Father-and-daughter duo take lead at 2025 USBC Open Championships
March 26, 2025

BATON ROUGE, La. – Coming to the United States Bowling Congress Open Championships and competing with your friends can be so much fun. But, it’s even more fun when you see your name on the leaderboard and are able to accomplish that with your family.
That’s what happened Monday at the 2025 event for a father-and-daughter duo in Classified Doubles at the Raising Cane’s River Center.
Alaina Moore and her father, Shane Moore, of Reno, Nevada, were able to take over the No. 1 spot on the leaderboard with their doubles score – 1,172.
Shane was able to lead the way for the pair during doubles, with a set of 688. He had games of 223, 264 and 201. Alaina added a series of 484, which included games of 145, 133 and 206.
Daniel King and Hunter Severson of Sidney, Montana, previously held the lead with 1,106.
“To do this and be able to bowl together is just … I don’t know the words,” Shane said. “We just feed off each other’s energy.”
“It helps that we constantly cheer each other on,” Alaina followed.
Alaina picked up bowling during the 2022-2023 season, and her appearance in Baton Rouge marked her third time attending the USBC Open Championships. Shane made his seventh tournament appearance.
“It would be pretty awesome – no one in our close group has an Eagle,” said Shane, about the possibility of being able to take home a win.
“I would be making it very known, posting it all over social media,” Alaina added. “I would show it off.”
The pair had a great year at the Open Championships, and Shane also was able to move into fourth place in Standard All-Events. Shane was able to shoot 505 in team and added 630 in doubles for an all-events score of 1,823.
Jeff Dent of Glade Hill, Virginia, leads Standard All-Events in 2025 with 1,981.
Alaina started with 378 in team and finished with 432 in singles for an all-events score of 1,294 in the Classified Division.
Classified Doubles features bowlers with combined entering averages of 310 and below.
The Open Championships is celebrating its third trip to Baton Rouge in 2025 and scheduled to feature more than 58,000 bowlers and 11,600 five-player teams competing across 150 consecutive days at the River Center.
Visit us on Facebook at the official USBC Open Championships page.
That’s what happened Monday at the 2025 event for a father-and-daughter duo in Classified Doubles at the Raising Cane’s River Center.
Alaina Moore and her father, Shane Moore, of Reno, Nevada, were able to take over the No. 1 spot on the leaderboard with their doubles score – 1,172.
Shane was able to lead the way for the pair during doubles, with a set of 688. He had games of 223, 264 and 201. Alaina added a series of 484, which included games of 145, 133 and 206.
Daniel King and Hunter Severson of Sidney, Montana, previously held the lead with 1,106.
“To do this and be able to bowl together is just … I don’t know the words,” Shane said. “We just feed off each other’s energy.”
“It helps that we constantly cheer each other on,” Alaina followed.
Alaina picked up bowling during the 2022-2023 season, and her appearance in Baton Rouge marked her third time attending the USBC Open Championships. Shane made his seventh tournament appearance.
“It would be pretty awesome – no one in our close group has an Eagle,” said Shane, about the possibility of being able to take home a win.
“I would be making it very known, posting it all over social media,” Alaina added. “I would show it off.”
The pair had a great year at the Open Championships, and Shane also was able to move into fourth place in Standard All-Events. Shane was able to shoot 505 in team and added 630 in doubles for an all-events score of 1,823.
Jeff Dent of Glade Hill, Virginia, leads Standard All-Events in 2025 with 1,981.
Alaina started with 378 in team and finished with 432 in singles for an all-events score of 1,294 in the Classified Division.
Classified Doubles features bowlers with combined entering averages of 310 and below.
The Open Championships is celebrating its third trip to Baton Rouge in 2025 and scheduled to feature more than 58,000 bowlers and 11,600 five-player teams competing across 150 consecutive days at the River Center.
Visit us on Facebook at the official USBC Open Championships page.