Then try
DRAM tCL -6
DRAM tRCD - 8
DRAM tRP - 7
DRAM tRAS - 21
General rules (but they can be broken when you know parameters completely):
1) tCL + tRCD + tRP = tRAS
2) tRCD is the most sensitive, so increase it first to achieve stability; then tRP next.
3) tCL is the least sensitive, so increase it last.
4) I'm almost certain that you will not have to change the command rate from 1.
5) Using these general rules means that I'll go up two steps [(but only on one parameter at a time) for tRCD and then tRP] before increasing tCL one step. Then repeat the process.
Here's additional adjustments to eck out that last bit of extra performance, but make sure that you've saved your last, best settings first. Also keep in mind that a flaw in all of the bioses only allows you to save one profile, even though there appears to be 4 spaces to save them/it.
QPI - 5.8+ rather than 4.8+
Frequency/Voltages
CPU0 Vcore Boot - 1.33125
CPU1 Vcore Boot - 1.31875
CPU0 Vcore Eventual - 1.34375
CPU1 Vcore Eventual - 1.33125
Boot CPU VTT - 1.375 (both CPUs)
Eventual CPU VTT - 1.4 (both CPUs)
DimmCPU0 Vcore 1.65
DimmCPU1 Vcore 1.66
IOH - 1.4
CPU PLL (both CPUs) - 1.845
CPU PWM Freq - 1210 (both CPUs)
Signal tweaks
PCIe - Auto (both CPUs)
Max positive values for: IOH, CPU to CPU (both directions), all CPU DDR
Max negative values for: both CPU Impedance and both QPIs
Caveat: Mileage may vary, but these get me over a 35,000 score for Geekbench2 using the same base CPU frequency as your system.
http://browse.geekbench.ca/geekbench2/581886