 Welcome to the 2016 NCHA Great American Insurance Summer Spectacular. I'm with the winner of the limited non-pro derby, who happens to be Ryan Rapp, who scored a 2-22 on Tough Julie. Well done to you, Ryan. Thank you. Awesome effort. How does it feel to have won a major title now in the Will Rogers? Well, it feels good to be kind of following in my parents' footsteps, kind of getting there. It's good to get that one under the belt. Now, you won the finals section of the Junior Worlds last year. This is, I guess, your first major title. I guess it's pretty significant. Yes, ma'am, definitely. What was your game plan going into it? Just have it cleaner on and just gives the judges something to mark. And how often have you showed Tough Julie? A lot. Like, over 15 times, I think. You've gotten to know her pretty well. Yes, ma'am. Well, how'd you find the cows? Well, just sitting up in that cow box, watching with my mom and Matt, and just kind of found, I was second, so we had our cows we wanted. We had our top three, and I got them cut, and it worked out. Now, do you discuss it a lot with your mom, or do you sort of take her lead, or do you, does your opinion never differ? How do you find that? We go back and forth, discuss, you know, we watch them. And then, as it goes on later through the cattle change, or the set, I guess, we, like, I'll kind of ask if I, this cow, you know, acting really good. And I ask my mom if, like, she's seen her around a horse, around the settling horse, and if she likes it, then we kind of go. But, you know, I ask her, and she asks me, and it just kind of works out that way. So you generally pick with your mom rather than your dad? Both of them, usually. Usually late. So usually it's with my mom. She always goes to get the seats, and dad arrives shortly after. Okay. I was going to say, do they have different strategies, or different things about the cows that they pick out? Yes. My parents pick a lot of different things. There's one my mom and I really like, and dad's like, that's a terrible cow, and usually ends up being a pretty good cow. But, and then there's some that my mom likes, and dad doesn't, and turns out to be a bad cow, and just kind of, that kind of stuff. That pretty much goes both ways. Okay. So how do you think you've developed as a rider in the past year? Just experience, just, you know, learning from my parents, and from just showing, you know, which leg to use at what time, when to use, you know, just, and how to cut, you know, in a lot of different situations, and different cattle, and it's just a lot of experience. And what do you like about this horse in particular? I like how fast she is, and like, she's really small, but she can get, she can go, hit a stop, and then, in a blink of an eye, go cover that cow back up. I've seen, I've felt her cover up a lot of misses that some horses I've seen couldn't cover up, like the four-year-old metallic smoke that I, my first age event horse, she was kind of slower. She was really cool moving, but a lot slower, and this way of she can really cover up a cow quick. Now you also made it to the non-pro derby final, and your second last out, your score in the limited could have won the actual non-pro final. How are you feeling? What were you thinking when you were going into it? Well, I was going into it, you know, I really kind of wanted Armando to win the Triple Crown, being honest, not just saying that because I'm on camera, but I was, you know, I was going to be fine with just kind of having a nice run and getting a good check. You know, I was, just kind of, it was my first regular non-pro in this pen finals, and I just kind of want to go in and have a clean run. And I did mark in 18 and got like fourth, I think. Yeah, excellent effort. It would be great to watch you keep counting, Ryan. Thanks very much for joining us. You're welcome. Thank you.