The Bell Tolls Seven Times đź””
adjusts headset while dust drifts across the console Week 7 at Alex Clark Memorial drew nine souls to the range under 54–70°F skies, and the anvil bell rang seven times when the rules say six. That's either a malfunction or the prairie's getting impatient.
The Dead Ledger Gets Lonely
Alan Tyree stood alone atop MPO with a modest -4 (915-rated), yet the Dead Ledger hanging from his bag grew heavier with every circle-counting par. His 65 was actually 7.7 strokes worse than his season average—brutal arithmetic that should've dropped him down the rankings. Instead, the arena granted him the Iron Sights #1 tag by right of collective collapse. The prairie doesn't reward excellence; it rewards whoever bleeds slowest.
Three Birdies, One Crown, Zero Mercy
Meanwhile in MA2, Landry Lee authored pure destruction—six birdies total, including a stretch of three straight on holes 10-12 that turned Timber Coil into target practice. His -10 shattered his previous best, registering 976-rated steel and claiming Venom Cartridge #1 for the Timber Coil pool. When the bell rang that seventh time, Landry was already cleaning smoke off his irons.
MA1: Where Finn's Crown Got Heavy
Mike "Finn" Finnegan had worn the MA1 crown too long. After last week's 853-rated masterpiece, he stumbled to +8 (rated 793)—a 60-point rating nosedive that handed the division to Ryan Boone at -2. In MA4, Adim Rogers kept his revenge tour rolling with -1 (rated 885, +52 differential), while Cameron Britton suffered the week's wildest swing—from -6 to +4, a 109-point rating crater that felt personal.
Archer and Everett: The Cousins Who Could
The youth divisions belonged to the Lee bloodline. Everett Lee posted -5 (rated 925, +104 differential) in MJ18 with a birdie on hole 8's creek-side coil, while Archer Lee torched MJ15 for a personal best +3 (rated 844, +166 differential). Both opened with four straight pars before the course remembered their last names.
When the Prairie Decides to Bless You
Five players opened with clean front-nines—Landry, Everett, Archer, and the two dark horses nobody saw coming. Landry's 976 and Archer's 166-point differential weren't just numbers; they were the prairie whispering "not today" to elimination. Meanwhile, holes 8 and 10 became sniper nests—single birdies on scoring averages that laughed at the creek's attempts to claim victims.
The Super Ace Mocked Us All
The $500 Super Ace pot survives another week, and I'm starting to think it enjoys the attention. Nobody aced Super Ace hole #5 (Finn and Edmon both missed by inches), leaving the $63 regular ace pot to roll forward. The sponsors want me to remind you this builds "dramatic tension." The sponsors have clearly never watched their $500 slip through a chains' teeth.
Two Pools, Two Kings, One Range

The Iron Sights pool crowns Alan Tyree with the Dead Ledger—tag #16765 that remembers every name carved into the anvil bell. Over in Timber Coil, Landry Lee claims Venom Cartridge, proving the Lee family doesn't just play this game—they own it. Both tags await their final trials while the prairie counts down from seven.
Seven Bells Ring, But Only Six Matter
Week 8 brings Dead Brand—six shots, six holes, one branding iron. The anvil will toll its final count at dawn, and someone's name will burn into the iron while the rest feed the dust. The bell rang seven times tonight, but by next week we'll know which count actually matters. From the booth that still doesn't understand frontier mathematics, this is Flippy—wondering why the prairie gets the last word.
Flippy's Hot Take