Kenney wins FLW Tour season opener on Kissimmee Chain

Just when it looked like JT Kenney had run away with title on Lake Toho Wesley Strader and Scott Canterbury made it interesting. AnglersChannel Insider Vance McCullough followed the action on the water today and filmed footage for an exciting episode of the Progressive Bass Wrap Up TV Show. We watched Canterbury go to work and we watched Kenney struggle. We will cover the details soon on AnglersChannel.com so check back with us for videos and news. As for now, the Bassmobile has a 3 hour ride to make so we'll just say that Kenney, with only 9 pounds, 4 ounces today, totaled 76-even for the win over Canterbury's 75-5 and Strader's 74-11.Kennto ey keyed on lily pads where he blind casted a Gambler Fat Ace on a Reins Tungsten weight and 17-pound Berkley fluorocarbon to spawning bass he marked as GPS waypoints in practice.


Northwestern State Team Of Cooper, Ledet Win College Central Regional Title On Red River

Hometown heroes John Ledet and Justin Cooper of Northwestern State University brought in the biggest bag of the final day weighing 17-0 to take home the title of 2015 Carhartt Bassmaster College Series Central Regional presented by Bass Pro Shops champions with a three-day total of 30-9.

In addition to their win on the Red River, Ledet and Cooper qualify for the 2015 Carhartt Bassmaster College Series National Championship along with the remainder of the Top 14 teams from the Central Regional.

“The good Lord blessed us today,” Cooper said. “We went into some spots that I’ve had a lot of success in before, and we just caught them.”

After starting the event off a little slow with only two fish for 6-15, it was apparent that the local favorites going into the event were around the right quality of fish. However, the brutal cold front that moved in on the final day of practice was something that, local or not, made catching numbers of fish on Thursday very difficult.

On Friday, Ledet and Cooper brought in three fish for 6-10 and found themselves in seventh place headed into the final day. Their 17-0 Saturday weight was the second biggest bag of the entire tournament and enough to rocket Northwestern State to the top of the leaderboard and grant them a win by a margin of 4 pounds.

“The first two days we tried to wait out our prespawn fish that we had found, but they wouldn’t bite fast enough,” Ledet said. “Then today we decided we had to change things up if we wanted to win this thing. We started to run and gun and finally ran into a school of fish that wanted to bite.”

Ledet and Cooper caught most of their limit today fishing a flat filled with lily pad stems in the Little Jungle. Their kicker, a big female weighing 6-2, came off that same flat.

“I caught that fish on a 3 1/2-inch V&M Baby Split Tail Beaver in about 5 feet of water next to a sunken duck blind,” Cooper said.

Evan Smith and Aaron Sarna of Arkansas Tech University finished the Central Regional in second place making a big move on the final day with a 12-0 bag that gave them a total of 26-9 for three days.

Dwight Camp and Jonathan Furlong of Southeastern Oklahoma University fell to third place on the final day after taking the lead on Day 2 with the Bass Pro Nitro Big Bag of the event weighing 17-8 and worth a $250 Bass Pro Shops gift card.  Their final round weight of four fish for 5-7 brought their three-day total to 25-3.

The 6-10 lunker caught by Hunter Leppert and Cole Eubanks of Arkansas Monticello on Day 2 held on to the Carhartt Big Bass honors for the Central Regional. The team will be awarded a $500 Carhartt gift card.

The Livingston Lures Leader Award of a $250 gift card will be awarded to Ledet and Cooper.

For a complete list of Saturday’s results, photos and video from on the water, visit Bassmaster.com.

Local hosts for the event include the City of Natchitoches, the Red River Waterway Commission and Northwestern State University.


Kenney punts; maintains huge lead on FLW field at Toho

Despite a smaller bag, JT Kenney was all smiles as he stayed over 12 pounds ahead of the field. photo by Vance McCullough

JT Kenney decided to “play defense” today. He only caught 14 pounds, 5 ounces of Lake Toho bass. It was enough to maintain a 12-and-a-half-pound lead over the rest of the field on the 3rd of 4 competition days at the FLW Tour season-opener on the Kissimmee Chain of Lakes out of the revitalized Big Toho Marina.

With a total weight of 66-12, Kenney is 12-8 in front of Wesley Strader who brought the crowd to life with a solid sack of bass that ran his total to 54-4.

Wesley Strader fired-up the crowd with a big catch. photo by Vance McCullough

Wesley Strader fired-up the crowd with a big catch. photo by Vance McCullough

Scott Canterbury made a move to 3rd. He has 53-11 heading into the final round.

Stacey King slipped to 4th but he’s happy to be here considering his recent bout with cancer. King has an even 50 pounds.

Stetson Blaylock is one ounce and one spot behind King.

Kenney says he will do tomorrow as he did today – that is, he will play the conditions. Today he scrapped the long run to his big fish in Lake Kissimmee and stayed in Toho. He threw a Nichols Lures Pulsator spinnerbait on the breezy lake under cloudy skies.

“I went into defensive mode today,” said Kenney. “I’m trying not to mess this up. I had a sizeable lead so instead of swinging for the big bag and, possibly, coming in here with a zero, I changed lakes and fished where I haven’t all week.”

Kenney said the other day that he had a pattern to catch non-spawning fish. Apparently, today’s tactic is what he spoke of. He also says he has a big area saved so tomorrow could be another 20-something-pound day. Then again, given a 12-pound lead and a complete absence of 30-pound bags this weeks (Kenney came the closest to that mark with his 29-14 on Day 1) he could punt again tomorrow and win this tourney. As the man said, “we’ll have to wait and see what the weather does.”

Watch Kenney talk about his decision in this short clip:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=RCicwW7MRFg

 


JT Kenney talks about Day3 decision to 'play defense'

JT Kenney has been smashing big limits of bass on Lake Kissimmee for 2 days but today he decided to stay on Toho and throw a Nichols Lures Pulsator spinnerbait to catch 14 pounds, 5 ounces - enough to keep him 12-8 ahead of the field. Kenney is making all the right moves this week. Hear him talk about his decision.


Kenney continues to crush 'em despite slow bite on Kissimmee Chain

4-day bass tournaments are like onions. As we peel the layers from the first 2 days of the FLW Tour stop on the Kissimmee Chain of Lakes we are starting to get a feel for how successful anglers are fishing the lakes.

Wacky weather has kept the fishery from showing all it can produce, but numerous giant Florida bass are being caught. Fishing is slow and so are the most productive tactics.

It seems like there is a strong worm bite in the pads. Bass on the Kissimmee Chain will spawn right on the roots of lily pads when other suitable bottom content is lacking. Luke Clausen won the 2006 Bassmaster Classic by dragging a junebug worm through pads on Kissimmee in late February.

According to reports from weekend tournaments, many bass had just moved into shallow spawning cover as the FLW Tour pros readied themselves for Monday’s practice round.

The field is scattered among the 4 lakes, but Kissimmee is a favorite. Toho is also producing some respectable weights.

JT Kenney has a chokehold on the Kissimmee Chain, as well as on his fellow competitors. He prepared thoroughly and that prep is paying off as he spread his lead to a margin of better than 12 pounds over Stacey King who remained in 2nd today despite only bringing 11 pounds, 12 ounces to the scale.

Kenney crushed another 22 pounds, 9 ounces today to run his total to 52-07.

He said he is throttling his areas and then heading to new water each day. He waypointed numerous places where big bass bit his hookless lures in practice. The fish have still been there for him during tournament hours.

A noted flipper, Kenney said he is casting for his fish this week.

The cut weight (Top 20) which is cleverly sponsored by Buck Knives, was 30-12.

Big bass of the day and of the tourney so far weighed an even 11 pounds. Ramie Colson Jr. said it’s the biggest bass he’s ever caught.

That one fish is heavier than the average bag brought in by Tour pros so far (10 pounds, 12 ounces).

But then, that’s Florida fishing isn’t it?

A lot can happen over the next 2 days. If Kenney continues on his current pace he’ll break the century mark and win by 25 pounds. That’s a big ‘IF’, but the man is very focused, very experienced and very capable.

Those who pursue his lead include the aforementioned Classic Champion Clausen who caught 20 pounds yesterday. In 5th place Clausen is 18 pounds behind Kenney. That’s crazy. Kenney is having one of those tournaments. When this happens it’s like watching a homerun hitter get all of one.

Just sit back and enjoy the show.


Championship Sunday - Morning Interviews With Top 10 In The Bassmasters Classic

Its Championship Sunday and we Checked in with the Top 10 to see how the wind and overcast skies would change thier game plan for today. Stay Tuned for the final weigh-in and crowning of the Classic Champion.


Kenney catches 29-14, leads FLW Tour on Toho

 

J.T. Kenney of Palm Bay, Florida, brought a five-bass limit to the scale Thursday weighing 29 pounds, 14 ounces to vault to the top of the leaderboard on day one of the Walmart FLW Tour at Lake Toho. Kenney will hold a 1-pound, 13-ounce lead over the 154-boat field heading into day two of the four-day event.

“I put a lot of work in here to get ready for this tournament,” said Kenney, an eight-time Forrest Wood Cup qualifier who has career earnings of more than $1.2 million in FLW competition. “I came over here every day for two weeks prior to the lake going off-limits and I found as many places that I could that looked perfect. I had different areas for all different wind directions and conditions. I was looking for specific spots.

 

“Then, in our official practice period, I never used a hook,” said Kenney. “I would make a cast, feel a big one hit my bait, then mark my waypoint. I have color-coded waypoints all over based on how big the fish are. I really put a lot of time and effort into this event.”

 

The hard work seems to be paying off for Kenney, as he managed to catch his entire limit of bass out of only one of his areas today.

 

“My area that I went in today was my biggest, and I just went in and beat it up,” Kenney said. “There were seven red waypoints in there and I caught six of them. I had the seventh on, but she shook off and got spooked. I caught every fish that was in there by 11 a.m. today, so I’m not going back.

 

“I’ve got eight more spots to go to. I don’t think any of those are as big or as good as my area today, so from here on out I’m going to be running around a lot more. I’m going to be fishing very specific areas.”

 

Although he is known on the FLW Tour for his prowess with a big flipping stick, Kenney said that he was casting to catch his fish today, not flipping.

 

“I’ve played this game long enough to know that everything could go downhill really fast,” Kenney went on to say. “But, I’ve got fish to go to. I’ve done my work.”

 

Right behind Kenney in second-place is legendary angler Stacy King of Reeds Spring, Missouri, who weighed in five bass for 28 pounds, 1 ounce. King was forced to withdraw from the Tour last season after being diagnosed with throat cancer and has endured multiple treatments to battle back and return to the FLW Tour this year.

 

The top 10 pros after day one on Lake Toho are:

 

1st:          J.T. Kenney, Palm Bay, Fla., five bass, 29-14

2nd:         Stacey King, Reeds Spring, Mo., five bass, 28-1

3rd:          Jason Reyes, Huffman, Texas, five bass, 21-15

4th:          Charlie Ingram, Centerville, Tenn., five bass, 21-7

5th           Lionel Botha, Fort Pierce, Fla., five bass, 20-10

6th           Alex Davis, Albertville, Ala., five bass, 20-9

7th:          Luke Clausen, Spokane, Wash., five bass, 20-0

8th:          Shane Lehew, Mooresville, N.C., five bass, 19-15

9th:          Quaker state pro Scott Canterbury, Springville, Ala., five bass, 19-1

10th:        James Biggs, Euless, Texas, five bass, 19-0

10th:        Brad Knight, Lancing, Tenn., five bass, 19-0

  

Lehew won the Bridgford Big Bass Award on the pro side Thursday with a bass weighing 9 pounds, 11 ounces to win the $500 prize.

 

Overall there were 705 bass weighing 1,736 pounds, 14 ounces caught by 151 pros Thursday. The catch included 126 five-bass limits.

 

Chad Randles of Elkhorn, Nebraska, leads the co-angler division with five bass weighing 19 pounds, 0 ounces followed by John Hunter of Shelbyville, Kentucky, in second place with five bass weighing 18-4.

 

The top 10 co-anglers are:

 

1st:          Chad Randles, Elkhorn, Neb., 19-0

2nd:         John Hunter, Shelbyville, Ky., five bass, 18-4

3rd:          Ken Keirsey, Owasso, Okla., five bass, 17-1

4th:          Joshua Weaver, Macon, Ga., five bass, 15-6

5th:          Alan Lane, Church Hill, Tenn., four bass, 15-3

6th:          Kyle Prskalo, Hobart, Ind., five bass, 14-15

7th:          Josh Smith, Hamilton, Ohio, five bass, 14-14

8th:          Paul LaFleur, Benton, Ark., 14-10

9th:          Mike Devere, Berea, Ky., five bass, 14-2

9th:          Mark Holman, Cornelius, N.C., four bass, 14-2

  

Hunter caught Thursday’s Bridgford Big Bass in the co-angler division weighing 8 pounds, 11 ounces to win the $250 prize.

 

Overall there were 429 bass weighing 850 pounds, 8 ounces caught by co-anglers Thursday. The catch included 36 five-bass limits.

 

In addition to casting for top awards of up to $125,000 cash in the pro division and up to $25,000 cash in the co-angler division, anglers are also competing for valuable points in hopes of qualifying for the 2015 Forrest Wood Cup, the world championship of bass fishing. The 2015 Forrest Wood Cup will be in Hot Springs, Arkansas, Aug. 20-23 on Lake Ouachita and is hosted by Visit Hot Springs. The Forrest Wood Cup Champion could win as much as $500,000 – professional bass-fishing’s richest prize.

 

Anglers will take off from Big Toho Marina located at 69 Lakeview Drive in Kissimmee at 7:30 a.m. on Friday and Saturday and at 7:45 a.m. on Sunday’s final take off. Friday’s weigh-in will be held at the marina beginning at 3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday’s final weigh-ins will be held at the marina beginning at 4 p.m.

 

Fans will also be treated to the FLW Expo on Saturday and Sunday from noon to 4 p.m. at Big Toho Marina prior to the final weigh-ins. The Expo includes a Ranger boat simulator, the opportunity to interact with professional anglers, enjoy interactive games, activities and giveaways provided by sponsors, and learn more about the sport of fishing and other outdoor activities. All activities are free and open to the public.

 

In conjunction with the FLW Expo, the FLW “Get Outdoors. Go Fish!” Youth Fishing Derby will also be held at Big Toho Marina on Saturday from noon – 3 p.m. The derby is free and open to area youth 15 years of age and younger. FLW Tour pros who are not one of the top 20 anglers that make the Buck Knives Cut will be on hand to assist the youth. Pros Rich Dalbey and Todd Hollowell’s “Hooked on Helping” foundation will also be hosting a food drive to benefit the Second Harvest Food Bank of Central Florida. FLW fans who donate five or more cans of food will be entered to win a $50 Walmart gift card.

 

Coverage of the Lake Toho tournament will be broadcast in high-definition (HD) on NBC Sports Network (NBCSN) when Season 20 of “FLW” premieres Sept. 28 from 7 p.m.-8 p.m. ET. The Emmy-nominated "FLW" television show airs on NBCSN, the Pursuit Channel and the World Fishing Network and is broadcast to more than 564 million households worldwide, making it the most widely distributed weekly outdoors-sports television show in the world.

For complete details and updated information visit FLWFishing.com.


Despite Forecasted Weather Conditions, Angler's Choice Marine Tournament Is A Go On Smith Mountain Lake

Despite a winter storm this week that brought icy conditions – the second year in a row that winter weather has affected the first tournament of the year for the Anglers Choice Marine Tournament Trail – Saturday’s tournament on Smith Mountain Lake will go on as scheduled.

Tournament director Chris Lucas said the launch Saturday will be delayed from 7 a.m. to 8 a.m. and the weigh-in will be held at 4 p.m.

Lucas and the folks at Parkway Marina made the determination Friday morning to go ahead with the tournament. Parkway employes have applied brine to the ramp and are prepared to put down rock salt to keep the lanes from being icy and dangerous, Lucas said.

“Last year we received 8 inches of snow the day before the tournament and still had a great day the next day at our tournament,” Lucas said, “With the forecast of 50 degrees and sunny on Saturday we hope this will be a great day to be on the lake.”

Although creeks, coves and other areas of the lake have surface ice, Lucas said he was more concerned with the problems anglers could face getting to the lake on icy roads than conditions on the lake.

“Use your best judgment as to whether or not you should come to Saturday’s tournament,” he said.

And, if anglers can't make it to the tournament because of icy conditions, Lucas said he is working on getting an additional qualifier on the schedule this year like he did last year. The extra tournament would be a qualifying tournament for one or both of the Anglers Choice Classics, with no points awarded.

While the winter that won't leave has affected the opening of the Anglers Choice season, like it did last year, Lucas said he expects to have another successful tournament year with a revised framework.

“We don't have a Virginia and a Carolina Division anymore, just one trail. But we will have two Classics – a Ranger Classic and a Triton Classic. So anglers can qualify to win two boats.”

He also announced that teams will have to pay the $10 membership fee for the B.A.S.S. Toyota Tundra Team Championship in order to fish the Anglers Choice trail. Lucas said he hopes to qualify more teams for the Toyota Team Championship.

“That program came out last year and they invited Anglers Choice, along with other trails, to qualify teams for the championship. The top three teams in the championship then fish individually for a shot at going to the Bassmaster Classic,” Lucas said. “Last year our guy, Brandon Gray, won it and he fished on Lake Hartwell two weeks ago.

The Anglers Choice Tournament schedule includes: March 7, Smith Mountain Lake; March 21, High Rock Lake; April 18 and 19, Kerr Reservoir; May 2, Smith Mountain Lake; May 23, Lake Hickory; June 6 and 7, Kerr Reservoir; with the Ranger Classic Oct. 3-4 on Kerr Lake and the Triton Classic Oct. 17-18 on High Rock Lake.

 

Anglers Choice Marine Team Trail VA Division

Sat, Mar 7, 2015

Smith Mountain Lake

Parkway Marina

Call Chris Lucas 276-358-0844

www.anglerschoicemarine.com

 


High School Duo Smashes 29 Pounds To Win Tourney On Lake Toho

Teaser image:

The Citrus High School team of Hunter McPherson and Laramy Strickland brought a five-bass limit to the scale Saturday weighing 29 pounds, 3 ounces to win the 2015 Florida State High School Fishing Championship on Lake Toho. The win earned the team the title of state champions and qualified the team to compete in the High School Fishing Southeastern Conference Regional Championship tournament on Lake Lanier in September.

“We had a spot that we found in our pre-fishing yesterday that we thought was holding some good fish,” said McPherson, who won this same event last year with graduated partner Brandon Branch. “We started our morning there and caught our biggest fish of the day – a 9-pound, 12-ounce toad – on a Z-Man Chatterbait.
 
“A light went off right then,” McPherson continued. “We realized the fish had moved up a little bit, and soon we picked up an 8-pound, 10-ounce beauty on a jig just a short time later.”
 
The Hurricane duo said that green pumpkin was the most effective color that they used and that their key to victory was realizing that the fish had moved up shallow from where they had found them early in the week.
 
The top four teams on Lake Toho that advanced to the Southeastern Conference Regional Championship were:
 
  1st:       Citrus High School – Hunter McPherson and Laramy Strickland, five bass, 29-3
  2nd:      Auburndale High School – Jackson Williams and Bryce Goff, four bass, 14-6
  3rd:       West Nassau County High School – Colby Cowart and Cody Hadden, four bass, 14-1
  4th:       Bartow High School – Jeremy Morgan and Steven Singletary, four bass, 12-10
 
Rounding out the top 10 teams were:
 
  5th:       Florida Student Angler Federation – Travis Conrad and Bailey Hines, five bass, 11-8
  6th:       Bartow High School – Hunter Gadd and Shane Schmucker, five bass, 10-10
  7th:       Pine Ridge High School – Trevor Brown and Nicholas Sutton, five bass, 10-6
  8th:       Monteverde High School – Jake Carter and Will Thomas, three bass, 10-0
  9th:       Taylor High School – Austin Murray and Brayden Robinson, three bass, 9-13
  10th:     Florida Student Angler Federation – Tyler Woolcott and Parker Meadows, three bass, 9-8
 
Complete results can be found at HighSchoolFishing.org.
 
The 2015 Florida State High School Fishing Championship was a two-person (team) event for students in grades 7-12. The top 10 percent from each TBF/FLW state championship field will advance to a High School Fishing conference championship. The top 10 percent of each conference championship field will then advance to the High School Fishing National Championship, coinciding with the TBF National Championship and an FLW Tour stop in the spring of 2016. The High School Fishing national champions will each receive a $5,000 college scholarship to the school of their choice.
 
In addition to the High School Fishing National Championship, all High School Fishing anglers nationwide automatically qualify for the world’s largest high school bass tournament, the 2015 High School Fishing World Finals, held on Pickwick Lake in Florence, Alabama, on July 8-11. At the 2014 World Finals more than $40,000 in scholarships and prizes were awarded. Visit HighSchoolFishing.org for details.
 

 


Warmer Nights Could Push Wave Of Big Females To The Banks For Cbc On Lake Wateree

So far, Lake Wateree has not been producing the same big bags as it did this time last year, but that could change just in time for the Carolinas Bass Challenge tournament Saturday, according to veteran tournament angler Andy Wicker of Pomaria.

The reason the bigger fish have not been caught in numbers so far, Wicker said, is because of the prolonged cold weather that has prevailed this winter and is not extending into March, typically the time for warmer weather.

“However with two to three nights this week of a low temperature that is higher than the water temperature, that will probably change Saturday,” Wicker said. “The temperature of the lows at night, I believe, is more important than the highs in the springtime. If you have a low that is at the existing water temperature of the lake, or higher, that means the lake is warming really fast. It’s warming during the day and at night, which is super important.”

The quick warmup should push a wave of big females to the banks by Saturday, Wicker said.

“I think the results will show it. That, being said, not all fish move up at once, so I think there will be fish caught a lot of different ways. Some will be caught on typical winter patterns on Alabama Rigs, crankbaits, and finesse worms, and there will also be some caught in some shallow water with spinnerbaits, Chatterbaits and jigs.”

Wicker, who is fishing the Bass Weekend AFT and ABA Series ad various CATT tournament in addition to the CBCs, said he and his partner reedy McGinn will be looking for the shallower routes, targeting docks, grass beds and shallow wood cover.

Noting that the Wateree tournament last year drew 147 teams, tournament director Brett Collins said he anticipates at least that many teams for Saturday's tournament, and probably more.

“We will have a lot of North Carolina teams and they love Lake Wateree,” Collins said. The tournament Saturday is the second S.C. Division CBC tournament held this year. Teams must fish three tournaments together to be eligible for the championship on Santee Cooper following the regular season.

Following Saturday's tournament on Lake Wateree, the S.C. Division moves on to Santee Cooper, Lake Hartwell and Clarks Hill before the championship.

 

Carolinas Bass Challenge - South Carolina Division

Sat, Mar 7, 2015

Lake Wateree

Clearwater Cove Marina

Call Brett Collins 803-413-7521

www.carolinasbasschallenge.com

 


Record weights to come at Toho?

The Kissimmee Chain will produce big bass and big smiles, such as this one for Danny White.

As the FLW Tour kicks off its 20th season anglers will take to the Kissimmee Chain of Lakes in Central Florida, just a little drive up the turnpike from the usual starting point, Lake Okeechobee.

Okeechobee furnished the heaviest weight total ever for an FLW Tour event when Brandon McMillan won with a 4-day haul of 106 pounds, 10 ounces in 2011.

Half of the 10 heaviest totals in Tour history were weighed in that tournament and 3 anglers broke the century mark.

Then there’s Lake Toho, where the 2015 season gets underway. On January 17, 2001 Dean Rojas set the Bassmaster record for the heaviest 1-day catch at 45 pounds, 02 ounces.

That catch came on the heels of a long cold winter that had held up the spawning process. The tourney opened on a full moon phase. On the last afternoon of practice those who were looking saw massive waves of big bass swarm the shallows of Lake Toho in an effort to make up for lost time. Nobody capitalized better than Rojas with his 9-pounds-per-fish average.

This tournament starts 6 weeks later than the aforementioned lunkerfest. January was mild enough for bass to spawn. February, especially the last couple of weeks, featured record-breaking cold. Cold enough to halt spawning activity. So the Kissimmee Chain is likely starting over with a vengeance to catch up to the calendar.

This could mean that anglers will find huge bass in great abundance once the field launches tomorrow morning.

Will we see record weights? As always, that depends. Weather forecasters call for good sight fishing conditions on Thursday and Friday, but as the weekend rolls around, cloud cover and a chance of rain may dampen the sight bite.

If somebody can get the toad bite going, or possibly the old Devil’s Horse topwater plug, they would likely make a big move when the clouds dim subsurface visibility.

The changeable weather will keep most pros from stacking up bass like cord wood for 4 straight days.

Also, look for a slightly different cast of characters than we've grown acustom to seeing atop the leader board at FLW Tour stop #1 each year. Darrell Davis knows Kissimmee very well. Van Soles won a Bassmaster Open here last year. Both could be dangerous, especially if the weather does pull a 180 and send pros scrambling for a suitable 'Plan B'.

So my prediction is that we may see a new single day FLW Tour weight record on either of the first 2 competition days but that this will turn into a topwater tourney toward the final round and while the 4-day total weight record may stand, we are in for some serious poundage on the scale this week!

 


Flip-Flopping Weather Has Red River Bass 'goofed Up' For Carhartt College Tournament

The bass were beginning to point towards coming to the banks in the Red River at Natchitoches, LA, which was setting up pretty good for the Carhartt Bassmaster College Series Central Regional tournament that started Thursday.

But then Mother Nature stepped in – again.

“The weather has been on and off,” said Northwestern University senior Phillip Borel. “One day it will be cold and raining and the next day just raining and warm. I figure the weather has got the fish all goofed up.”

The real kicker came last week, he noted, just as the fish were starting to get the urge to move shallow.

“Last week it snowed on Wednesday. That knocked the water temperature down. The fish are just kind of shocked right now.”

Borel, who graduates in May with a degree in criminal justice and plans to stay in school two more years to complete a degree in engineers, said the Red River is not really a home water advantage for the bass team members at Northwestern, which is located in Natchitoches.

“We are right here on it, but we don't fish it that much because Toledo bend is so close. Most of us would much rather go and fish Toledo Bend.”

With more cold rain expected this weekend, there will be no relief for the college anglers, but Borel said he has a couple of spots that he thinks will produce.

“When it warms up the fish will be in those spots. Right now they have moved off those spots so we have to find them. They may be shocked right now, but if you put a bait right in front of them they will bite.”

He and his Northwestern teammates will have a full three days to figure them out. The Carhartt Bassmaster College Series has been expanded to three-day tournaments for 2015, instead of two, B.A.S.S. announced as it revealed the 2015 College Series schedule.

“College teams competing in our series are so strong now, they can easily step up to the challenge of a three-day tournament,” said Hank Weldon, director of the college fishing program for B.A.S.S. “It’s exciting to see the level of competition increase every year.”

 

Bassmaster Carhartt College Central Conference Regional

Mar 5-7, 2015

Red River

Grand Ecore

Natchitoches, LA,

www.bassmaster.com

 


Robby Peralta wins the Oakley Big Bass on Harris Chain with 10.15 Lb Bass

Harris Chain doesn't dissapoint as the Oakley Big Bass Tour kicked off 2015 with some fantastic weights and finishes. Richard Hartley (below) had a super catch below, but not super enough. Robby Peralta won with a 10.15 Lb kicker to win the 1st OBB event of the year-full results below the pic- Great way to start 2015!!

Richard Hartley and his Monster Florida Harris Chain BassRichard Hartley and his Monster Florida Harris Chain Bass

 

2015 Harris Chain, FL

Leaders

Rank Angler Weight
1 ROBBY PERALTA 10.15
2 JUAN FAIR 9.06
3 RICHARD ANTHONY 9.00
4 DUSTIN SNELSON 8.79
5 TOMMY FREDRICK 8.74
6 RYAN MABRY 8.65
7 CHAD SHROEDER 8.41
8 NATE STEPHENS 8.27
9 DENNIS GALASSI 8.22
10 ANTHONY BARGER 8.16

Saturday 8-9

Rank Angler Weight
1 DUSTIN SNELSON 8.79
2 CHAD SHROEDER 8.41
3 ANTHONY BARGER 8.16
4 LARKIN NOBLES 7.53
5 JAMES BADER 7.41
6 JEFF HESS 5.90
7 ALLEN WHITT 5.76
8 JOSH ALBIN 4.89

Saturday 9-10

Rank Angler Weight
1 RYAN MABRY 8.65
2 RONNIE DAVIDSON 6.13
3 STAN REEDER 5.09
4 BRADY SINGER 4.50
5 MARSHA SARVER 4.25
6 JEFF SHERRARD 4.21
7 CHRIS PAUGH 3.69
8 JOHN DARLEY 3.65

Saturday 10-11

Rank Angler Weight
1 MIKE SOLDANIA 7.74
2 VERNON KEMP 6.41
3 JIMMY SMITH 5.89
4 RICHARD HARTLEY JR 5.74
5 ERIC DUFALA 5.06
6 PHILLIP HEYDE 4.92
7 BLAINE PARTEE 4.84
8 TYLER MARING 4.60

Saturday 11-12

Rank Angler Weight
1 TOMMY FREDRICK 8.74
2 DENNIS GALASSI 8.22
3 BOB BLACKMON 6.43
4 DAVID HUNTER 6.15
5 WALLACE BERTSCHIN 5.55
6 KEVIN HIRES 5.40
7 ROY JONES JR 4.92
8 BLAINE PARTEE 4.69

Saturday 12-1

Rank Angler Weight
1 ROBBY PERALTA 10.15
2 MARVIN CARR 7.27
3 WILLIAM BARRETT SR 5.84
4 RONALD SHELFER 5.69
5 TRAVIS DETWEILER 5.58
6 CHAD SHEFFIELD 5.48
7 BRYAN HOLMES 5.25
8 MARLEE NORMAN 5.06

Saturday 1-2

Rank Angler Weight
1 TERRY FREE 7.25
2 CLAYTON WIGGINS 7.24
3 MARK WOOLUM 6.62
4 JD CRAWLEY 6.49
5 SEAN WOOTEN 6.43
6 RICK WEST 6.36
7 GLEN DAVIS 6.30
8 DUSTY MCDEVITT 6.25

Saturday 2-3

Rank Angler Weight
1 WILLIAM BARRETT 6.83
2 ANDREW HESS 6.67
3 MIKE DEWEY 6.53
4 GREG JOHNSON 6.52
5 LARRY PETTY 6.30
6 CHERI BLOOM 6.17
7 JIMBO DENTON 6.10
8 RICHARD HARTLEY JR 5.78

Sunday 8-9

Rank Angler Weight
1 JEFF FELLOWS 6.73
2 ZACH WEIMER 6.12
3 RYON HICKS 5.93
4 BRIAN ELDER 5.25
5 DEAN MORRIS 4.77
6 JIMMY SMITH 4.32
7 JESSE HERRINGSHAW 4.08
8 RICHARD HARTLEY JR 3.97

Sunday 9-10

Rank Angler Weight
1 JEFF FELLOWS 7.54
2 SEAN WOOTEN 7.21
3 LANCE PEMBLE 7.15
4 KENT SMART 6.12
5 TYLER MARING 4.55
6 RONNIE ROKISKY 4.47
7 RICK OSTERHOLT 4.40
8 TOBY YOUNG 4.23

Sunday 10-11

Rank Angler Weight
1 JEFF FELLOWS 6.08
2 STEVE MCENTYRE 5.81
3 JEFF SHERRARD 5.49
4 RICHARD ANTHONY 5.42
5 SKYLER ALMAND 5.36
6 GLEN DAVIS 4.70
7 MARK ROBERTS 4.54
8 RONNIE SEETS 4.40

Sunday 11-12

Rank Angler Weight
1 NATE STEPHENS 8.27
2 CORY MCGLAMERY 5.36
3 STEVEN MCENTYRE 5.15
4 JOE CARTER 5.04
5 DENNIS GALASSI 4.88
6 MICHAEL DOLAN 4.86
7 MIKE SOLDANI 4.73
8 JIMMY SMITH 4.24

Sunday 12-1

Rank Angler Weight
1 DANNY GLISSON 7.04
2 GARY CRISP 5.28
3 DAMON COPPOLA 5.01
4 JOE DAVIS 4.84
5 JEFF POWELL 4.75
6 BRAYDEN RAKES 4.73
7 BRANDON BRINKMAN 4.25
8 RANDY HAMRICK 4.16

Sunday 1-2

Rank Angler Weight
1 JUAN FAIR 9.06
2 MARSHA SARVER 7.74
3 RICK WEST 6.48
4 JUAQUIN COVAS 6.25
5 ERIC PANZIRONI 5.03
6 GEORGE WILBANKS 4.72
7 TIM DEEN 4.59
8 KIM HEBB 4.13

Sunday 2-3

Rank Angler Weight
1 RICHARD ANTHONY 9.00
2 JEFF ROBINSON 8.01
3 ERIC DUFALA 6.80
4 BILL BROOKER 6.32
5 RON DOW 5.61
6 TOBY YOUNG 5.41
7 ROBBY PERALTA 5.16
8 WILLIAM NORRIS 5.06

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Slow Bite Due To Extreme Cold No Problem For Ashley In Bassmaster Classic On Lake Hartwell

 

I can catch ‘em shallow, I can catch ‘em deep,
Open water or the back of a creek,
The wind, the rain, to me it’s all the same,
I make a living playing this game,
I thank the Lord above every time I can,
I get to be a fisherman.

The 2015 Bassmaster Classic on Lake Hartwell opened with Casey Ashley singing the National Anthem. It ended last Sunday with the pro angler – and accomplished singer, songwriter and musician – hoisting the winner's trophy and being serenaded by the song he recorded a few years ago about being a professional angler.

As the B.A.S.S. sound system blared Ashley's song, Fisherman, the Elite Series pro from just down the road in Donalds, S.C., realized the dream he had been having for the past seven years had come true. Ashley finished 17th in the 2008 Classic on Lake Hartwell, his first time in the championship, and he has been itching to get another shot on his home lake ever since.

He did not disappoint himself, his legion of fans from around Donalds or B.A.S.S. fans everywhere. But the road to victory was not an easy one, he will be the first to admit. Things did not go exactly how he had scripted the three days of competition.

In the pre-practice period three weeks before the Classic, Ashley found the fishing outstanding.

“That Friday I had probably 30 bites or more, not catching, just bites, and they were where I wanted them. Then it started getting cold and on Saturday the bite fell off a little and the next day it fell off a little more.”

Then the lake went off-limits until the Wednesday of Classic Week when the anglers were allowed on the water for a final check before the actual competition.

“It did not do anybody any good to go fishing that day,” Ashley said. “That was right after a cold front came through. It was cold – the high was 43 degrees – and the wind was blowing 20 to 30 miles per hour. I did not fish any of the stuff I would fish in the tournament, but I fished stuff I should have got bit on, but I only had four bites all day.”
If he thought it was cold that day, it felt even colder when the Classic began. So cold, in fact, that B.A.S.S. delayed the first day launch for an hour and a half as a safety precaution.

“I wanted the tournament to be cold – cold and tough – but I did not want it to be that cold,” he said. “That day on the water was the coldest I ever fished.”

The way Ashley had it figured he would go out each morning and catch an early limit on a Blade Runner type lure his father had made, then move to the docks and brushpiles with a jig and upgrade his limit with bigger fish. But the jig bite never materialized.

Ashley started out on Friday in 6th place with a limit that weighed 15 pounds, 3 ounces. On Saturday he moved up to 5th place with another limit at 14 pounds, 11 ounces.

At that point, he said, he realized his planned strategy was not working out. To win he knew he was going to have to abandon the jig and throw the Blade Runner all day long. The first couple of hours would be critical because after that the bite would slow down.

“If I had to order up a day to go fishing on Lake Hartwell that Sunday was it,” Ashley said. “It was a really dark, gloomy nasty day, the kind of day when the fish will bite.”

Before the tournament his dad gave him a bag full of the hand-crafted Blade Runner-type lures and Ashley thew the lures all day long on Sunday in pockets, anything with a creek channel in it.

“That's what those fish need this time of year. They run up the creeks where the freshwater is coming in, where the oxygen is best,” he said.

Usually the fish will be more to the backs of the creeks, holding in 25 feet of water at the deepest point, but that day they were further out, he said.

“The cold front had pushed them out and all the fish I caught came from 35 to 40 feet of water. It was so deep I had to fish it really slow and it was hard to keep it down in the strike zone. It was painful – but it's easier to fish that slow when you are getting bites.”

On the final day of the Classic Ashley came to the scales with the second heaviest limit of the tournament at 20 pounds, 3 ounces, to give him 50 pounds, 1 ounce for the win – more than 3 pounds ahead of Bobby Lane in second place.

Ashley noted that he is one of the few anglers who has won a Classic on his home waters, despite all of the distractions and potential pitfalls that come with the scenario.

“I tell everybody the hometown advantage can be really good or it can really hurt you. There is no in-between,” Ashley said. “But in this tournament, with the cold front making the fish stop biting and with me knowing the lake so well, I knew the areas the fish would be in as the tournament progressed and the lake got more stable. I knew where they lived.”

 


Keowee Bass Tournament To Benefit Wounded Warriors In The Carolinas

Tournament anglers are noted for two characteristics that are not necessarily related to fishing – most are very patriotic and they love to support charities, especially if they can do it while fishing. So the first ever Wounded Warrior Project Benefit Bass Tournament that will be held on Lake Keowee Saturday is the perfect combination.

“A friend of mine down east in North Carolina joined a club that takes wounded veterans hunting,” said Bryan Yates, a member of the Mountain Elite Bass Series, an open club in Waynesville, N.C., for anyone who likes to fish. “We do a charity each year and we were trying to figure out which charity we would support this year. We decided to do a bass tournament and raise money for the Wounded Warrior Project.”

Yates registered the tournament with WWP and plans are to make it an annual event, he said. Partnering with Upstate Warriors Solution in Greenville, S.C., the money will be directed to wounded warriors in the Carolinas to pay for treatment and equipment not covered by insurance.

“It blows my mind,” Yates said. “They go over there and fight and you'd expect our government would pay 100 percent, but unfortunately, that is not the case.”

Yates said almost 50 anglers had registered by the first of the week and more are expected by tournament time. The tournament received a big boost during the weigh-in at the Bassmaster Classic last weekend when pro Edwin Evers urged anglers to support it.

Evers, from Talala, Okla., took a brochure from an information box at the launch ramp and read it onstage, telling the crowd how important it is to support the effort to help the Wounded Warriors.

Yates said the tournament will feature 10 special guests – all Purple Heart recipients, three of them Medal of Honor winners – plus the fathers of two soldiers who were killed in action. Capt. Bill Plumley, owner and operator of Capt. Bill's Fishing Adventures on Lake Hartwell will bring his 26-foot boat and take some of the wounded veterans in attendance out on the lake. Other wounded vets, some in wheelchairs, will be ferried on the lake by other anglers.

Entry fee for the tournament is $100, with payout to the top three places plus Big Fish. After the payout, which will be about 20 percent of the total from entry fees, 80 percent will go to the Wounded Warrior Project. Barbecue will be served at $10 per plate, with 20 percent of the total going to WWP and special T-shirts will sell for $20 each with 100 percent going to WWP, Yates said.

“I think this shows how us in the outdoors support our wounded veterans,” Yates said. “They go and fight to give us the freedom to do what we like to do.”

 

Wounded Warrior Project Benefit Bass Tournament

Sat, Feb 28, 2015

Lake Keowee

Gap Hill Landing

Call Bryan Yates 828-506-2034

Email: [email protected]

 


Chickamauga Producing Record Bass In Time For Chattanooga Bass Association Opener

The Chattanooga Bass Association opens its 2015 season on Lake Chickamauga Saturday with anglers having an increased anticipation of catching some really hefty largemouths. The reason: An angler practicing for a tournament on Feb. 13 reeled in a new state record largemouth bass at a whopping 15.2 pounds.

It may have been Friday the 13th, but it definitely was not a bad luck day for Gabe Keen of Dayton, Tenn., who broke a record that has stood in Tennessee for more than 60 years. Keen caught the fish on a Tennessee Rig fitted with Zoom Super Flukes. He said he is convinced there's another state record, maybe more than one, in Chickamauga.

“I think there's some more 15- to 16-pound fish in the lake,” he said.

State wildlife officials were not surprised the record was broken in Chickamauga and TWRA fisheries biologist Mike Jolley had said for some time he expected the lake to produce the next state record.

Jolley said he is awaiting DNA test results, but he expects the fish is a cross between one of the Florida largemouth bass stocked in the lake and a northern largemouth that is the native species in the lake.

While another state record might not be in the cards for Saturday's tournament, there is real anticipation that some excellent quality fish will be weighed in, said Chattanooga Bass Association Vice President Brad Ferguson.

“There have been several other big fish caught recently, 11- to 12-pound fish,” Ferguson said. “The huge fish we are seeing are the result of the Florida strain stocking program that was begun back in the mid- to late '90s.”

Ferguson said the series also expects a big turnout for the opening tournament Saturday.

“We had a pre-meeting last Sunday and more than 100 showed up. A lot that I know who fish were not able to attend. I could not nail down a number, but we are looking for 80 or more boats for the first tournament.”

If one of those anglers does catch another state record, or even a 10-pound-plus largemouth, he will have to do it without the lure that Keen used to set the record two weeks ago. Under the new CBA rules for 2015, the Alabama/Tennessee Rig is banned. No umbrella-type rigging, harness of other device designed to hold more than one lure at a time – with or without hooks – is allowed.

The CBA's 2015 schedule includes: Feb. 28, March 14, April 11, May 16, June 6 (Night), June 27 (Day). July 11 (Day), July 25 (Night), Aug. 15 (Day), Aug. 29 (Night), Sept. 19 and Oct. 10, with the Classic Nov. 7-8.

 

Chattanooga Bass Association #1

Sat, Feb 28, 2015

Chickamauga Lake

Chester Frost Park

Call 423-593-3343

Email: [email protected]

www.cbatournament.com

 


Lookback at the Classic Bass Master Classic as well as look ahead this weekend with AC Pro Staffer Rob Digh

AC Pro Staffer Rob Digh talks about the big win for local angler Casey Ashley as well as some upcoming events this weekend, including the BFL on Norman-where Rob says it will take 20 LBS to win!!


Powroznik cops to 'cheating' at Classic - well, almost.

"I consider it cheating" said Jacob Powroznik concerning his use of extremely advanced electronics in the recent Bassmaster Classic on Lake Hartwell. Hear him explain.


Ram Trucks named official tow vehicle of FLW

FLW, the world’s premier tournament-fishing organization, and the Ram Truck brand announced today a strategic marketing agreement that names Ram the official tow vehicle of FLW. Terms of the agreement were not disclosed.
“With its best-in-class fuel economy, best-in-class towing, best-in-class payload and best-in-class torque, Ram will find an appreciative audience among the hundreds of thousands of anglers that FLW touches each month,” said Trish Blake, President of FLW Marketing. “This loyal group of truck buyers will embrace Ram like no other consumer group the company currently targets.”
Ram trucks will be displayed at all FLW Tour Expos and prominently featured at the 20th anniversary Forrest Wood Cup in Hot Springs, Arkansas, Aug. 20-23. The sponsorship also includes exposure for Ram across all FLW media platforms, including FLWFishing.com, FantasyFishing.com, FLW Bass Fishing magazine, social media and the “FLW” television show, which airs on the NBC Sports Network WFN and Pursuit.
“Ram truck owners are deeply involved with the outdoors and more than 40 percent name fishing their top hobby,” said Bob Hegbloom, President and Chief Executive Officer, Ram Brand, FCA - North America. “Our broad line of hard working Ram trucks are a perfect match for anglers and outdoorsmen. Ram’s partnership with FLW is a great opportunity to show our capability and support.”
In addition to significant media exposure through FLW media properties Ram dealers nationwide have the opportunity to host pro days and offer contingency awards tied to FLW tournaments.

Deep thoughts from Classic competitors

Depth is a key factor in finding fish. During the Classic on Hartwell most pros found two primary zones - 10 feet or less, and 30-to-35 feet - that produced the majority of their fish. Hear them explain how and why they dialed-in on these depth zones.


Patterns That Produced At 2015 Bassmaster Classic

Top performers tell which patterns, lures, techniques they used to place 2nd through 6th in the 2015 Bassmaster Classic.


Casey Ashley's 2015 Bassmaster Classic Winning Ways

Casey Ashley gives a detailed description of his winning gameplan including locations, technique, lure (homemade) and how he fishes the lure. Unless you're friends with his dad, good luck getting one of the winning bladerunner heads. The Zoom Super Fluke Junior is widely available though.


Looking back on the 35+ LB Winning bag on Toldeo Bend Sat-Holy COW!

Teaser image:

 

 

 

For Immediate Release. For more info, contact Greg Duncan,
Blue Heron Communications, 800-654-3766 or [email protected].   
 

Editor's Note: Photo caption: First-place finishers James Benedict (left) and Bart Blakelock (right) show off their plaques at the TXTT event at Toledo Bend on Feb. 21. (To download a high-res image, please visit  https://blueheronticker.files.wordpress.com/2015/02/img_74308.jpg)

 

 

 

Texas Team Trail Presented by Cabela's Wraps up Toledo Bend Event

 

Winning anglers weight a 35-pound, five-fish stringer 
 

 

NORMAN, Okla. (February 23, 2015) - Bart Blakelock, of Lake Charles, Louisiana, and James Benedict, of Torbert, Louisiana, brought 35.56 pounds of bass to the scales to win the 2015 Texas Team Trail presented by Cabela's (TXTT) event at Toledo Bend on Feb. 21. The anglers won a fully rigged Triton 189 TRX powered by a Mercury outboard, valued at $28,500. 

 

Historically, Toledo Bend has been known as a great place to go and catch numbers of largemouth bass. Its neighbor to the west, Sam Rayburn, owns the long-standing reputation of holding trophy fish, those rare giants that weigh over 8 pounds.

 

 At the second Cabela's Texas Team Trail event of 2015, Bart Blakelock and James Benedict proved that times are a changing. Toledo Bend is now producing both numbers and giants, as evidenced by the winning team catching three bass over 8 pounds, including a jaw dropping 11.42-pound kicker.

 

Blakelock and Benedict opted to fish a small ditch on the north side of the lake. The two anglers had a good feeling about the area, despite the wet and windy conditions.

 

"We fished it a week ago and the water temperature was up to about 58 or 59 degrees," said Blakelock. "Today, it was cooled down to about 53 or 54, which I thought was good for a Rat-L-Trap bite."

 

Blakelock explained that he and Benedict were targeting staging fish in six to eight feet that were on the way in. The area was protected from the blustery weather and the water clarity was perfect - stained, but not too dirty.

 

"There was a little patch of hydrilla at the end of the ditch," said Blakelock. "That was the best spot; it was about the size of two pickup trucks. We just went back and forth on that 25-yard stretch of ditch all day. I was throwing into about four and dragging into the six- to eight-foot ditch."

 

Benedict got the morning started off on the right foot. On just the second cast of the day, he loaded up on the 11.42 kicker.

 

"When he first hooked it, I got the net and thought it was about a seven- or eight-pounder," recalled Blakelock. "But when it got closer I tried to put it in the net and I didn't think it was going to fit in there at first."

 

The kicker fish earned the anglers an extra $1,270 for the Big Bass award.

 

Jonathan Simon of Orange, Texas, and Cade Durio, of Lake Charles, La., sacked a 26.28-pound limit to take home the $6,350 second-place prize. The anglers added $1,727 in Anglers Advantage cash and $250 for the boat bonus award.

 

Simon and Durio fished the mid-lake region and targeted points in 18 to 20 feet of water.

 

"We positioned the boat in 10 feet of water and used our Talons to pole down," said Durio. "That made it easy to make the right cast in that wind. And having a Ranger made getting to all those points a lot easier. Once we got set up, we caught everything on Carolina rigs with Bass Candy Flukes."

 

Clint West, of Beaumont, Texas, and Clay West, of Lumberton, Texas, finished third with a five-fish stringer weighing 26.09 pounds. The brothers took advantage of the Anglers Advantage and boat bonus contingency programs to add $1,570 and $250, respectively, for a total of $5,630 in total winnings.

 

"We started off throwing a trap and caught only one, so we changed to an Alabama rig and moved to some deeper water in the back of Housen Bay," said Clay West. "Right away I caught one about 3.5 pounds. Then there was another tournament that let out and it looked like a parade coming at us. But we stayed in our area and ended up having over 21 pounds by noon."

 

The two eventually changed spots and continued to catch quality bass, but no kickers.

 

"We decided to return and finish the day at that same spot. We caught a 6.5-pounder on a Carolina rig with 20 minutes left in the tournament."

 

 The next tournament stop for the TXTT is set for March 28 at Lake Ray Roberts. The 2015 schedule includes some legendary Texas bass fisheries and features huge payouts with unprecedented contingency opportunities.

 

For additional information, anglers are encouraged to call 210-788-4143 or check out the TXTT website at www.texasteamtrail.com. Site visitors can register for events, review the television schedule, get official Texas Team Trail gear, view results and learn more about what's in store for 2015.

 

Texas Team Trail events are made possible through the sponsorship and continued support of these well-respected brands: Cabela's, Ranger Boats, Lucas Oil, Evinrude, RAM, Mercury, Minn Kota, Triton Boats, Power-Pole, Amphibia, Arctic Ice, Stratos Boats, Lowrance, Navionics, Protect the Harvest, General Tire, SuperClean, Mustang Survival, iON Cameras, Garmin, Valley Fashions and Powertex Group.

 

For full results, please go to www.texasteamtrail.com/tournaments/events-results.

 

 

 

 

 


Classic bag's not the only impressive bags hauled in this weekend

ABA D-96 Tournament Results

Lake Greenwood – February 22, 2015

Division 96 2014-15 Season

Group picture from left to right; 1st place & Big Fish winner Jason Moyer of Greenwood, SC / 2nd place Curtis Temples of Saluda, SC / 3rd place Franklin Ramey of Abbeville, SC / 4th place Brad Fowler of Pendleton, SC / 5th place Don Kneece of Saluda, SC / 6th place Ben Little of Laurens, SC. Also pictured is Jason Moyer holding two of his fish including the tournament big fish.

First place, Jason Moyer was fishing the creeks in lower part of the lake. His fish came on crank baits, chatter baits and jerk baits giving him 5 fish weighing 20.29 pounds. That included two fish over 6 pounds with one being the 6.51 pound big fish of the tournament. Those fish were caught on a chatter bait and a crank bait. The first place finish, big fish pot and option pot earned him a payback of $ 850.

Curtis Temples finished second with 5 fish weighing 17.45 pounds. Curtis was fishing crank baits in creeks on the middle part of the lake. He was able to get on some schooling fish early to fill a limit. Curtis earned $450 with second place and the option pot.

24 anglers fished this Lake Greenwood qualifying tournament. It was another wet day and fishing was tough as 10 anglers did not bring fish to the scales. Only three 5 fish limits were brought to the scales and seven out of the twenty one anglers did not bring fish to the scales. It started out at 38 degrees and ended with the 3pm weigh-in at 56 degrees. It was raining when we started out with a 5 to 10 mph wind out of the SSW. The rain was never more than sprinkle and we got some breaks during the day but it continued again during the weigh-in. Water temperature was 44 to 47 degrees. The main lake was stained but reported clear on the very upper end.

Here’s how we finished:                    

1 – Jason Moyer, Greenwood, SC - 5 fish 20.29 lbs. BF 6.51 lbs. 200 pts. Cell # 864-344-9867

2 – Curtis Temples, Saluda, SC – 5 fish 17.45 lbs. 199 pts. Cell # 803-646-1503

3 – Franklin Ramey, Abbeville, SC – 5 fish 13.82 lbs. 198 pts.

4 – Brad Fowler, Pendleton, SC – 5 fish 13.37 lbs. 197 pts.

5 – Don Kneece, Saluda, SC – 5 fish 11.09 lbs. 196 pts.

6 – Ben Little, Laurens, SC – 5 fish 10.77 lbs. 195 pts.

7 – Rodney Cromer, Pomaria, SC – 5 fish 10.48 lbs. 194 pts.

8 – Andy Wicker, Pomaria, SC – 5 fish 10.31 lbs. 193 pts.

9 – Jay Treon, Greenwood, SC – 5 fish 9.05 lbs. 192 pts.

10 – Robin Whisenant, Aiken, SC – 2 fish 8.06 lbs. 191 pts.

11 – Steve Moeller, Waterloo, SC – 2 fish 7.91 lbs. 190 pts.

12 – Mark Richardson, Irmo, SC - 3 fish 6.67 lbs. 189 pts.

13 – Jeff Woods, Waterloo, SC – 1 fish 5.00 lbs. 188 pts.

14 – Shane Abbott, Ninety Six, SC – 2 fish 3.67 187 pts.

10 anglers did not weigh in fish - 50 pts.

Money

Jason Moyer – 1st place plaque $600 / Big Fish plaque $120 / 1st place option $130 Total - $850

Curtis Temples – 2nd place plaque $360 / 2nd place option $90 Total - $450

Franklin Ramey – 3rd place plaque $123

Brad Fowler – 4th place $94

Don Kneece – 5th place ALX Camo Hat

Ben Little – 6th place Parker Spinnerbait

 

D-96 2015 Angler of the Year

(Top 3 in points)

Sean Anderson – 799 pts.

Curtis Temples - 787

(tie)Gene Parker & Don Kneece – 779 pts.

ALX Rod Big Fish Leader for 2015

Andy Wicker – 7.18 lbs. Lake Murray, January 4, 2015

 

ALX Rods Big Fish Award for the 2015 Season (New ALX IKOS Series Rod for Season Big Fish Winner www.alxrods.com )

Local Sponsors:

Our local sponsors will be providing products or money for products for the anglers fishing Division 96 tournaments. Please give them your support by looking to them first when considering your purchases. They are supporting you!

Kneece Investigations, LLC Saluda, SC www.kneeceinvestigations.com (864-445-3713) (one stop for both your Investigative and Surveillance Equipment needs)

ALX Rods Aiken, SC www.alxrods.com (803-645-5392) Email: [email protected] (ALX Rods are available locally at Tomahawk Fishing Shop (5 Points - Columbia, SC), The Tackle Shop (Martinez, GA), Palmetto State Armory (Mt Pleasant, SC), Wacky Riggers (Salisbury, NC), Grady’s Great Outdoors (Anderson, SC) and direct at www.alxrods.com.)

 

Gene Parker’s Spinnerbaits Asheville, NC - the baits that Gene Parker used to win the 2011 ABA National Championship on Lake Murray, SC www.parkerbaittechnology.com (828-691-2277)

Results and news on www.aba-sc.com and see your photos on ‘facebook’ at D-96 American Fishing Tour

Upcoming ABA Tournaments: 

SCWBS Feb. 28, 2015              Murray – Dreher Island State Park

D-94    March 7, 2015                        Savannah River - Stokes Bluff

SC Couples March 7, 2015      Murray – Dreher Island State Park

D-26    March 8, 2015                        Clarks Hill – Wildwood Park

D-25    March 15, 2015          Hartwell – Gum Branch Mega Ramp

D-96    March 22, 2015          Murray – Dreher Island State Park

SCWBS March 28, 2015          Hartwell – Green Pond

SC Couples March 28, 2015    Hartwell – Broyles Landing

AFT National Championship   Oct. 17-23, 2015         Hartwell – Green Pond - Anderson, SC

Jason Moyer and part of his 1st place 20.29 Lb Haul!! 

Jason Moyer and part of his 1st place 20.29 Lb Haul!!

ABA Lake Greenwood Top 5

ABA Lake Greenwood Top 5


Bart Blakelock and James Benedict Crush the TTT on Toledo Bend with 35.56 Lbs-Full Results here!!

Teaser image:

 

Quick Links 

 

2015 Schedule 

Get Registered Here! 

Results 

Team of the Year Standings

 

Important Forms for 2015:

Registration Form

Contingency Form

Liability Release 

 

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Cabela's Extends Partnership with TXTT

 

Cabela's, the World's Foremost Outfitter of hunting, fishing and outdoor gear, and title sponsor of the Texas Team Trail (TXTT), has renewed its partnership with the popular bass fishing circuit with a multiyear extension.  

 

"We're thrilled to renew our partnership with Cabela's," said Mike Hastings, Texas Team Trail tournament director. "Not only are they a great partner and title sponsor for the Texas Team Trail but they're also such a well-respected brand and leader in our industry. We're fortunate to have their support and look forward to building on our relationship for years to come."

 

"Cabela's is proud to continue its support of the Texas Team Trail and the opportunities it offers anglers," said Andrea Crass, director of communications and partnerships for Cabela's. "This circuit is one of the largest and most popular team events in Texas, and we're excited for a new season that will feature some of the best fisheries in the state."

 

CLICK HERE to read more...  

 

Seven-Pound Average Seals Toledo Bend Title

Blakelock-Benedict catch 11.42 kicker to clinch TXTT victory

by Brett Carlson 

 

Bart Blakelock & James Benedict

 

MANY, La. - Historically, Toledo Bend has been known as a great place to go and catch numbers of largemouth bass. Its neighbor to the east, Sam Rayburn, owns the long-standing reputation of holding trophy fish, those rare giants that weigh over 8 pounds. At the second Cabela's Texas Team Trail event of 2015, Bart Blakelock and James Benedict proved that times are a changing. Toledo Bend is now producing both numbers and giants, as evidenced by the winning team catching three bass over 8 pounds, including a jaw dropping 11.42-pound kicker.

 

Blakelock and Benedict opted to fish a small ditch on the north side of the lake. The two anglers had a good feeling about the area, despite the wet and windy conditions.

 

"We fished it a week ago and the water temperature was up to about 58 or 59 degrees," said Blakelock, the Lake Charles, La., native. "Today, it was cooled down to about 53 or 54, which I thought was good for a Rat-L-Trap bite."

 

Blakelock explained that he and Benedict were targeting staging fish in 6 to 8 feet that were on the way in. The area was protected from the blustery weather and the water clarity was perfect - stained, but not too dirty.

 

"There was a little patch of hydrilla at the end of the ditch," he said. "That was the best spot; it was about the size of two pickup trucks. We just went back and forth on that 25-yard stretch of ditch all day. I was throwing into about 4 and dragging into the 6- to 8-foot ditch."

 

Benedict got the morning started off on the right foot. On just the second cast of the day, he loaded up on the 11.42 kicker.

 

"When he first hooked it, I got the net and thought it was about a 7- or 8-pounder," recalled Blakelock. "But when it got closer I tried to put it in the net and I didn't think it was going to fit in there at first."

 

Soon after, Blakelock got into the action with a 7-pounder and then a 3-pounder. At 9 a.m. another big fish came into the boat, this one weighing about 8 pounds.

 

"Then it slowed for a little while," Blakelock said. "In fact, we had only seven bites all day. We were having some issues with the cranking battery so we decided we would only fish until 1:30 p.m. At 1:15, I caught the 9-pounder and we decided to come in because we knew we had over 30 pounds."

 

The official winning weight for five fish was 35.56 pounds. Blakelock and Benedict caught all their fish on a Bill Lewis Rat-L-Trap in Rayburn Red color with 17-pound Seaguar fluorocarbon. For winning the second qualifier of the season, the two earned a Triton 189 TRX with 150-horspower Mercury Pro XS, valued at $28,500, $1,270 for Big Bass and $2,355 in Anglers Advantage cash.

 

"I'm so fired up; I can't believe it," said Blakelock. "We fish the lake a lot and that's the largest stringer we've ever caught in a tournament. To have a day that like that is so special. It's a once-in-a-lifetime event. Me and my partner, we are beside ourselves."

 

Simon and Durio take second

 

Jonathan Simon of Orange, Texas, and Cade Durio of Lake Charles, La., sacked a 26.28-pound limit to finish the Toledo Bend event in second place. The two earned $8,327 with Anglers Advantage and Ranger contingencies.

 

 

"We can't complain about second," said Durio. "We were fortunate to catch 26 pounds; that's a heck of a limit any day."

 

Simon and Durio fished the mid-lake region and targeted points in 18 to 20 feet of water.

 

"We positioned the boat in 10 feet of water and used our Talons to pole down," added Durio. "That made it easy to make the right cast in that wind. And having a Ranger made getting to all those points a lot easier. Once we got set up, we caught everything on Carolina rigs with Bass Candy Flukes."

 

Durio explained that their Ranger was positioned near a wall of grass. The two would throw out to bare-bottom points and then bring their baits back toward the grass.

 

"On my second cast of the morning we had one right at 8," Durio recalled. "The second cast at our next point we caught another 8-pounder. So we had a really good morning. Then we just culled ounces - catching a bunch of 3-pounders. I bet we caught somewhere around 40 keepers today; it was a very fun day to be on that lake."

 

West brothers third

 

Brothers Clint and Clay West finished third with a five-fish stringer weighing 26.09 pounds. Like Simon and Durio, the two caught three limits and culled 3-pound fish all day.

 

"We started off throwing a trap and caught only one, so we changed to an Alabama rig and moved to some deeper water in the back of Housen Bay," said Clay. "Right away I caught one about 3 1/2 pounds. Then there was another tournament that let out and it looked like a parade coming at us. But we stayed in our area and ended up having over 21 pounds by noon."

 

The two eventually changed spots and continued to catch quality bass, but no kickers.

 

"We decided to return and finish the day at that same spot. We caught a 6 1/2-pounder on a Carolina rig with 20 minutes left in the tournament."

 

The West brothers' main presentation was throwing a Hog Farmer umbrella rig with 3 1/2-inch Keitech Swing Impact Fat swimbaits. They preferred the Hog Farmer because it had five wires and eight willow blades.

 

"We were fishing the ledge right where it dropped from 15 to 25 feet. We fished hard and stayed steady."

 

After taking seventh at the season opener, the West brothers are in serious contention for the Lucas Oil Team of the Year award.

 

"Rayburn and Toledo are in our back yard, so we will have to really do our homework for the next two. But we have high expectations."

 

Goodwyn-Crelia fourth, Guidry-Ferguson fifth

 

In fourth place with five fish for 25.61 pounds was TJ Goodwyn and Philip Crelia. Behind them was Jeremy Guidry and Paul Ferguson with 25.26 pounds.

 

"We didn't catch a lot fish; we only put seven in the boat," Guidry said. "We started fishing shallow grass, but that didn't work out. So we ended up going to some deep fish and we caught 'em on V&M football jigs (with craw trailers) in like 10 to 20 feet. The wind made it real hard to stay on those offshore spots."

 

Rest of the best

 

Rounding out the top 10 teams at the 2015 Cabela's Texas Team Trail event on Toledo Bend:

 

6th: Stan Burgay and Darren Wiggins, 24.60

7th: Steve Hope and Brett Killingsworth, 23.63

8th: David Curtis and Mark Mueck, 22.67

9th: John Iles and Matt Morrison, 21.78

10th: Jamin Brower and Ricky Blankinship, 21.09

 

Up next

 

The next Cabela's Texas Team Trail event is slated for March 28 on Lake Ray Roberts in Sanger, Texas, the third of four qualifying tournaments.

       

Click for Complete Results>>>

 

 



 

 

http://texasteamtrail.com/uploads/pdf/2015_Toledo_Bend_Results.pdf?utm_source=Copy+of+Brett%27s+Rayburn+ReCap+&utm_campaign=TXTT+Champ+2015&utm_medium=email  

 


Casey Ashley Wins 2015 Bassmaster Classic With Dad's Help

Don’t expect a mad rush of customers buying Casey Ashley’s Bassmaster Classic-winning lure. His dad won’t make that many.

Ashley caught all of his 20-pound-plus winning stringer on a homemade blade runner jig head (similar in concept to the Buckeye Lures Suspin Blade or a horsey head) paired with a Zoom Super Fluke Junior.

“There may be a signature series coming, but my dad won’t be making them. He doesn’t have time or the interest to do that,” laughed the newly crowned Classic champ.

Ashley’s dad molds the simple lures for himself and his son. The key to the lure’s productivity, says Ashley, is the Sampo swivel that spins the small willow leaf blade no matter how slowly the lure is retrieved. And Ashley fishes it slower than most folks would ever imagine. “On the first day I was having to dip my rod twice on each cast to get the ice off my reel. That’s how slow I was fishing.”

He said he wishes he had scrapped the jig plan sooner. “I almost lost the tournament trying to make that work.”

Coming into the event he was certain it would be won under docks up shallow. There was a shallow bite, during the first hour of each day when bass gorged on blueback herring in small main lake pockets that drained from the bank.  

But Ashley’s dock jigging pattern didn’t play well for him. It worked for Bobby Lane who made a hard charge at the Classic title today, finishing runner-up with 46 pounds, 15 ounces to Ashley’s 50-01.

Lane caught a 6 pound, 6 ounce bass from 2 feet of water beneath a dock. “I almost didn’t (fish) it because it was so shallow.” Lane said when he reeled a second fish in, about 20 bass over 3 pounds apiece followed it to his boat and then disappeared. They all came from beneath the very shallow dock.

After the morning blitz most successful anglers went to the 30-to-32 foot depth zone where Lake Hartwell’s flooded forests become a flooded desert the rest of the way in to shore. Jacob Powroznik (5th with a total weight of 43-01) and Mike Iaconelli (6th with 42-06) said their fish in this key zone were bellied tight to the bottom. “The fish I was catching had red bellies from rubbing that clay bottom,” said Powroznik.

The position of the fish along the bottom, as opposed to being suspended, is the reason Ashley wound his lure in so slowly.

Look for videos - wherein Ashley and his fellow competitors give more details - on AnglersChannel.com.

 


2015 Bassmaster Classic Day 2 Notes - Brought To You By Buckeye Lures!

Takahiro Omori holds the lead as the 2015 Bassmaster Classic heads into the final competition day.

Exactly 1 pound separates Omori (31-11 total weight) from the reigning Bassmaster Classic Champion, Randy Howell, who is in 4th place with 30-11.

Between the two former Classic champs are Dean Rojas in 2nd with 31-9 and Mike Iaconelli in 3rd with 31-even.

Casey Ashley is 5th with 29-14.

Can Howell repeat as Classic Champion? Considering that he is closer to the top going into the final day than he was last year when he launched from 11th to win it, the smart money says ‘yes’.

And he’s running the same pattern that paid off on Guntersville last year – riprap around bridges. Howell is covering the lake. He was spotted as far up as Clemson University today.

Ike made a move up the standings on the strength of a simple game plan that he says he’ll run again tomorrow – “I’m fishing shallow for about the first hour then I’m going deep for the rest of the day.”

Ike’s deep strategy revolves around brush in 40-to-50 feet of water. All different types of brush are in play from sunken whole trees to bamboo stake beds to the more typical man-made brush piles.

He doesn’t spend much time on a spot. “I’m positioning my boat about 204 or 40 feet away and trying to just make contact with the brush. If my lure goes through and doesn’t get bit, I move on. If I catch one, I throw back in quickly to see if there’s another in there. But I’m not trying multiple lures or anything like that.”

Bobby Lane did 17 pounds, 4 ounces to move into the cut. “I caught them in 22 feet of water, 32 feet, 44 feet, and then my biggest fish came from 4 feet,” said Lane.

Lane is among a handful of anglers that have found their biggest fish in shallow water this week.

But the biggest bag belonged to the biggest mover, Coby Carden, who was the only angler to approach 20 pounds with his 19-13 effort. Carden jumped to the 7th spot on the leaderboard.

Like Lane, Carden is catching quality bass up shallow. In fact, he’s catching all of his fish up shallow. He plans to do the same tomorrow.

Cut weight was 22-3 – held by Mark Davis.

Aaron Martens had the day’s big bass at 6 pounds, 11 ounces.

Day 2 Standings:

1.  Takahiro Omori         Emory, TX               10  31-11    0
Day 1: 5   15-00     Day 2: 5   16-11
2.  Dean Rojas             Lake Havasu City, AZ    10  31-09    0
Day 1: 5   21-02     Day 2: 5   10-07
3.  Michael Iaconelli      Pitts Grove, NJ          9  31-00    0
Day 1: 4   14-07     Day 2: 5   16-09
4.  Randy Howell           Springville, AL         10  30-11    0
Day 1: 5   15-05     Day 2: 5   15-06
5.  Casey Ashley           Donalds, SC             10  29-14    0
Day 1: 5   15-03     Day 2: 5   14-11
6.  Brett Hite             Phoenix, AZ             10  29-07    0
Day 1: 5   15-07     Day 2: 5   14-00
7.  Coby Carden            Shelby, AL              10  29-00    0
Day 1: 5   09-03     Day 2: 5   19-13
8.  Paul Mueller           Naugatuck, CT           10  27-15    0
Day 1: 5   13-12     Day 2: 5   14-03
9.  Bobby Lane Jr.         Lakeland, FL             9  27-14    0
Day 1: 4   10-10     Day 2: 5   17-04
10. Skeet Reese            Auburn, CA               7  27-01    0
Day 1: 5   20-02     Day 2: 2   06-15
11. David Kilgore          Jasper, AL              10  26-11    0
Day 1: 5   14-01     Day 2: 5   12-10
12. Chris Lane             Guntersville, AL         9  26-01    0
Day 1: 5   14-00     Day 2: 4   12-01
13. Jacob Wheeler          Indianapolis, IN        10  25-08    0
Day 1: 5   12-10     Day 2: 5   12-14
14. Brandon Lester         Fayetteville, TN        10  25-06    0
Day 1: 5   11-00     Day 2: 5   14-06
15. Mike McClelland        Bella Vista, AR          9  25-06    0
Day 1: 5   12-02     Day 2: 4   13-04
16. Jared Lintner          Arroyo Grande, CA       10  25-03    0
Day 1: 5   10-09     Day 2: 5   14-10
17. Clifford Pirch         Payson, AZ               9  24-06    0
Day 1: 5   11-13     Day 2: 4   12-09
18. Justin Lucas           Guntersville, AL         8  24-02    0
Day 1: 3   08-04     Day 2: 5   15-14
19. Jacob Powroznik        Port Haywood, VA         9  24-02    0
Day 1: 4   09-02     Day 2: 5   15-00
20. Todd Faircloth         Jasper, TX              10  23-15    0
Day 1: 5   14-06     Day 2: 5   09-09
21. Jason Christie         Park Hill, OK            8  23-14    0
Day 1: 3   07-06     Day 2: 5   16-08
22. Ott DeFoe              Knoxville, TN           10  23-07    0
Day 1: 5   10-06     Day 2: 5   13-01
23. James Niggemeyer       Van, TX                  9  22-10    0
Day 1: 4   08-10     Day 2: 5   14-00
24. Keith Combs            Huntington, TX           7  22-06    0
Day 1: 5   18-08     Day 2: 2   03-14
25. Mark Davis             Mount Ida, AR           10  22-03    0
Day 1: 5   09-06     Day 2: 5   12-13
26. Greg Hackney           Gonzales, LA             7  21-14    0
Day 1: 4   14-15     Day 2: 3   06-15
27. Gerald Swindle         Warrior, AL             10  21-10    0
Day 1: 5   08-13     Day 2: 5   12-13
28. Bill Lowen             Brookville, IN           9  21-04    0
Day 1: 4   07-11     Day 2: 5   13-09
29. Randall Tharp          Port St. Joe, FL         6  20-11    0
Day 1: 2   04-08     Day 2: 4   16-03
30. Aaron Martens          Leeds, AL                8  20-11    0
Day 1: 3   07-09     Day 2: 5   13-02
31. Matt Herren            Ashville, AL             9  19-10    0
Day 1: 4   08-01     Day 2: 5   11-09
32. Edwin Evers            Talala, OK              10  19-04    0
Day 1: 5   07-04     Day 2: 5   12-00
33. John Crews Jr          Salem, VA                7  17-12    0
Day 1: 2   07-08     Day 2: 5   10-04
34. Cliff Prince           Palatka, FL              7  17-11    0
Day 1: 2   03-09     Day 2: 5   14-02
35. Cliff Pace             Petal, MS                7  16-14    0
Day 1: 2   04-05     Day 2: 5   12-09
36. Andy Young             Mound, MN                7  16-09    0
Day 1: 2   03-08     Day 2: 5   13-01
37. Brandon Gray           Bullock, NC              8  15-10    0
Day 1: 3   06-07     Day 2: 5   09-03
38. David Walker           Sevierville, TN          5  14-15    0
Day 1: 4   12-03     Day 2: 1   02-12
39. Scott Rook             Little Rock, AR          8  14-12    0
Day 1: 3   04-13     Day 2: 5   09-15
40. Stephen Browning       Hot Springs, AR          5  14-02    0
Day 1: 1   02-13     Day 2: 4   11-05
41. Chad Pipkens           Holt, MI                 6  13-14    0
Day 1: 3   07-09     Day 2: 3   06-05
42. Shin Fukae             Palestine, TX            8  13-03    0
Day 1: 5   06-14     Day 2: 3   06-05
43. Andy Montgomery        Blacksburg, SC           5  11-08    0
Day 1: 5   11-08     Day 2: 0   00-00
44. Kevin Short            Mayflower, AR            7  10-08    0
Day 1: 5   08-04     Day 2: 2   02-04
45. Chad Morgenthaler      Coulterville, IL         5  10-00    0
Day 1: 2   03-04     Day 2: 3   06-12
46. Cliff Crochet          Pierre Part, LA          3  09-14    0
Day 1: 1   02-12     Day 2: 2   07-02
47. Brian Snowden          Reeds Spring, MO         5  09-06    0
Day 1: 4   08-08     Day 2: 1   00-14
48. Jeff Lugar             Cross Junction, VA       4  09-02    0
Day 1: 1   02-04     Day 2: 3   06-14
49. Paul Elias             Laurel, MS               3  08-08    0
Day 1: 0   00-00     Day 2: 3   08-08
50. Brett Preuett          Monroe, LA               2  07-11    0
Day 1: 1   03-00     Day 2: 1   04-11
51. Teb Jones              Hattiesburg, MS          3  07-09    0
Day 1: 3   07-09     Day 2: 0   00-00
52. Morizo Shimizu         Suita, Osaka JAPAN       2  05-13    0
Day 1: 1   01-05     Day 2: 1   04-08
53. Brandon Palaniuk       Rathdrum, ID             3  05-04    0
Day 1: 1   01-07     Day 2: 2   03-13
54. Steve Lund             Glendale, AZ             1  04-15    0
Day 1: 0   00-00     Day 2: 1   04-15
55. Troy Diede             Sioux Falls, SD          0  00-00    0
Day 1: 0   00-00     Day 2: 0   00-00
55. Van Soles              Haines City, FL          0  00-00    0
Day 1: 0   00-00     Day 2: 0   00-00
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Totals
Day   #Limits    #Fish      Weight
1        24       195       490-09
2        31       208       571-05
----------------------------------
55       403      1061-14


2015 Bassmaster Classic Day 1 Press Conference Highlights

Hear the anglers tell it in their own words. Highlights from the Day 1 post-weigh in press conference featuring Casey Ashley, Skeet Reese, Randy Howell, Keith Combs, Brett Hite, and of course, tourney leader Dean Rojas.


2015 Bassmaster Classic Day 1 Notes - Brought To You By Buckeye Lures!

As the 2015 Bassmaster Classic got underway on Lake Hartwell near Anderson, SC conditions were cold but anglers were in good spirits. A huge crowd of spectators lined the frozen shore to watch the field launch from Green Pond Landing.

After a day of brutal exposure to the elements three guys separated themselves from the pack.

Dean Rojas leads with 21-2. Skeet Reese is exactly a pound behind with 20-2. Keith Combs is 3rd with 18-8 and then there’s a drop off in weight.

Brett Hite has 15-7. Defending Classic Champ Randy Howell has 15-5. Local favorite Casey Ashley is 6th with 15-3.

Just making casts was a challenge. Rojas noted that he had to dip his rod into the water to de-ice it so he could cast right up until 3 o’clock. While blastoff for the entire field was delayed for nearly two hours due to icy weather, Rojas endured an extra 28-minute wait in the proverbial ‘penalty box’.

Reese marveled at Rojas’ ability to take the lead with such a short fishing day and one that included a bunch of time wasted fighting iced-up equipment.

Rojas was penalized 28 minutes because that’s how late he was coming in from the final practice day. “I go my new Skeeter boat and my Lowrance unit on the console was set the Central Time. I thought I was coming in early, but I was 28 minutes late,” chuckled the veteran pro from San Diego, Cal. He can laugh about it now.

“My second cast I caught a fish and it was on from there,” said Rojas.

Reese also scored early. “Usually when you catch a fish on the first cast that means you’re gonna have bad luck the rest of the day, but today it meant 20 pounds.”

Another sign of struggle is getting only 5 bites. But Combs got the right 5. “I only got touched 5 times today. They were good fish. It’s that time of year when you can catch just a few but they’ll be big.”

Combs said he used 3 different lures but the banks he fished were similar, so he’s on a solid pattern. And because he mentioned fishing ‘banks’ you might think he’s fishing shallow. He is. He’s also fishing deep. Most pros said they caught fish in depths ranging from 2 feet to well over 50 feet.

Be sure to check out the video highlights from the post-weigh in press conference on the AnglersChannel.com videos page.


Dean Rojas Talks About Taking Lead At Bassmaster Classic Despite 28-Minute Penalty

Rojas was relaxed even though he spent 28 minutes in the 'penalty box' after a morning launch that was already delayed an hour and a half. He gives details about his day and the reason for his penalty.


2015 Bassmaster Classic Off To Frigid Start-Brought To You By Buckeye Lures

8:30 came and went with a dozen boats left to launch.

The 2015 Bassmaster Classic is off to a delayed start. B.A.S.S. had hoped to send the anglers off by 8:30. But boats were iced to their trailers and it took extended effort, and time, to free them and set them adrift. Boats were still leaving the dock at around 9:30.

The usual big crowd sprawled along the shore of Lake Hartwell at the newly renovated Green Pond Ramp.

The temperature was about 11 degrees, making this the coldest Bassmaster Classic launch in history.

Now the fun begins for 56 anglers. Word is that bites can be had if I guy can keep his mind on the fish rather than the weather.

See y’all at the weigh in show.

 


Jake Wheeler feels like it's "70 and sunny"

Jacob Wheeler is from Indianapolis. Understandable then that he would feel right at home as anglers launch for Day 1 of the coldest Bassmaster Classic ever.


Randy Howell Reflects On Year As Bassmaster Classic Champ

Randy Howell credits teamwork for his Classic title in a sport that many assume is an individual endeavor.


Brutal Conditions Push Odds In Favor Of Tough Guys At 2015 Bassmaster Classic

If the forecast holds true, this could be the coldest Bassmaster Classic ever. Mental toughness will count for a lot. So we posed the question to 11 top anglers:  "Are you tougher than the rest of these guys? If so, does that give you an advantage?"


Van Soles Gives Back, Brings Lakeland Junior Bassmasters To Classic

Van Soles enjoyed support from the Lakeland Junior Bassmasters club en route to winning the Open on Lake Toho and punching his ticket to bass fishing's most major tournament. He's giving back by bringing a handful of these young anglers to experience the thrill of the 2015 Bassmaster Classic.


David Walker Saves Man from Drowning on Frigid Lake Hartwell

See and hear Bassmaster Elite Series Pro David Walker tell the story of how he rescued a boatless boater from the frigid waters of Lake Hartwell during practice for the 2015 Bassmaster Classic. The boarding ladder on Walker's Ranger boat was, litterally, a life-saver.


Angler Says Texas Team Trail Tournament On Toledo Bend Could Be A 'crazy Slug Fest'

The Texas Team Trail tournament on Toledo Bend Saturday could be a “really crazy tournament,” according to pro angler and Toledo Bend fishing guide Stephen Johnston of Hemphill, Texas.

“A lot of the fish have made a big move towards the bank. They had a 200-boat tournament this past Saturday and it was a really tough bite, but it still took 26 pounds to win and 18 pounds to get a check.”

Since then, said Johnston who has guided on Toledo Bend and Sam Rayburn Reservoir for more than 20 years, a big front has moved through, bringing 30-degree nighttime temperatures.

“That is going to lower the water temperature for those shallow fish and make them sluggish,” Johnston said. “We've got one practice day on Friday and there is a 70 percent chance of rain which is going to keep the water temperature cool.”

But that, he said, might not be enough to give the shallow bass lockjaw for the tournament.

“I think so many of those big females have pushed up towards the bank it could be really crazy Saturday,” said Johnston, who predicted there could be several bags in the 30-pound range weighed in Saturday.

“So many of those 6- to 8- to 9-pound fish are weighing 2 pounds more than at any other time of the year. This past week three was an 11-pounder caught and a 12-pounder was caught last Thursday. I can see the tournament Saturday being a crazy slug fest.”

The trail drew 300 boats in the first tournament of the year on Lake Sam Rayburn Jan. 31, and tournament director Mike Hastings predicted another big turnout for the Toledo Bend tournament. The tournament series features the biggest team payouts in the state of Texas, plus many sponsor bonuses.

“The trail is a pretty neat deal and it is pushing 300 boats again this Saturday,” Johnston said. That, he said, means getting a good draw and getting on the water early.

“We drew 150 the other day on Rayburn and by the time we got up the lake there were people sitting everywhere.”

Johnston guides on Toledo Bend and Sam Rayburn. His Johnston's Guide Service is located on the southern end of Toledo Bend. Check out his guide service at http://www.johnstonfishing.com/. To book a fishing trip or inquire about gift certificates, call him at 409-579-4213 or email [email protected].

 

Texas Team Trail

Sat, Feb 21, 2015

Toledo Bend Reservoir

Cypress Bend Park

Call (210) 788-4143

www.texasteamtrail.com

 


'tough' Fishing Expected For Flw College Fishing Southern Conference Tournament On Texoma

“Man, it's been really tough.”

That was Dwight Camp, a senior at Southeastern Oklahoma State University, describing the fishing in Lake Texoma in the days leading up to the FLW College Fishing Series Southern Conference tournament Saturday,

“”Last spring it was taking almost 30 pounds to win local tournaments. Last weekend it only took 13 pounds to win the Bud Light tournament on the lake. Fishing is just really tough right now.”

Camp, who teams with fellow senior Jonathan Furlong on the Southeastern Oklahoma Fishing Team, said whoever weighs in 12 to 13 pounds Saturday will probably be doing pretty well in the tournament.

“We had about a week and a half of really good weather, stable weather, and the water temperature got up into the upper 50s. Before that it was cold, in the high 40s,” Camp said. “Now, we've had about three days of really cold weather, 20-degree weather. We've not been out there yet to see what that dropped it to.”

Camp and Furlong plan to spend Thursday and Friday practicing on the lake which is only about 10 minutes away from their campus, although the launch site for the tournament is 35 minutes away.

“Some fish are moving up. They are not spawning yet, but they are wanting to. But they are catching some fish real shallow on a jerkbait,” Camp said. “That is what supposedly won the Bud Light tournament last weekend, a jerkbait in 5 feet of water.”

Camp said he and Furlong will probably spend their practice time looking for brushpiles on lake points, along with some stumps and rocky areas holding fish.

“The fish in the tournament will probably be caught on the Alabama rig and the jerkbait,” he said.

FLW College Fishing is the country’s largest tournament circuit for collegiate anglers with more than 600 clubs nationwide competing for lucrative awards plus a chance to fish against the world’s top anglers in the Forrest Wood Cup.

College Fishing teams compete in qualifying tournaments in one of five conferences – Central, Northern, Southern, Southeastern and Western. The top 15 teams from each regular-season tournament will qualify for one of five Conference Championship tournaments. The top 10 teams from each of the five Conference Championship tournaments will advance to the 2016 FLW College Fishing National Championship.

Saturday's tournament is the second of three regular-season stops in the Southern Conference. A full field of college teams will be competing for a top award of $2,000 and a berth in the Southern Conference Championship tournament.

 

FLW College Fishing Series – Southern Conference – 2015

Sat, Feb 21, 2015

Lake Texoma

Highport Marina

www.flwoutdoors.com

 


Five Fishing Daughters Cheering On Bfl Gator Division Points Leader

Jesus Villegas is leading the points going into the Gator Division's third tournament of the year on Lake Okeechobee, but if you ask him how he's catching fish he likely will tell you instead about his five daughters who love to fish.

“I can't tell you what I am doing, but I will say I am doing something different than most of the fishermen,” said Villegas who finished 16th in the first Gator Division tournament Jan. 3, but posted a 3rd place finish Jan. 31 to take over first place in the points.

Villegas grew up in New York and his first taste of bass fishing came when he was stationed in Texas in the Air Force.

“I did not catch a fish,” he said, “but throwing lures and casting intrigued me.”

He's had plenty of opportunity to cast for bass since moving to Florida in 1985 and he made sure his five daughters were exposed to fishing from an early age.

“I love my girls and all my girls fish,” said the proud father. “My oldest likes saltwater, but my 3-year-old just won her first kid's tournament and one of my daughters recently caught a 6-pound, 9-ounce bass. I've got girls that love to fish – and that makes me happy.”

Villegas said the Gator Division tournament Saturday is going to be a tough one because of the weather, and because the series is loaded with some top-notch anglers.

“There are some really good fishermen in this division, quite a few ex pros, FLW and B.A.S.S. guys,” he said.

“The weather is nice, but it is going to get a little cold. There is a front coming in and that will start driving the temperature down. The temperature Friday should be about 29 degrees. I've been on other lakes up north when it was that cold, but not on Okeechobee. It is going to be interesting, very interesting.”

While the cold front is probably going to make fishing tough this weekend, it could set the stage for better fishing, Villegas said.

“The cold weather encourages some of the bigger fish to come in, but we have not seen those 30-pound strings yet. Some of the bigger fish have come in and done their thing and left, but on the average we have not seen the massive weights.”

He believes the cold front will stir more of the bigger fish to start their move to the banks, but that migration probably won't occur until next week sometime.

“I am thinking that when the weather stabilizes there should be some awesome fishing,” he said.

So far the weather has kept the bass off their normal schedule and the flippers off their game, he said.

“The flippers are not finding what they like to find. I'm fishing around everybody and doing something different,” he said. “Somebody could find the right mat and some big females could move under them, but what I have been doing is the opposite of what the other guys are doing – and it's been working.”

Consistency has been the key for his fishing success in the two tournaments so far, he said.

“I always want to win, but I try to always be consistent. I am on a pretty good swing right now.”

And he's got a pretty good group of cheerleaders urging him on, too – five fishing daughters.

 

Walmart BFL Gator Division

Sat, Feb 21, 2015

Lake Okeechobee

Scott Driver Recreation Area

www.flwoutdoors.com

 


Pro Tips from Denali Rods

 

 

 

 

PRO'S POINTERS 

February - Early Season Cranking

 

Hi Denali fans - 

It's full on cabin fever time. Winter is locked in, football and hunting season are over, and it's still cold  and dreary outside. The good news is that it can also be a great time to catch some of the largest bass you'll see all year if you know what you're doing. Tour staffer Greg Bohannan is renowned for his  prowess with a crankbait this time of year, so we picked his brain to get some tips on early season cranking.

Hopefully you can put them to use in the coming weeks; as there's no better cure for cabin fever than the head shake of a four pounder as it inhales your crankbait!

Enjoy February and good luck on the water!

Scott Estes - President, Denali Rods


  

Cold Water - Hot Action 

February is an interesting month for bass anglers across the country. Anglers in Florida are usually already chasing post spawners while anglers in the north are still drilling holes in their frozen lakes and reservoirs.

 

Outside of those two extremes, February for the majority of the country offers water temperatures in the forties often dreary weather, making anglers work hard for any success on the water.

 

However, if you get a warm up during February it can quickly turn the fishing from tough to fantastic and give savvy anglers some of the best fishing of the season. For that reason, FLW and Denali pro Greg Bohannan thinks February is one of the best months to get out on the water. The bass are changing despite the cold weather and you can really start catching them on crankbaits.

 

"I absolutely love fishing in the late February/early March period." Bohannan said. "You'll almost always get a couple sunny days that push the water temperature into the upper 40's and then the bass really start eating crankbaits well. It's still cold, but the action can be absolutely amazing."

 

To Bohannan, the key to triggering the early season crankbait bite is the first little uptick in water temperature due to a cold front, and the magic number he's looking for is 46 degrees.

 

"Below about 46, I'm really a jerkbait or bust type of guy." Bohannan said. "Once it gets to 46 though, I'm gonna pick up that crankbait rod and have a lot of confidence that bass will respond to it. Not only is it a more efficient way to cover water than a jerkbait, but it also seems to catch bigger fish the majority of the time." Water temperature is obviously the most important factor in determining when to throw a crankbait in the early season, but what else is important? We picked Bohannan's brain to get the inside scoop on early season cranking from one of the masters.


1. Find the right bank

Throughout the winter, bass hold on classic vertical structure like bluff ends, points, and standing timber. They like vertical structure because it doesn't take a lot of energy to change depth in relation to mood and access food sources like shad.

 

Because of that, Bohannan starts out his early cranking pattern targeting those same types of cover, but said to be ready to move as the water begins to warm up.


"Once you start cranking in the spring, the bass will still be on those same bluff ends, points, and timber lines that you were catching them on Jerkbaits." Bohannan said. "However once that water temp starts climbing, even a little bit, you need to be ready to move with them."

 

They might not move very far, but the key factor in this move is that it's more than likely going to be toward the backs of the creeks.


"Usually, the bass will move to similar bluff ends and points, but by late February they will be bluff banks deep in creeks and secondary points in the back half of creeks. They also gang up on the last few channel bends in creeks before they start to flatten out. Bottom line is that you need to transition with them, so if the bass aren't where you had been catching them on the main lake, they've probably moved into the creeks." Bohannan said.

 

2. Use a rod with "flex"

Lost fish can be a frustration with crankbaits, and Bohannan said it can be especially frustrating in the early season because the fish are still very lethargic. "I think a lot of times they just slap at it or they don't have the energy to really eat it so losing fish can become a real problem in the early season if you don't have the right rod."

 

To Bohannan, the right rod is one with enough flex to allow the bass to fully eat the bait, as well as work as a shock absorber once the fight starts. The rod he turns to for his early season cranking is the Denali J2 7 foot 6 inch MH cranking rod.

 

"Flex is so important when cranking in cold water." Bohannan said. "If you've got a bass hooked on a single treble hook in the side of the face, you need a forgiving rod to keep that hook buried and not lose it. The J2 rod has the perfect flex for that, but it's also a medium heavy power so it has enough backbone in the bottom half of the rod to make sure you get the hook in him to begin with."

 

In addition to keeping fish buttoned up, a rod with good flex also allows short striking fish a better opportunity to get the bait, resulting in better hooked fish. "I see guys cranking with fast action rods and losing a lot of fish. Having that more moderate action delays the rod loading up just a split second, which increases the amount of bait the bass gets in his mouth."

 

Another key Bohannan has found is to make really long casts, something much easier to accomplish with a longer rod. "The bass are often spread out along long stretches of rip rap, bluff walls, or points, so being able to throw it far and keep it in the strike zone for longer periods of time is very important to your success in the early season. The J2 rod I use is seven and a half feet, which is plenty long enough."

 

For early season cranking, Bohannan pairs his Denali cranking rod to a 6.5:1 Ardent Apex reel spooled with 10 pound monofilament, due to the better abrasion resistance. "Lots of guys use fluorocarbon to crank, and I do some as well, but most of the time I'm fishing around rocks and timber so I like the improved abrasion resistance of the monofilament." Bohannan said.

 

3.Take your time

Despite the promises of hot action, water in the upper forties is still cold, and Bohannan said that anglers should take that into consideration when cranking cold water bass.

"You want to make sure that you're not retrieving your bait as fast as you would in the summer." Bohannan said. "The bass are more aggressive than they were in January, but you still need to give them time to get the bait, and that means a moderate to slow retrieve most of the time."

 

Bohannan will also occasionally pause the bait, especially when it contacts something like a stump, rock, or treetop. "A lot of times, I'll kill it right after I hit something and that generates a lot of strikes. The crankbaits I use float, and when they see it floating slowly away from them after it hits something they just have to eat it."

 

Taking your time is important not only in an individual cast, but Bohannan also said it is important in the number of casts you make to an area. "Unlike some other times of the year where you can throw in an area a couple times and don't get bit then move on, in the early season you really need to saturate an area to maximize the number of bass you catch."

 

4. Bait choice is important

Go to any Bass Pro Shops and count how many different crankbaits are on the wall. You're gonna be there awhile. Although all those different shapes and models may work well at different points in the year, Bohannan relies on only a select few during the early season.

 

Classic cold water baits like The Rapala Shad Rap and Storm Wiggle Wart have always found their place in Bohannan's hand, but he recently worked on developing a crankbait with Skirmish Baits called the A10, which was designed from the ground up to excel at early season cranking.

 

"We looked at all the other baits that are really successful in cold water and took the best attributes from all of them when we designed the A10." Bohannan said. "I've only had the production models for a little while, and I can already tell you that what we've done works. I can't wait to get the A10 out in tournaments this spring. It is a fish catching machine."

 

As far as color goes, Bohannan said that anglers should keep it simple and use anything that resembles a crawfish. "I really only use two colors when I'm cranking in the spring; and we turned them both into signature series colors for the A10. One is a green craw, and the other is a red craw. I throw the green craw in clear water and the red craw when it's got some color to it."

 

 

 

 

Denali Rods brings you Pro's Pointers Each month. Check out February's article here.

To see our archives, click here

 

 

Thanks,
Scott Estes
Denali Rods - President
870-492-2231
www.denalirods.com 

 

 

 

 

 

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Classic Title will be earned under brutally cold conditions

Somebody’s going to earn the title of 2015 Bassmaster Classic Champion. EARN it. From Wednesday evening until Saturday noon, temperatures are expected to stay below freezing for about 66 continuous hours.

Air temp at time of initial blast off on Friday will be about 11 degrees.

As possibility of snow gives way to near certainty of freezing rain Saturday afternoon, anglers will endure a day-long down pour in frigid conditions on Sunday. All day.

But forecasters often miss the details. This storm, however, is no detail. It’s going to be cold. Maybe the coldest Classic ever. That’s saying something considering the snow and ice that greeted contestants at Grand Lake in Oklahoma a couple of years ago.

Cliff Pace won that Classic.

Pace also nearly won in 2008 – last time the Classic was held here on Hartwell. Pace missed last year’s chance to become a back-to-back champion due to a hunting accident. I imagine is healed up and licking his chops at the chance to get back at. Pace loves these cold weather, slow bite conditions. He will be a very dangerous man among this field of the best anglers in the world.

Jerkbaits, jigs and finesse offerings will get the majority of the work here this week.

The lake is down just a few feet.

It was lower last time the Classic was held on Hartwell. Also, the lake was then dominated by largemouth bass. Now there is a viable population of spotted bass in excess of 3 pounds. Spots could be the winning ticket now that the weather has gone off the rails.

Spotted bass bite especially well under the nasty type of conditions we expect on days 2 and 3. Look for this species to contribute heavily to the winner’s weight total.

Meanwhile, go to the morning launches at Green Pond Landing near Anderson, SC and then thaw out at the huge Expo at TD Convention Center in Greenville. Weigh ins will take place daily at the Bon Secours Wellness Center arena in downtown Greenville. Doors opens at 3 o’clock each day. Get there early. This is going to be a jam-packed, exciting Bassmaster Classic!


Looking Ahead To The 2015 Bassmaster Classic On Lake Hartwell!

Vance McCullough is packed and ready for the 2015 Bassmaster Classic. Join him and many THOUSANDS of other bassheads in Greenville at the huge Bassmaster Classic Outdoor Expo, the morning launches at Green Pond and the daily weigh in shows at the arena. If you can't be there in person, or even if you can, follow along on Anglerschannel.com and the AC.com Facebook page where we invite you to chime-in!


Lew's launches loyalty program for BFL anglers

Lew's announces the launch of its new Speed Fishing Awards Incentive Program for anglers competing in any 2015 FLW Bass Fishing League (BFL) divisional tournament events.

The membership-based brand loyalty program is designed to benefit participating anglers who either win or are the highest Speed Fishing Awards member finisher in the "Top 20" of any of the 120 BFL divisional events held across the country.

To be eligible for the program's cash and product prizes, anglers must own and have registered both a Lew's rod and reel manufactured since 2010, be a current member of the Lew's incentive program and comply with participation rules that include displaying a Lew's logo on tournament wear and boat. The cost to join is $29.95 per calendar year, with 2015 being the first for the program. Membership includes a Lew's cap and decals.

The program's top award per BFL event for a win is $250 cash or a $500 Lew's gift certificate. The certificate is for exchange for Lew's products in that amount directly from the company.

 

If a Speed Fishing Awards member does not win, the highest eligible finisher placing in the event's top 20 has a choice of either $125 cash or a $250 Lew's product gift certificate.

 

At the conclusion of all BFL division events, and prior to the All-American Championship, the Speed Fishing Awards member who has accumulated the most points for his/her division among all program participants will be named the Lew's Speed Fishing Awards Angler of the Year and presented a $1,000 gift certificate to exchange for Lew's products of equal value.

"FLW's BFL has been one of the country's most prominent grassroots tournament fishing programs for a long time," said Lew's CEO Lynn Reeves. "These are serious anglers and include some of the country's very best fishermen in each region. We appreciate their participation in bass fishing and hope our new incentive program helps them along the way."

For online sign-up of the Lew's Speed Fishing Awards Incentive Program, visit www.lews.com and click on "Angler Resources," then "Rewards Program." The web site information also includes a full description of program rules and a frequently asked questions section.

The FLW Walmart Bass Fishing League consists of 24 divisions and five tournaments per division. For more information on the BFL, including tournament dates and venues, visit www.FLWoutdoors.com.

 


Hardwick and Williams win the CBC on Norman with 18.75 Lbs-Full results here!

Carolinas Bass Challenge NC Division Qualifier #1 - Lake Norman

Thomas Hardwick & Tommy Williams topped the 184 boat field with 18.75lbs of bass. Tournament Payout, Skeeter Bonus & Real Money gave them a total of $15,500 for the day.

Skeeter Owners Barry Bost and Will Petty caught a 6.56lb Big Fish earning them a $1,000 bonus!

Here are the full results:

Place Team Name Team # Fish Weighed Net Weight Big Fish Points Winnings
1 Thomas Hardwick - Tommy Williams * 114 5 18.750 6.400 310 $15,500*
   * Includes $3,000 Skeeter Real Money & $2,500 Highest Finishing Skeeter Bonus
2 Artie Phillips - Graham Rushing 71 5 18.320 0.000 309 $4,250
2 Aric Dwyer - Robert Anderson 89 5 18.320 0.000 309 $4,250
4 Todd Garner - Shane Hartman 127 5 17.550 5.380 307 $2,500
5 Nick Miller - Brandon Brickweg 143 5 17.110 0.000 306 $2,000
6 Chuck Camp - Rob Digh 18 5 16.390 3.840 305 $1,700
7 Louie Hull - Chuck Montgomery 178 5 16.290 0.000 304 $1,450
8 Adam Waters - Dylan Fulk 135 5 15.830 0.000 303 $1,300
9 Kenny Seagle - Thomas Simmerson 162 5 15.810 5.010 302 $1,100
10 Marvin Godard - Robert Adams 5 5 15.310 5.720 301 $1,000
11 Joshua Queen - Mike Queen 139 5 15.220 0.000 300 $750
12 Wayne Hauser - Anthony Rife 19 5 15.110 4.290 299 $650
13 Klaus Hadschin - Jerry Hadschin 44 5 15.060 0.000 298 $550
14 Mike Stephens - Chris Gravely 165 5 14.680 0.000 297 $525
15 Jason Wilson - Kelly Logan * 21 5 14.580 0.000 296 $1,975*
* Includes $1,500 2nd Highest Finishing Skeeter Bonus
16 Jeremi Beatty - Clint Benbow 169 5 14.510 0.000 295 $450
17 Dale Duncan - Donnie Woody * 58 5 14.380 0.000 294 $1,400*
* Includes $1,000 3rd Highest Finishing Skeeter Bonus
18 Barry Bost - Will Petty 144 5 14.240 6.560 293 $1,350*
* Includes$1,000 Big FishBonus
19 Doug Easton - Pete Bejte 79 5 14.080 0.000 292 $330
20 Randy Hall - Mike Seawright 152 5 13.940 0.000 291 $310
21 Jacob Moore - Thomas Moore 46 5 13.880 0.000 290 $300
22 brian morgan - anthony Lutz 37 5 13.850 0.000 289 $280
23 Jeff Queen - Carroll Queen 123 5 13.840 0.000 288 $270
24 Bill Grier - Robby Byrum 1 5 13.800 3.980 287 $260
25 Bucky Helms 12 4 13.780 6.180 286 $250
26 Robert Bauguess - Rodney Morrow 116 5 13.710 0.000 285 $240
27 Chance Ratcliff - Allen Snyder 175 5 13.650 0.000 284 $230
28 John Gutierrez - Joe Anders 98 5 13.400 0.000 283 $220
29 Stacey Richards - Brian Triplett 11 5 13.320 0.000 282 $210
30 Ted Newman - John Noonkester 141 5 13.310 0.000 281 $200
31 Dwight Dellinger - Doug Dellinger 130 5 13.180 0.000 280
32 Bryan LeFever - Wayne Sharpe 173 5 13.140 0.000 279
33 Adam Fillmore - Matt Queen 32 5 13.120 0.000 278
34 John parker - Scott Allison 51 5 13.070 0.000 277
35 Mark Hollifield - Matt Lowe 60 5 13.040 0.000 276
36 Brian Travis - Ashley Brotherton 170 5 13.030 0.000 275
37 Kevin Toler - Rodney Lambert 121 5 12.930 0.000 274
38 Keith Speece - Wendell Ireland 59 5 12.920 0.000 273
39 Marcus Leech - Tim Chapman 128 5 12.690 0.000 272
40 Eric Self - Tyler Beam 147 5 12.620 0.000 271
41 Roy Barrow - Robert Morrison 122 5 12.610 0.000 270
42 Rodney Bell - Tommy Jones 38 5 12.570 0.000 269
43 Robert Mixon - Robert Lambert 118 5 12.510 5.730 268
44 Josea Goble - Clint mccorkle 129 5 12.460 0.000 267
45 Wayne Ingram - Chris Brown 157 5 12.390 0.000 266
46 Steven Austin - Roger Wood 97 5 12.300 0.000 265
47 Bryan Welch - Mark Inman 136 5 12.280 0.000 264
48 Steve Addington - Matt Stout 145 5 12.260 0.000 263
49 Robin Collins - Ronnie White 82 5 12.180 0.000 262
50 Nathan White - Jason Jones 54 5 11.970 0.000 261
51 Dale Surrett - Lee Endicott 34 5 11.940 0.000 260
52 Todd Walters - Jason Threadgill 10 5 11.810 0.000 259
53 David Wright - Jeff Coble 74 5 11.770 0.000 258
54 George Lambeth - Ron Wolfarth 57 5 11.720 0.000 257
55 Scott Wyatt - Tim Medlin 107 5 11.670 0.000 256
56 Israel Gibson - Brian Silvers 33 5 11.620 0.000 255
57 Terry Wike - Michael Kelley 43 5 11.570 3.260 254
57 Dave Snyder - Edward Markham 168 5 11.570 0.000 254
59 Roger Hoover - Scott Hamrick 56 5 11.550 0.000 252
60 Michael Carver - Jason Barrazza 53 5 11.440 0.000 251
61 Eddie Smith - Michael Carson 154 5 11.400 0.000 250
62 Tony Stafford - Joshua Stafford 183 5 11.360 0.000 249
63 Billy Jacobs - Allan Collins 106 5 11.330 0.000 248
63 Robert Osborne - Bobby Osborne 111 5 11.330 0.000 248
65 Mitchell Cook - Todd Huffman 159 5 11.320 0.000 246
66 Mike Branch - Brian Branch 87 5 11.310 0.000 245
67 Tyler Brown - Ron Weyersberg 41 5 11.260 0.000 244
67 Stump Bledsoe - Glenn Elliott 181 5 11.260 0.000 244
69 Jason Hathcock - Jon Barringer 30 5 11.230 0.000 242
70 Michael Cribb - Roger Cribb 67 5 11.160 0.000 241
71 Keith Porter - Mike Allman 95 5 11.120 0.000 240
72 Matthew McBee - Matt Haywood 28 5 11.110 0.000 239
73 Donald Poteat - Johnny Allen 115 5 11.100 0.000 238
73 Todd Sumner - Robert Parrish 171 5 11.100 0.000 238
75 Tony Higgins - Joey Caison 113 5 11.080 0.000 236
76 Chris Koons - Jennifer Nicol 94 5 10.910 0.000 235
77 Darren Sigmon - Brian Huffman 36 5 10.880 0.000 234
78 Dale Luckey - John Brown 133 5 10.870 0.000 233
79 Rob Wright - Douglas Fowler 146 5 10.860 0.000 232
80 Mac McLean - Brett McLean 137 5 10.810 0.000 231
81 Scott Henley - Dean Minor 99 5 10.800 0.000 230
82 Michael Kinard - Tony Lambert 103 5 10.630 0.000 229
83 Larry Denton - Chris Guest 182 5 10.620 0.000 228
84 Vince Parker - Mark Parker 148 5 10.610 0.000 227
85 Chris Boehme - Fue Vang 161 5 10.590 0.000 226
86 Ricky Self - Ben Stanton 110 5 10.490 0.000 225
86 Steve Sink - Tony Foster 151 5 10.490 0.000 225
88 Drew Stankwytch - Dave Whitehead 64 5 10.170 0.000 223
89 Nick Beaver - Roger Beaver 96 5 10.100 0.000 222
90 Reginald Pickett - Larry Kirk 85 5 10.040 0.000 221
91 Jerry Craig - Bobby Lateuch 3 5 10.030 0.000 220
92 Kyle Whisnant - Craig Chambers 9 5 9.930 0.000 219
93 Russell Hoyle - Jerry Pruitt 13 5 9.880 0.000 218
93 Chris Graham - Ricky Byrd 50 5 9.880 0.000 218
95 Patrick Houpe - Jesse Smith 65 5 9.740 0.000 216
96 Jessie Towery - David Fortenberry 83 5 9.680 0.000 215
97 Nathan Webber - Dale Webber 160 5 9.670 0.000 214
98 Tracy Brown - Matthew Bange 27 5 9.660 0.000 213
99 Ricky Parrish - Rick Carson 26 5 9.650 0.000 212
100 howard symonds - David Wray 167 5 9.510 0.000 211
101 Phillip Frady - Dirk Porter 176 5 9.500 0.000 210
102 Jimmy Cummings - Dean Collins 62 5 9.370 0.000 209
103 Bernie Davis - Bobby Snyder 163 5 9.190 0.000 208
104 Brian McDonald - billy bledsoe 108 5 9.180 0.000 207
105 Derick Livingston - Jonathan Spivey 7 4 9.110 3.500 206
106 Chris Dover - Robert Fowler 174 2 8.940 0.000 205
107 Brian Stowe - Shannon Stowe 102 5 8.910 0.000 204
108 Steve Dyer - Derek Lilley 77 5 8.830 0.000 203
109 Wesley Cashwell - Shane Doughtie 2 4 8.760 0.000 202
110 Cayce West - mike mcduffie 75 5 8.750 0.000 201
111 Rich Szczerbala - Rick Dunstan 164 4 8.550 0.000 200
112 Jerry Lineberger - Shane Lineberger 40 5 8.490 0.000 199
113 Thomas Gavin - Bobby Winn 66 4 8.350 0.000 198
114 Michael Smith - Roger Pope 52 4 8.300 0.000 197
115 Kelly Homesley - Allen Eaker 39 3 8.290 0.000 196
116 Thomas Richmond - Reggie Pollock 184 4 8.260 0.000 195
117 Phil Hennessee - Lee Hoilman 78 5 7.860 0.000 194
118 Mark Lamb - Robert Griswold 166 5 7.760 0.000 193
119 Andrew Young - Wyatt Hammond 109 4 7.660 0.000 192
120 Mike Ray - Chris Anderson 91 4 7.630 0.000 191
121 Mike Davis - Gerald Ritchie 31 5 7.610 0.000 190
122 Reggie Guffey - Tommy Chapman 76 4 7.600 0.000 189
123 Buddy Black - Russell Kiser 68 4 7.570 2.480 188
124 Zack Jeney - Mike Smith 86 3 7.550 0.000 187
125 Lester Elton - Chris Martin 134 4 7.440 0.000 186
126 Greg Whittington - Danny Hucks 63 4 7.420 0.000 185
127 Jason Christle - Tommy Sitton 4 4 7.370 2.610 184
128 Cody Andrews - Brent White 6 4 7.250 0.000 183
129 Ben Parker - Gene Parker 73 4 7.160 0.000 182
130 James Hobbs - Dustin Calloway 61 5 7.030 0.000 181
131 James Perdue - Richard Coates 177 4 7.020 0.000 180
132 Greg Bragg - Christopher Terry 45 3 6.860 0.000 179
133 Bart Roberts - Stacy Metz 55 3 6.740 0.000 178
133 Scott Threadgill - Dwayne Saunders 172 2 6.740 0.000 178
135 Jason Anderson - Jimmy Hughes 72 3 6.540 0.000 176
136 Chris Wagner - Chase Deal 16 2 6.470 0.000 175
136 John Martin - Christopher Allard 25 3 6.470 3.140 175
138 Brent Berry - Steve Shaw 105 4 6.440 0.000 173
139 Chuck Morton - Kevin Sheppard 158 3 6.080 0.000 172
140 Denny Parunak - Tony Blevins 132 3 5.700 0.000 171
141 Butch Zadlo - Bryan Lewis 119 3 5.430 0.000 170
142 Johnny Guffey - Wesley Bell 126 3 5.400 0.000 169
143 Tyler Hoopaugh - Chris Hoopaugh 81 5 3.920 0.000 168
144 Cory Leonard - Paul Rigsbee 80 2 3.680 0.000 167
145 Gary Love - Ricky Todd 104 2 3.060 0.000 166
146 Jesse Wise - Jonathan Phillips 153 1 2.850 0.000 165
147 Dan Funderburk - Rod Cozart 140 1 2.530 0.000 164
148 Robin Parker - Frank Letto 101 1 1.910 0.000 163
149 Heath Pait - Tony Davis 93 1 1.680 0.000 162
150 Ronald Farrow - Roger Farrow 8 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Mike Scott - Tommy Thompson 14 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Jason Dew - Steve Spivey 15 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Jerry Goble - Scott Griffin 17 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Tanner Stirewalt - Josh Brady 20 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Paul Guthrie - Robert Church 22 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 David Brookshire - Nathan Royal 23 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Doug Punch - Rocky Franklin 24 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Larry LeHew - Greg Deal 29 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Dwayne Hughes - Micheal Gibson 35 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Jeff Hager - Darrell Hager 42 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 John Paul George - Eric Weir 47 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 John McBride - Rick Mcbride 48 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Roger Holtsclaw - Mike Holtsclaw 49 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Bo Morris - Ricky Roach 69 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Dennis Cable - Tim Harrison 70 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Dempsey Carter - Ted Mobley 84 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Adam Greer - Shae jones 88 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Bob Furstenberg - Sheldon Hipps 90 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Charlie Hanshaw - Jeffrey Hanshaw 92 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Robert Walser - Mack Lowe 100 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Thomas Vickers - Brian Huskins 112 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Hunter Hicks - Bobby Rice 117 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 James Wall - Jimmy Wall 120 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Daniel Britt - Raymond Lovejoy 124 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Alan Fletcher - Ronnie McCoy 125 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Rodney Eller - Jonathan Morgan 131 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Travus Lovell - Joshua Lyalls 138 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Gary Cline - Terry Wien 142 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Eric Jeter - Darren Jeter 149 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Brian Hall - Doug Stallings 150 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 David Clanton - Brent Sanders 155 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Adam Ridings - Chris Beaird 156 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Milton Yancey - Larry Yancey 179 0 0.000 0.000 161
150 Chris Miller - Walt Brysiak 180 0 0.000 0.000 161

 


Browning, Walker, Others May Rely On Hfc Craw During Bassmaster Classic

The Bassmaster Classic is unlike any other tournament. There are no points to accumulate, no moral victories. Just the title of Bassmaster Classic Champion, along with the big check and the huge trophy. Anglers pull out all the stops to win this, the most prestigious prize in tournament fishing.

As such, anglers often look to gain an edge by fishing where others don’t or by using lures others don’t have. Some take the ‘everything old is new again’ approach and use vintage lures. Some have found suitable replacements for out-of-production favorites. Consider LIVETARGET’s HFC Craw:

“Last year our introduction of the HFC Craw (Hunt For Center) got over shadowed by the impact of the BaitBall launch, but this is one sweet little crankbait that has some real potential to be a productive lure, and to solve a dilemma that many anglers try to solve by searching for old, out of production lure types,” says LIVETARGET’s Gary Abernethy.   “There is a boutique, cult following of the "pre-Rapala" Wiggle Wart style lures where anglers will search forums and message boards seeking this heritage lure and/or certain colors, often willing to pay upwards of $30 per lure for select baits.

“LIVETARGET has built a modern crawfish crankbait with many of the qualities revered in the older competitive products. The Hunt For Center Craw does in fact amble left and right of a straight line of retrieve, producing the "searching" action that is preferred in this style of crankbait.” 

The HFC Craw will be on the decks of at least two pros during the Classic this week. Stephen Browning and David Walker are familiar with the lure’s characteristics and capabilities. The 3/8 oz. crankbait will dive from 6-to-9 feet based on line size.

Members of the LIVETARGET pro staff, Browning and Walker may well need to imitate crawfish along the steep-sloped banks of Lake Hartwell. The available color combinations will allow them to find a good match for the clear water conditions that dominate much of the lake as well as for the more stained upper reaches where anglers often find success during winter warming trends.

“Not only does the lure have this fantastic action, but it also incorporates modern LIVETARGET crawfish paint patterns and anatomy so that is provides the angler with lure options for clear, stained, and dirty water conditions via six color patterns,” notes Abernethy.

Want to get your hands on some? It has a MSRP of $14.99 and is available at Tackle Warehouse, Land Big Fish, and retail dealers nationwide.

You can also check it out at the Bassmaster Classic Expo in Greenville, SC later this week. LIVETARGET will have a booth at the show – look for Booth #5061. There you can see all the latest from LIVETARGET including the new Yearling BaitBall series and the HFC Craw!

 


Lew's partners with Missouri FOP in fundraiser for wounded Springfield police officer

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (Feb. 13, 2015) - Lew's and the Missouri Fraternal

Order of Police have teamed in a major fundraiser to benefit Springfield, Mo., police officer Aaron Pearson  and his family. Pearson was seriously wounded late last month while responding to a burglary call.

The fundraiser, deemed the "Team Pearson Boat Raffle," is the result of Lew's officials providing the FOP with significant prizes to stimulate ticket sales in support of the Pearsons' needs. The grand prize is a fully rigged 2015 Ranger boat with trailer and a Mercury 250 horsepower outboard motor, a package valued at $75,000. The two runner-up prizes are considered "dream fishing trips," as each is with a nationally recognized angler.

One trip is with Hank Parker, host of the "Hank Parker's Outdoor Magazine" television show and a two-time Bassmaster Classic champion. The other trip is with Jason Christie, a highly successful Bassmaster Elite Series and FLW Tour bass tournament angler, who is currently ranked the #1 pro in the world by BassFan.com. Both trips are for the respective prize winners and a guest.

The Parker prize package is valued at $10,000 and the Christie trip $5,000. All three prizes also include an assortment of fishing rods, reels, tackle bags and lures. Raffle tickets cost $20 each and can be purchased at www.officerpearson.com.

Lew's is headquartered in Springfield. CEO Lynn Reeves says that Pearson is a true American hero, and the team at Lew's has a responsibility to help.

"Officer Pearson is an American hero," Reeves said. "He sacrificed to keep our community safe. We know that it's now our turn to make sure Aaron and his family have everything they need to see them through their challenges ahead.

While Pearson has been steadily improving, and is now out of the ICU, he will face long-term care and rehabilitation.

"Aaron's an outstanding officer and we're ready to stand by him," said Mike Evans, president of the Springfield Police Officers Association. "So many local businesses have come forward to help, and we're thrilled to see this effort from Lew's. With everyone coming together for this raffle, I think we'll be able to take great care of Aaron and his family. And that's what it's all about."

Reeves also said a number of outdoor industry companies in addition to Lew's helped make the prize packages possible, and extended a "thank you" to them on behalf of everyone in the Springfield area. Among the other prize contributors were Grosse Savanne Waterfowl and Wildlife Lodge, Gene Larew Lures, Plano, Onyx Lifejackets, Strike King, River2Sea, Rat-L-Trap, Owner Hooks, Bullet Weights, K2 Coolers, Ranger Boats, Mercury, Humminbird, MinnKota, Power Pole, TH Marine and HydroWave.

 

Mike Evans, president of the Springfield Police Officers Association, stands alongside the "Tournament Ready" 2015 Ranger bass boat that is the featured item of a grand prize package that local-based Lew's and many of its fishing industry friends helped provide for a raffle to benefit wounded Officer Pearson. (Click for hi-res image)

 

Team Person Boat Raffle tickets are available for purchase during the period of Feb. 13 - May 31, 2015. A third-party accounting firm will conduct the drawing on June 5, 2015.

The Missouri Fraternal Order of Police Foundation is a 501c3 non-profit organization. The Missouri Constitution, Article 3, Section 39(f), states that any organization recognized as charitable or religious pursuant to federal law may sponsor raffles and sweepstakes in which a person risks something of value for a prize. Such laws vary by state. The Team Pearson Boat Raffle is void where prohibited.

 

Visit www.officerpearson.com for more details about Officer Pearson, the fundraiser and prizes.


Josh Powers And Cole Stewart Of Tennessee's Gundy County High School Win Costa Bassmaster High School Tourney

Teaser image:

Josh Powers, left, and Cole Stewart of Tennessee's Gundy County High School won Saturday's Costa Bassmaster High School Southern Open on Lake Martin with five bass that weighed 14 pounds, 4 ounces. They caught their bass from 60 feet of water on jigs. Story coming soon..

Photo Bryan Brasher/B.A.S.S.

Many of the anglers in Saturday’s Costa Bassmaster High School Southern Open talked of catching lots of bass in practice, only to strike out on tournament day.

But the opposite happened for Josh Powers and Cole Stewart.

After struggling most of the week to figure out Lake Martin in practice, the two juniors from Tennessee’s Grundy County High School Bass Team scored at just the right time, landing five fish Saturday that weighed 14 pounds, 4 ounces to top the 203-boat field.

They caught their fish from 60 feet of water, using D&L Jigs with Berkley Chigger Craws as trailers.

“We had a good, solid four days of practice here, and it was pretty rough,” Powers said. “But today, we finally got on some fish in some real deep water, 60 feet. It was a good jig bite, and we caught just enough good fish to win.”

Electronics played a big role in helping the anglers locate their fish – as did the patience that was mandated by their captain, Wesley Taylor.

Taylor had to force the anglers to rest and refuel during the mandatory 10-minute halftime period at 10:15 a.m., and he called seven of the eight allotted timeouts.

The halftime period is in place for anglers to drink fluids, eat snacks, rest and confer with their coaches, while timeouts are in the rulebook specifically to allow the anglers to ask the adults questions. Those are the only times anglers are allowed to talk with their adult coaches and captains about fishing strategy.

“They wanted to just keep fishing straight on through, and I had to make them stop,” Taylor said. “Those seven timeouts probably helped me as much as they helped them. I couldn’t stand it. I was living and dying with every cast.”

Stewart said things didn’t go their way all day.

“We lost a couple of good fish that could have really helped us in the long run,” he said. “They were big fish that would have really pushed our weight up.”

They were afraid the mishaps would hurt them at the scales, and they almost did.

One of the final few teams to weigh in was Bailey Fain and Justin Selvidge from Tennessee’s Lenoir City High School Bass Club. The two sophomores brought five bass to the scales that weighed 14-1, barely missing the mark set by Powers and Stewart.
“Our day was kind of slow until halftime,” Fain said.

“We only had two keepers at halftime, but we finished off a limit by about 12 o’clock and started culling by about 2:30. We only caught about six fish total all day.”

Besides the usual calculation of pounds and ounces, a new feature of the tournament was the “Costa Moment.” At each high school event, a moving act of courage, kindness or courtesy will be identified on stage and recognized for the honor.

The honor at this event went Mason Felps of the Cullman High School fishing team. Instead of his usual Cullman jersey, Felps wore the yellow jersey his father, Les, wore during his tournament days before he died of cancer back on Oct. 12, 2013.

Feb. 20 would have been his birthday.

“With his birthday coming up, I just felt like honoring him was the right thing to do,” Mason said. “He meant the world to me.”

A total purse of about $12,000 in cash and prizes was awarded to the field with checks made out to the high schools of the winning teams. A check in the amount of $1,500 was awarded to Grundy County High School in honor of Stewart and Powers’ victory.

The top five teams were also given sunglasses from Costa, the new title sponsor of the Bassmaster High School Series.

The top 20 boats in the field qualified for the national championship, which will be held at a site to be announced during next week’s GEICO Bassmaster Classic presented by GoPro.

            Costa Bassmaster High School Series-Southern Open
                          2/14/2015 - 2/14/2015
          Lake Martin - Wind Creek State Park - Alexander City, AL

                         STANDINGS  BOATER DAY   1
                                           Day's Activity   Accumulative
   Name                                   FishLive s - Oz  FisLives - Oz

  1 Cole Stewart - Josh PowGCHS                5   5  4- 4    5    5  14- 4
  2 Bailey Fain - Justin SeLenoir City High    5   5  4- 1    5    5  14- 1
  3 Zeke Gossett - Hayden BPell City High S    5   5  2-11    5    5  12-11
  4 Fischer Keel -         Auburn Anglers      5   5  1-13    5    5  11-13
  5 Ryan Winchester - JustiClinton High Sch    5   5  1-10    5    5  11-10
  6 Lucas Lindsay - Logan PAuburn Anglers      5   5  1- 8    5    5  11- 8
  7 David Gaston - John McKSylacauga Fishin    5   5  1- 7    5    5  11- 7
  8  J T Russell - Jared TurBriarwood High S    5   5  1- 2    5    5  11- 2
  9 Will Nichols - ChristiaAlexandria High     5   5  0-12    5    5  10-12
  9 Haynes Waid - Will GarrAuburn Anglers      5   5  0-12    5    5  10-12
11 Taylor Cox - Ben Muse  Carrollton High     5   5  0- 8    5    5  10- 8
12 Sean Hall - Kyler McKieNorth Augusta Hi    5   5  0- 5    5    5  10- 5
13 Noah Pescitelli - ChrisMill Creek High     5   5  0- 0    5    5  10- 0
14 Dustin Johnston - TrevoBeulah Bass Team    4   4   9-14   4    4  9-14
15 Cole Burdeshaw - Jacob Headland Bass Te    5   5   9-11   5    5  9-11
16 Alex Heintze - Justin WLivingston Paris    5   5   9-10   5    5  9-10
16 Tristan Thomas - DakotaEast Hall Angler    5   5   9-10   5    5  9-10
18 Justin Barnes - Sutton Monroe Student B    5   5   9- 0   5    5  9- 0
19 Jonathon Wilburn - ConnGuntersville Hig    5   5   8-15   5    5  8-15
20 Kyle Ingleburger - KyleGrundy County HS    5   5   8-13   5    5  8-13
21 Tripp Hodges - Trae WriSylacauga Fishin    4   4   8-11   4    4  8-11
22 Koby Littrell - Martin Killen Student A    5   5   8-10   5    5  8-10
23 Daniel George - Cody MeOdenville Bass C    3   3   8-10   3    3  8-10
24 Zane Loveday - Erik WilChelsea Anglers     5   5   8- 8   5    5  8- 8
25 Drew Mitchum - Alan StuNorthside High S    5   5   8- 5   5    5  8- 5
26 Hank Lowrie - Daniel StGCHS                5   5   8- 4   5    5  8- 4
27 Tristan Hendrix - Seth Hoover High Scho    5   5   8- 1   5    5  8- 1
28 Will Brown - Trent PruiGlencoe Fishing     5   5   8- 0   5    5  8- 0
28 Tanner Jones - Clay TeaTuscaloosa Count    5   5   8- 0   5    5  8- 0
30 Ryan Foster - Joseph ScBeauregard High     5   5   7-15   5    5  7-15
30 Brian Rosenbalm - JacobAlexandria High     5   5   7-15   5    5  7-15
32 McKinley Prickett - SamAlexandria High     5   5   7-13   5    5  7-13
33 Cole Wood - Will Wood  Jefferson High S    5   5   7-12   5    5  7-12
34 Adam Higgins - Weston PArab High School    3   3   7-12   3    3  7-12
35 Blake Albertson - DylanSouthside Angler    5   5   7-11   5    5  7-11
35 Hunter Silverstrim - NaQueen City High     5   5   7-11   5    5  7-11
37 John Evans Thrower - DyArab High School    4   4   7-11   4    4  7-11
38 Justin Glass - Jack MarACA                 5   5   7-10   5    5  7-10
39 Chad Simpson - Brad KinValley High Scho    5   5   7- 39   5    5  7- 9
39 Steven Younginer - JameSouth Florence H    5   5   7- 9   5    5  7- 9
41 Josh Wissinger - JustinHayden High Scho    4   4   7- 7   4    4  7- 7
42 Joseph Lacy - Breanna WPell City High S    5   5   7- 6   5    5  7- 6
43 Luke Barrett - Caz AndeWNC High School     5   5   7- 5   5    5  7- 5
44 Matt Holmes - Luker DavAuburn Anglers      4   4   7- 2   4    4  7- 2
45 Jesse Sconyers - Tyler ACA                 5   5   7- 0   5    5  7- 0
46 Preston Crowley - WesleTuscaloosa Count    5   5   6-13   5    5  6-13
46 Grant Ray - Matthew RamTuscaloosa Count    5   5   6-13   5    5  6-13
46 Garrett Stevens - AndreOla High School     5   5   6-13   5    5  6-13
49 Daniel Coyle - Kory KieACA                 5   5   6-12   5    5  6-12
49 Trevor Hull - Kyle HandBrookwood High S    5   5   6-12   5    5  6-12
49 Hunter Porter - Cade CrHillcrest High S    5   5   6-12   5    5  6-12
49 Corey Whaley - Dylan GiBeulah Bass Team    5   5   6-12   5    5  6-12
53 Dailus Richardson - TreIL - Benton High    5   5   6- 7   5    5  6- 7
54 Matthew Brown - ChristiCorbin High Scho    3   3   6- 7   3    3  6- 7
55 Noah Bentley - Dustin TBrookwood High S    5   5   6- 5   5    5  6- 5
56 Dozier Greer - Joe KoonEufaula High Bas    5   5   6- 2   5    5  6- 2
57 Ryan Nottingham - Seth Valley High Scho    5   5   5-15   5    5  5-15
58 Walker Davidson - Zach Auburn Anglers      2   2   5-15   2    2  5-15
59 Tanner Shelton - ReeceeHayden High Scho    5   5   5-13   5    5  5-13
60 Beau Ashcraft - Shawn ZWabash Valley Ba    5   5   5-12   5    5  5-12
61 Sam Barwick - Maximus BGuntersville Hig    5   5   5-11   5    5  5-11
62 Jake Smith - Kody Kite Cullman High Sch    3   3   5-11   3    3  5-11
63 Chace Gregory - Scott YHelena High Scho    5   5   5-10   5    5  5-10
64 Dalton Reeves - Evan BoNorth Augusta Hi    4   4   5-10   4    4  5-10
65 Caleb Dennis - Sloan PeFayetteville Hig    3   3   5-10   3    3  5-10
65 Payton Woolley - Davis Northridge High     3   3   5-10   3    3  5-10
67 Levi Burr - Caden BelchAmerican Christi    5   5   5- 9   5    5  5- 9
68 John Turner - Miller JaHillcrest High S    5   5   5- 8   5    5  5- 8
69 Colson McCool - Cole LaHillcrest High S    4   4   5- 8   4    4  5- 8
70 Jacob Graydon - Alec EtHelena High Scho    4   4   5- 6   4    4  5- 6
71 Colby Williams - Avery Hillcrest High S    4   4   5- 5   4    4  5- 5
72 Zach Weiss - Chase GuntAuburn Anglers      3   3   5- 5   3    3  5- 5
73 Bailey Nelson - John JuHillcrest High S    5   5   5- 4   5    5  5- 4
73 Stephen Williams - AmelVestavia High Sc    5   5   5- 4   5    5  5- 4
75 Davis Miller - Spencer Tuscaloosa Count    3   3   5- 4   3    3  5- 4
76 Jacob George - Ryan SweOdenville Bass C    4   4   5- 3   4    4  5- 3
77 Brandon Green - Race LaPlainview High S    5   5   5- 2   5    5  5- 2
78 Dylan Pugh - Chance DraEufaula High Bas    3   3   5- 2   3    3  5- 2
79 Sully Jeter - Delaney JBriarwood Christ    4   4   5- 1   4    4  5- 1
80 Brenn Holloway - ParkerHarris County Hi    3   3   5- 1   3    3  5- 1
81 Colton Mechan - Dylan BAlexandria High     2   2   5- 0   2    2  5- 0
82 Cassandra Gifford - JC Eufaula High Bas    5   5   4-15   5    5  4-15
83 Zach Martin - Cody ArmsHayden High Scho    3   3   4-15   3    3  4-15
83 Kyle Woodruff - Wesley Guntersville Hig    3   3   4-15   3    3  4-15
85 Caleb New - Dax Ewart  Tuscaloosa Count    4   4   4-14   4    4  4-14
86 Joey Rush - Tyler OswalTuscaloosa Count    2   2   4-14   2    2  4-14
87 Jackson Elder - Drake MAmerican Christi    4   4   4-13   4    4  4-13
87 Seth Ward - Garrett WarHoover High Scho    4   4   4-13   4    4  4-13
89 Easton Samples - Drew SPlainview High S    1   1   4-12   1    1  4-12
90 Peyton McCord - Aaron CHeadland Bass Te    3   3   4-10   3    3  4-10
91 Laura Ann Foshee - JordGardendale Rocke    2   2   4-10   2    2  4-10
92 Blake Bomar - Chris WalAlexander High S    2   2   4- 9   2    2  4- 9
93 Austin Hamner -        Northside High S    4   4   4- 8   4    4  4- 8
94 Dalton Tankersley - ZacWNC High School     3   3   4- 8   3    3  4- 8
95 DJ Barber - Reid ConnorGardendale Rocke    3   3   4- 5   3    3  4- 5
95 John Johnson - Dax MassSipsey Valley Hi    3   3   4- 5   3    3  4- 5
95 Dalton Summers - PeytonGCHS                3   3   4- 5   3    3  4- 5
98 Josh Jordan - Logan WilChiles High Fish    2   2   4- 5   2    2  4- 5
99 Zack Allen - Andrew ShaPlainview High S    4   4   4- 4   4    4  4- 4
99 Justin Fausnight - DaltACA                 4   4   4- 4   4    4  4- 4
99 Hunter Shell - Ryan ParPell City High S    4   4   4- 4   4    4  4- 4
102 Ben Coots - Luke Kirby Plainview High S    3   3   4- 3   3    3  4- 3
103 Buck Burns - Clint DailSipsey Valley Hi    2   2   4- 1   2    2  4- 1
104 Austin Brown - Bailey DPlainview High S    3   3   3-15   3    3  3-15
105 David Ackerman - JoshuaSouth Florence H    3   3   3-12   3    3  3-12
105 Owen Kuhn - John Smith Chiles High Fish    3   3   3-12   3    3  3-12
107 Wes Gallops - Elliot ToACA                 3   3   3-11   3    3  3-11
107 Will Miller - Connor EdAmerican Christi    3   3   3-11   3    3  3-11
109 Brandon Zark - Austin STuscaloosa Count    2   2   3-11   2    2  3-11
110 Tyler Presnell - CameroEFCA FISHING TEA    3   3   3-10   3    3  3-10
111 Justin Lowery - Jaiden Cullman High Sch    2   2   3-10   2    2  3-10
112 Braxton Williams - GageTuscaloosa Count    3   3   3- 9   3    3  3- 9
113 Davis Hammett - Nick ArHoover High Scho    3   3   3- 8   3    3  3- 8
114 Ean Davis - Chris MastePell City High S    2   2   3- 7   2    2  3- 7
115 Ace Johnson - Dawson DrCULLMAN HIGH SCH    3   3   3- 6   3    3  3- 6
116 Dakota Green - Steven DHayden High Scho    3   3   3- 4   3    3  3- 4
116 Adam Puckett - Keaton GBloomington High    3   3   3- 4   3    3  3- 4
118 Korin Lolley - Shelby PRehobeth Bass Cl    4   4   3- 2   4    4  3- 2
119 Preston Kendrick - GunnGardendale Rocke    3   3   3- 1   3    3  3- 1
119 MacKenzie Pennington - Fayetteville Hig    3   3   3- 1   3    3  3- 1
120 Hunter Rundquist - BradAuburn Anglers      3   3   3- 0   3    3  3- 0
122 Garrett Battles - TraviBrookwood High S    2   2   2-15   2    2  2-15
123 Cole Cranford - Andy KeArab High School    3   3   2-13   3    3  2-13
123 Clay Evans - Will O'RouJefferson County    3   3   2-13   3    3  2-13
125 Tanner Bohannon -      Hillcrest High S    2   2   2-12   2    2  2-12
126 Dylan Corder - Landyn SBrookwood High S    1   1   2-11   1    1  2-11
127 Logan Shelton - Ethan PNorthside High S    3   3   2- 8   3    3  2- 8
128 Brock Ware - Tate Dark Auburn Anglers      2   2   2- 8   2    2  2- 8
129 Hunter Wilkins - DaltonHillcrest High S    2   2   2- 7   2    2  2- 7
130 Cade Holcomb - Andrew PHelena High Scho    2   2   2- 6   2    2  2- 6
131 Grant Rogers - Josh FonBrookwood High S    1   1   2- 6   1    1  2- 6
132 David Dueland - Mason FCullman High Sch    1   1   2- 5   1    1  2- 5
133 Chris Cygan - Hayden RiDar Fishing Patr    2   2   2- 4   2    2  2- 4
133 Laney Skipper - Taylor Rehobeth Bass Cl    2   2   2- 4   2    2  2- 4
135 Mitch Drummond - Colby Sipsey Valley Hi    2   2   2- 3   2    2  2- 3
135 Matthew Maynard - ConnoHoover High Scho    2   2   2- 3   2    2  2- 3
137 Matthew Kenedy - Logan Arab High School    1   1   2- 3   1    1  2- 3
138 Kaleb Ballard - Will DeHillcrest High S    2   2   2- 2   2    2  2- 2
138 Kaleb Davis - Dalton CrHelena High Scho    2   2   2- 2   2    2  2- 2
138 Drew Traffanstedt - JusHoover High Scho    2   2   2- 2   2    2  2- 2
138 Seth Utt - Kenda Moody WNC High School     2   2   2- 2   2    2  2- 2
142 Andrew Calvin - Will HaTuscaloosa Count    2   2   2- 1   2    2  2- 1
142 Cameron Glasscock - LawCullman High Sch    2   2   2- 1   2    2  2- 1
144 Connor Roberson - JustiSylacauga Fishin    1   1   2- 0   1    1  2- 0
145 Chase Heisler - CourtneCullman High Sch    2   2   1-15   2    2  1-15
146 Dylan Strawder - JosephBeulah Bass Team    1   1   1-15   1    1  1-15
147 Tommy Floyd JR - Chris South Florence H    2   2   1-13   2    2  1-13
148 Tyler Green - Hunter HaGardendale Rocke    2   2   1-12   2    2  1-12
149 Hunter Cullefer - MarkeHarris County Hi    1   1   1- 9   1    1  1- 9
150 Alex Cook - Adrian GoocGardendale Rocke    1   1   1- 8   1    1  1- 8
151 Logan Hallyburton - AndAuburn Anglers      1   1   1- 7   1    1  1- 7
152 Cole Dodson - Jordan McGardendale Rocke    1   1   1- 6   1    1  1- 6
152 Dara Hand - Caitlin KuyVinemont High Sc    1   1   1- 6   1    1  1- 6
152 Hunter Powers - Trent JRehobeth Bass Cl    1   1   1- 6   1    1  1- 6
155 Cade Barnes - Matt ShirTuscaloosa Count    1   1   1- 3   1    1  1- 3
155 Cal Culpepper - Bailey Harris County Hi    1   1   1- 3   1    1  1- 3
155 Jordan Mullis - Tyler MSouthside Angler    1   1   1- 3   1    1  1- 3
158 Troy Benefield - NathanHillcrest High S    1   1   1- 2   1    1  1- 2
158 Griffin Thrash - EveretHoover High Scho    1   1   1- 2   1    1  1- 2
160 Cody Rosen - Gage Mays Eufaula High Bas    1   1   1- 0   1    1  1- 0
161 Tyler Harless - Andy PeHelena High Scho    1   1   0-15   1    1  0-15
161 Zac Nix - Colby White  Arab High School    1   1   0-15   1    1  0-15
163 Colin Nease -          AUBURN ANGLERS      1   1   0-14   1    1  0-14
163 Gabe Sanford - Tyler BiNorthside High S    1   1   0-14   1    1  0-14
165 Web Sartain - Hayden KeSipsey Valley Hi    1   1   0-13   1    1  0-13
166 Drew Cumbie - Brandon QRehobeth Bass Cl    1   1   0-11   1    1  0-11
167 Brady Adcock - Calvin LGuntersville Hig    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Taylor Ashley - Chase KHayden High Scho    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Jared Baker - Jake StalWhitewater High     0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Zach Buchanan -        Headland Bass Te    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Owen Carpenter - BrandoAmerican Christi    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Eli Chambers - Hunter HVinemont High Sc    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Andrew Chapman - Ryan CHeadland Bass Te    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Clay Coghlan - Terry KiGatlinburg-Pittm    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Carl Cooke - Justin CamCarrollton High     0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Dru Davis - Jake Young Alexandria High     0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Jack English - Logan PhAmerican Christi    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Peyton Erwin - Andrew FGardendale Rocke    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Andrew Fisher - Chance Alexandria High     0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Tyler Franks - Coby McLGardendale Rocke    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Chyna Gable - Grant HenVinemont High Sc    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Grayson Hanson - Jesse Pell City High S    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Samuel Hayworth - ParkeAuburn Anglers      0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Kalee Jones - Keegan JoHillcrest High S    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 William Knapp - Cooper Huntsville High     0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Taylor Manning - Ethan ACA                 0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Jake Mims - Jace GarretAlexander High S    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Levi Nelson - Tanner BrHillcrest High S    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Beau Nelson - Cody PerkAmerican Christi    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Tyler Price - Garrett HRhea County High    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Devyn Putman -         Gardendale Rocke    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Ethan Reed - Shelton BaOdenville Bass C    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Seth Roberts - Dawson HCampbell County     0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Sydney Shields -       Vinemont High Sc    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Ryan Shields - Austin HHazel Green High    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Jaci Skipper - Tyler MeRehobeth Bass Cl    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Chace Stancil - Markus Beauregard High     0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Andrew Stanley - TraytoAmerican Christi    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Nathan Walley - Caleb PHeidelberg Acade    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Garrett Whitney - CobieCullman High Sch    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Austin Winter - Zac GibLenoir City High    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Victoria Woods - Gabe OSylacauga Fishin    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Allyson Wooten - Cole WGardendale Rocke    0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
167 Craig Zoellner - TuckerWhitewater High     0   0   0- 0   0    0  0- 0
            BIG BASS                            TOTALS
 DayName        City,StateLbs-Oz    Day  Fish   Live   Lbs-Oz  Limits
   1Adam Higgin ARAB, AL    4-14    1     557    557   66- 3      59


Anglers Choice Marine TT 2015 Preivew with Director Chris Lucas

Anglers Choice Marine Team Trail director Chris Lucas joins us at this years OPEN HOUSE to talk about what lies ahead for this 2 division trail in 15'.......First Tournament blastoff is March 7th at Smith Mtn-click here for more!


Sportsman's Warehouse Winter pattern product tips!

Sportsman's Warehouse fishing manager Craig Baird goes over some good COLD WX BAITS that you probably will need the next two weeks, as this Feb winter is in FULL FORCE!!


Outstanding Catches Expected For Carolinas Bass Challenge North Carolina Division Saturday On Norman

The 2015 Carolinas Bass Challenge is off to a resounding start with 173 boats entered in the South Caroling Division opener on Lake Murray and up to 200 expected for the North Carolina Division opener on Lake Norman this Saturday.

Anglers planning to fish Lake Norman Saturday will be looking to weigh in some outstanding catches, according to Brett Collins, founder and tournament director for the CBC.

“Fishing has been outstanding at Norman lately. A 20-pound limit of spotted bass won a tournament on the lake last week. Some 5-pound spots have been showing up recently, plus some very nice largemouths.”

Collins said the Alabama Rig and jerkbaits are key tactics on main lake humps and points and around docks.

“Lake Norman is clear and down 4 feet or more. The water temperatures have been running 45 to 50 degrees,” Collins said. “The very cold weather should bunch them up and if you fish the right size you can load the boat. I look for at least 17 pounds to win it.”

The CBC North Carolina Division kicks off Saturday on Lake Norman, then moves to Lake Wylie March 21, Jordan Lake April 4, Lake Hickory May 9 and then to High Rock Lake for a double-points tournament June 20. The North Carolina State Championship will be held Oct. 10, with the CBC Classic Oct. 23-24 on Clarks Hill Lake out of Wildwood Park.

The CBC operates a full tournament schedule in South Carolina and North Carolina with outstanding payback and rewards. First place in every CBC tournament is guaranteed a minimum of $8,000, more depending on the number of entries, Collins said. The big fish winner in each tournament earns a check for $1,000 and there is a $5,000 Skeeter Bonus for each tournament for registered owners of Skeeter Boats.

“The Skeeter Bonus is split three ways, $2,500 for the highest finishing Skeeter, $1,500 for the second highest finishing Skeeter and $1,000 for the third highest finishing Skeeter,” Collins said.

Skeeter Boats, Yamaha Outboards, Foothills Marine Center in Morganton, N.C., Marshall's Marine Center in Lake City, S.C., and Palmetto Marine Center in Greenville, S.C., teamed up to support the 2015 Carolinas Bass Challenge.

The top teams of the 2015 South Carolina and North Carolina State Championships will both win a Skeeter TZX190/150 with a Yamaha 150. A ZX200/200 Yamaha SHO will be awarded to the winning team in the 2014 CBC Classic.

The big payouts in both the state qualifying tournaments, the state championships and the CBC Classic are drawing a lot of attention from anglers all over, Collins said.

“We have a lot of teams signed up from Georgia and others from West Virginia, Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina and even Ohio,” he said.

 

Carolinas Bass Challenge - North Carolina Division

Sat, Feb 14, 2015

Lake Norman

Blythe Landing

Call Brett Collins 803-413-7521

www.carolinasbasschallenge.com

 


College, High School Classics To Feature Top Student Anglers During Bassmaster Classic

Professional and veteran tournament anglers will not be the only ones walking across the stage to have their fish weighed in the Bon Secours Wellness Arena in Downtown Greenville, S.C., during the 2015 Bassmaster Classic next week.

Top high school anglers and top college anglers will get a taste of what it's like to be a Classic contender during the annual bass world championship. Both groups will fish on nearby Lake Keowee while the pros and veteran tournament anglers are fishing in Lake Hartwell.

The high school anglers will weigh in on Saturday and the college teams will weigh in on Sunday, said Hank Weldon, director of the college and youth fishing programs for B.A.S.S.

“We will have 11 different schools represented in the Bassmaster High School Classic,” Weldon said, “from Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky and South Carolina. These schools qualified from competitions last year and then we had one spot from the host state of South Carolina.”

Representing South Carolina in the High School Classic are Carter McNeil and Tucker Smith with the Abbeville high School Panthers and Andrew Mitchell and Christopher Bensel, members of the Dixie High School Hornets in Due West, also from Abbeville County.

McNeil and Smith are no strangers to high level competition, said their boat captain, Trad Whaley, veteran tournament angler and assistant fishing team coach from Abbeville.

“They have been to two national championships and have qualified for another one,. They came in second in the FLW High School Fishing Championship on Lake Keowee last year. They won the FLW Southeastern Conference Championship on Lake Lanier in October 2013, and they won the TBF South Carolina State Championship,” Whaley said.

“They won the B.A.S.S. State Championship on Lake Murray and that qualified them to fish the 6-man team in the Old Milwaukee B.A.S.S. Nation Southern Divisional on the Waccamaw River in April. It also qualified them to fish in their second B.A.S.S. High School National Championship this summer.”

Whaley said McNeil has signed a scholarship to fish with the Bethel University Fishing Team in McKenzie, Tenn., and several other anglers on the Abbeville fishing team are expected to get college fishing scholarships.

Weldon said eight teams will compete in the Bassmaster College Fishing Classic on Lake Keowee, including six teams from South Carolina universities – two teams from Clemson University, two teams from the University of South Carolina, one team from Coastal Carolina University and one from Lander University – plus the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, defending national champions, and the University of West Alabama, winners of the Bassmaster College Classic in Birmingham, Ala., last year.

“We limited the field in both the high school and college tournaments because we have to get them weighed in ahead of the Classic anglers, but we wanted also to provide something the Classic fans can enjoy as a pre-show attraction,” Weldon said.

“As for the student anglers, the main value is to be able to walk across the Classic stage. The sponsors will provide them with some pretty neat swag, but the main thing is getting bragging rights for their team while getting a taste of what it is like to be in a Bassmaster Classic,” Weldon said.

 

2015 Bassmaster Classic

Feb. 20-22, 2015

Lake Hartwell

Launch: Green Pond Landing, near Anderson, S.C.

Weigh-In: Bon Secours Wellness Arena, Greenville, S.C.

Bassmaster Classic Outdoors Expo: TD Convention Center in Greenville

Bassmaster High School Classic

Bassmaster College Classic, Feb. 20, 2015

Both on Lake Keowee, Feb. 21, 2015

Launch: South Cove Ramp

http://www.bassmaster.com/