate an excellent run from a historic one.
However, despite posting the fast time, Gibson-Stillwell did not officially leave Calgary with the 2026 Calgary Stampede Barrel Racing Champion title.
That distinction still belongs to Hailey Kinsel, who ultimately secured the Stampede title. Calgary’s format, built around qualifying rounds, seminfinals, and a winner-takes-all final, means that times from earlier rounds don’t always carry the same weight as performances in the championship round. Kinsel’s consistency across te entire structure, combined with a clutch performance wen it mattered most, allowed her to claim the title even without the single fastest run of the week.
It is a reminder that Calgary is not simply about speed.
It is about timing, consistency, and delivering under the highest pressure moment of the rodeo.
The Stampede places competitors in front of a large international audience, significant prize money and one of the most recognizable crowds in western sports. Horses must manage the noise, travel ground conditions and repeated high-pressure runs while remaining physically and mentally sharp.
That makes Piper’s performance particularly significant, even without the official championship title record atached.
Successful barrel racing is often discussed as though the rider simply chooses the fastest horse. In reality, elite runs depend on a partnership built through conditioning, veterinary and farrier care, hauling strategy, confidence and thousands of decisions made before the horse enters the arena.
A 16.56 second result represents years of preparation compressed into less than 17 seconds on an international stage.
Adding another layer to the story, Piper and Kinsel’s legendary mare, Sister, share bloodlines. The connection highlights how breeding proframs continue to shape the upper tier of barrel racing, where elite genetics, careful development and experienced riders combine to produce horses capable of competing at the highest level.
That conversation around bloodlines naturall leads to some of the most respected names in the industry: Sherry Cervi & Mel Potter. Their breeding program has beome synonymous with producing elite barrel horses that consistently perform at the highest levels of the sport. Cervi, a multi-time world chhampion, and Potter have built their program on a deep understanding of what it takes to win - not just in terms of speed, but in durability, mindset, and consistency under pressure.
Thier horses are not accidental standouts. They are the result of intentional crosses, careful selection and years of experience competing at the very top. When you see horses like Piper and Sister sharing lineage and rising to the biggest stages, it reinforces what programs like Cervi and Potter’s have proven for years: great horses are built long before they ever enter the arena.
The performance also creates a strong promotioanl opportunity for women’s rodeo.
Barrel racing consistently produces some of rodeo’s most recognizable athletes and most shareable moments. A visibly fast run, whetehr or not it becomes the official arena record or championship title earner, gives broadcasters, events, and sponsors content that can travel well beyond established rodeo audiences.
The Calgary Stampede is formatted to reward complete performances and championship formats for major rodeos shape outcomes and how the next generation of elite horses, often connected by bloodlines, contine to push the limits of what is possible.
At one of rodeo’s largest stages, Hayle Gibson-Stillwell and Piper delivered a run that captured attention and re-wrote the history book of Canada’s most iconic rodeo. But it was Hailey Kinsel and her iconic mare Sister who left with the title - proving that in Calgary, the fastest run doesn’t always tell the whole story, but it does write a good one.