Trump did raise $301,000 in Oklahoma during July, which is about $14,000 more than Romney did for the same month four years ago.

But Trump is still $250,000 behind Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who stopped campaigning in early summer, and more than $800,000 behind Democrat Hillary Clinton, whose unpopularity in Oklahoma may rival that of President Barack Obama.

According to Federal Election Commission reports, none of Cruz’s maximum donors had contributed to Trump through the end of July.

Trump has won over a few well-known Oklahoma donors — Oklahoma City oilman Harold Hamm, who gave Trump’s campaign the $5,400 maximum a week before speaking on Trump’s behalf at the Republican National Convention; Tulsa coal executive Joe Craft, who also gave the maximum a week before the RNC; and Oklahoma City furniture retailer Bill Mathis, who kicked in just after the convention.

The explosion of third-party “dark money” makes figuring out who is really spending how much on whom more complicated than it used to be. But Craft, who has given more than $330,000 to the Republican National Committee the past two years, does not seem to have given anything to Trump-connected PACs.