Carter Nutt cracks the code, he and twin brother Dylan go 1-2 at Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit Stop 4 on Douglas Lake

JEFFERSON COUNTY, Tenn. (May 10, 2026) – There are a number of historically notable sets of brothers in bassin’, and some are very much in action today. But there probably isn’t a hotter set than twins Carter and Dylan Nutt, who have made it look easy recently most times they launch their boats. In Stop 4 Presented by Phoenix Boats of the Warehouse Pro Circuit Presented by MillerTech, the pair finished 1-2 at Douglas Lake, and their biggest competition was each other.

Earning his first Pro Circuit win, Carter weighed a massive 18 pounds, 8 ounces on the final day for a 48-0 total and the $100,000 payday. Finishing second, Dylan racked up 17 pounds on the final day for a 47-10 total and a $23,900 payday.

The win also qualified Carter for REDCREST in 2027, and he took over the lead in the 7 Brew Angler of the Year race, ahead of fellow University of North Alabama angler Banks Shaw. While the Nutt brothers stuck offshore, Keith Poche finished third with 47 pounds that he caught off the grid, and Will Harkins fished docks to catch a big bag on Day 3 and moved into fourth.

Offshore skills fuel Nutt
Growing up in Tennessee, Carter is well-versed in the offshore game. He learned it in high school before forward-facing sonar, and he’s perfected it in college. This week, the depth of knowledge that both brothers have was on full display. Each day, Carter caught the majority of his fish on a crankbait, and most of his weight in the event came with minimal aid from LiveScope.

“I was running the whole lake every day, from the dam to pretty far up the river,” he said. “I was just running around, scanning a bunch of stuff, trying to find places where they were set up good. Run and gun, and stumble on a couple places where they were biting.”

Pretty early in practice, Carter realized the smart play was to put some hours on his Mercury and devote a lot of effort to scanning.

“The first morning of practice, I spent the first hour looking for a shad spawn,” he said. “I didn’t see any shad spawn activity, and nobody we were staying with saw any kind of shad spawn. So, at that point, I stayed out deep the entire time. I feel like that’s one of my strengths, I felt really comfortable with what I was doing.”

During the event, it wasn’t uncommon for Carter to go 15 or 20 minutes between casts, as he ran and idled, looking for the best places to stand up and fish. That’s difficult for anyone not trained on the Tennessee River, but easy when you have the history and know the potential of the strategy.

“I scanned a lot of the same stuff every day, but I fished different places every day,” Nutt said. “I would scan all the same areas, depending on if they were set up really good or not, I would fish them. I want to see a whole bunch of fish down there, out here, they move around a lot, and if someone fished them before you, they can scatter. You really want to be fishing for the fish that haven’t really been messed with, and are grouped up pretty good. Especially fishing for them without ‘Scope, that’s the best.”

Douglas is famous as a lake where fish are caught super deep, but this week, Carter did most of his work in fairly reasonable depths. He and Dylan also concentrated a lot of effort in the upper region of the lake, which may have helped separate them.

“I recognized in practice, it seemed like there was better quality up there,” Carter said. “Down the lake, there were so many small ones in those schools. There were also a lot of big ones, but those big ones were super smart.

“Pretty much all the fish I weighed came fairly shallow, I’d say 18 to 20 feet, but I weighed a couple that were 25. I had schools that were in 35 foot, I just never caught any big ones out of them.”

A handful of deep crankbaits did most of the damage for Nutt, with a Berkley Dredger 25 among them. He also caught fish on a jig with a Berkley PowerBait MaxScent Crud Craw, as well as a Berkley Lab Series Minnow. Using 12-pound Berkley Gin Clear line was key for his cranking, and he also used pretty fast reels. For his deepest, biggest baits, he used a 7-foot, 11-inch, heavy Fenwick World Class stick, paired with a 6.8:1 Abu Garcia Zenon. For his slightly lighter duty cranking, he used a 7-11, medium heavy Abu Garcia Veritas Winch, with an 8.3:1 Zenon.

Finally Carter’s time on top
Carter has won in solo competition at the BFL level and elsewhere, but when it comes to signature wins, Dylan has thus far had the edge. Sunday, it was Carter’s time to shine.

“I went out every day not really knowing what was going to happen, not really knowing where I was going to catch them,” he said. “I just figured it out as the week went on, and I had a couple places that were really, really good, and caught some big ones. Today was unbelievable.”

It started off hot – Carter popped a big one out of a school that had been good for about 12 pounds every day, but no giants. Still, he didn’t really expect to be sharing the stage with Dylan when it came down to it at weigh-in.

“I knew it was a possibility, but how big of a bag I had, that was totally out of leftfield,” he said. “I caught a 4 ½ pretty early this morning. Then, I caught a 2 ½ and a 3-pounder, and I knew I was putting myself in the right position. When I had over 18 pounds, I knew it was a possibility. Then, Dylan pulled up, and he only had four, and he caught a 3 ½ and had an ounce more than me on his Bubba. After that, I wasn’t as stoked, I was trying to catch another. I thought he was going to win it.”

Pulling into the same spot as Carter, Dylan quickly minnowed up his fifth fish late in the day, and it was a big one. It was a moment that resonated on MLFNOW! – was Carter really ok with Dylan whipping in for a quick fish?

According to Carter, he was totally in the clear.

“I was a little less cool when he had more than me, but we fish as a team,” he said. “Scanning a lot in practice, you don’t really get to sample a lot of the schools. So, we were able to talk about where we were finding better size, and baits they were biting better. We scanned the entire lake, and we found pretty much every school in the lake.”

And, considering Carter finally got a big win of his own, it’s probably safe to say that he’s fine letting Dylan catch a fish or two in front of him.

“He’s had his moments. I’m super happy to finally get one for myself,” Carter said. “It’s super cool. To get a win on this level, it’s unbelievable. It’s crazy.”

The top 20 pros at the Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit Stop 4 on Douglas Lake Presented by Phoenix Boats finished:

1st:        Carter Nutt, Nashville, Tenn., 15 bass, 48-0, $100,000
2nd:      Dylan Nutt, Nashville, Tenn., 15 bass, 47-10, $23,900
3rd:       Keith Poche, Cecil, Ala., 15 bass, 47-0, $19,300
4th:       Will Harkins, Blairsville, Ga., 15 bass, 45-14, $17,400
5th:       Aaron Yavorsky, Palm Harbor, Fla., 15 bass, 42-3, $16,500
6th:       Harbor Lovin, New Concord, Ky., 15 bass, 42-0, $15,600
7th:       Colby Miller, Elmer, La., 15 bass, 41-13, $14,700
8th:       Brody Campbell, Oxford, Ohio, 15 bass, 41-9, $13,700
9th:       Bobby Lane, Lakeland, Fla., 15 bass, 41-7, $12,800
10th:     Drew Boggs, Lebanon, Tenn., 15 bass, 41-6, $11,900
11th:     Ott DeFoe, Blaine, Tenn., 15 bass, 41-1, $10,000
12th:     Drew Gill, Mount Carmel, Ill., 15 bass, 41-1, $10,000
13th:     Marty Robinson, Landrum, S.C., 15 bass, 40-15, $10,000
14th:     Brent Chapman, Lenexa, Kan., 15 bass, 40-13, $10,000
15th:     Chad Mrazek, Montgomery, Texas, 15 bass, 39-15, $10,000
16th:     Jason Vance, Battle Ground, Ind., 15 bass, 39-9, $10,000
17th:     Banks Shaw, Harrison, Tenn., 15 bass, 39-3, $10,000
18th:     Miles Burghoff, Dayton, Tenn., 15 bass, 39-2, $10,000
19th:     Nick Hatfield, Afton, Tenn., 15 bass, 39-2, $10,000
20th:     Levi Kohl, Edinburg, Ill., 15 bass, 38-10, $10,000

Complete results for the entire field can be found at MajorLeagueFishing.com.

Overall, there were 229 bass weighing 580 pounds, 1 ounce caught by the final 46 pros on Sunday. The catch included 45 five-bass limits.

The Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit Presented by MillerTech at Douglas Lake Presented by Phoenix Boats was hosted by Visit Jefferson County, TN.

The full field of pros competed in the two-day opening round on Friday and Saturday in a five-fish, weigh-in format. Only the top 46 pros, based on their two-day cumulative weight, advanced to the final round on Championship Sunday. The winner was determined by heaviest cumulative weight from all three days and awarded the grand prize of up to $135,000.

Television coverage of the MLF Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit Presented by MillerTech Stop 4 on Douglas Lake Presented by Phoenix Boats will air as a two-hour episode, premiering at 9 a.m. ET, on Saturday, Sept. 27 on Vice TV.

The 2026 Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit Presented by MillerTech features a field of up to 150 professional anglers competing across six tournaments around the country, for a total purse of $3.8 million and valuable 7 Brew Angler of the Year (AOY) points to qualify for the Pro Circuit Championship, set for Sept. 18-20 on the Kissimmee Chain of Lakes in Kissimmee, Florida, and a coveted spot on the MLF Bass Pro Tour – the sport’s premier circuit.

The next event for the 2026 MLF Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit is Stop 5 at Lake Eufaula Presented by K&N Filters, set for June 5-7 in Eufaula, Oklahoma.

Proud sponsors of the 2026 MLF Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit Presented by MillerTech include: 7 Brew, Abu Garcia, Athletic Brewing, B&W Trailer Hitches, Berkley, Black Buffalo, Bubba, Cigars International, Epic Baits, Grizzly, Mercury, MillerTech, OFF! Deep Woods, Onyx, O’Reilly Auto Parts, Phoenix Boats, PirahnO2, Power-Pole, Precision Sonar, Suzuki Marine, Tackle Warehouse, T-H Marine, Toyota, VOSKER, YETI and Yuengling.

For complete details and updated information visit MajorLeagueFishing.com. For regular Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow the MLF5 social media outlets at FacebookInstagram and YouTube.

About Major League Fishing
Major League Fishing (MLF) is the world’s largest tournament-fishing organization, producing more than 250 events annually at some of the most prestigious fisheries in the world, while broadcasting to America’s living rooms on CBS, Discovery, Outdoor Channel, VICE, World Fishing Network, RFD-TV, Game & Fish TV and Rumble, and on demand on MyOutdoorTV (MOTV). Headquartered in Benton, Kentucky, the MLF roster of bass anglers includes the world’s top pros and more than 30,000 competitors in all 50 states and 20 countries. Since its founding in 2011, MLF has advanced the sport of competitive fishing through its premier television broadcasts and livestreams and is dedicated to improving the quality of life for bass through research, education, fisheries enhancement and fish care.

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