Mundy wins Toyota Series on Sam Rayburn with over 70 pounds! -Updated

Broaddus Angler Weighs in Second-Biggest Limit in Toyota Series History
BROOKELAND, Texas (Jan. 31, 2021) – Toyota Series angler Derek Mundy of Broaddus, Texas, brought a five-bass limit to the scale Saturday weighing 18 pounds, 7 ounces to win the three-day Toyota Series presented by A.R.E. at Sam Rayburn Reservoir presented by Berkley in Brookeland, Texas. Mundy’s three-day total of 15 bass weighing 70-11 earned him the win by a 14-pound margin over second-place angler Jason Bonds of Lufkin, Texas and earned Mundy the top payout of $44,150 in the first tournament of the 2021 Toyota Series Southwestern Division.

The Broaddus, Texas angler started off the year by crushing 40 pounds, 10 ounces – with an 11-10 kicker – to win a Phoenix Bass Fishing League presented by T-H Marine event on Sam Rayburn just a few weeks ago. In just under a month, Mundy became the only angler alive with two of the top 10 biggest single-day weights in MLF history.

Mundy said he caught fish from grass during the tournament, but all of his big fish, including a massive 13-10 kicker on Friday – the third-largest bass ever weighed by a pro in Toyota Series history – came from offshore.

“I was throwing [a lipless crankbait] in grass to try and bail me out when I couldn’t catch them offshore,” Mundy said. “They like a red ‘trap on Rayburn and you can catch a big bag with it.

“But all of my big fish came from hard spots in little transition areas,” he continued. “I fished probably five or six throughout the week. Sometimes I’d rotate through the same ones trying to catch them when they’d set up right. When we get hard winds like we had on Saturday they get up off the bottom and like to roam around and chase gizzard shad.

“Toward the end of the day, I knew I needed to pull something out of the hat,” Mundy said. “So, I picked up my No. 1 confidence bait for this time of year and that 10-pounder bit on my last cast.”

That confidence bait was a Strike King 8XD. Mundy said he builds his own rods and opts for  Lew’s Super Duty Wide Speed Spool  reels for his big crankbaits, throwing anything from 15- to 20-pound-test fluorocarbon line, depending on what depth he’s trying to target.

Fishing the tournament out of a borrowed boat due to a blown motor on his, Mundy said he was hoping to make a little money to be able to pay for the engine. With over $50,000 in winnings this month, that shouldn’t be much of an issue.

“That should get me [a motor] and still leave me with a little money to play with,” he laughed. “This is amazing. It really is.”
The top 10 pros on the Sam Rayburn Reservoir finished:

1st:       Derek Mundy of Broaddus, Texas, 15 bass, 70-11, $44,150
2nd:      Jason Bonds of Lufkin, Texas, 12 bass, 56-11, $17,000
3rd:       Aaron Johnson of Shreveport, La., 15 bass, 52-11, $12,750
4th:       Jason Conn of Anna, Texas, 15 bass, 51-9, $10,900
5th:       Jeff Reynolds of Calera, Okla., 15 bass, 49-13, $9,750
6th:       Garrett Hilton of China, Texas, 15 bass, 45-7, $8,375
7th:       Jeff Sprague of Point, Texas, 15 bass, 45-2, $7,300
8th:       Lowell Bennett of Hewitt, Texas, 14 bass, 44-9, $6,300
9th:       Kevin Lasyone of Dry Prong, La., 15 bass, 41-3, $5,300
10th:     Brandon Flowers of Baytown, Texas, 13 bass, 40-10, $4,200

A complete list of results can be found at MajorLeagueFishing.com.

Pro Dicky Newberry of Houston, Texas took home an extra $1,000 as the highest finishing Phoenix MLF BIG5 Bonus member. Boaters are eligible to win up to an extra $35,000 per event in each Toyota Series tournament if all requirements are met. More information on the Phoenix MLF BIG5 Bonus contingency program can be found at PhoenixBassBoats.com.

Kelsey Ray of Joplin, Missouri won the Strike King Co-angler Division Saturday with a three-day total of 14 bass weighing 36 pounds, 12 ounces. Ray took home the top prize package of a new Phoenix 518 Pro bass boat with a 115-horsepower Mercury outboard motor.
The top 10 Strike King co-anglers on the Sam Rayburn Reservoir finished:

1st:       Kelsey Ray of Joplin, Mo., 14 bass, 36-12, Phoenix 518 Pro bass boat w/115-hp outboard
2nd:      Cody Wise of Chireno, Texas, 13 bass, 34-11, $5,375
3rd:       Zack Freeman of Russellville, Ark., 15 bass, 33-15, $4,300
4th:       Phil Smith of Orange, Texas, 15 bass, 33-12, $3,650
5th:       Josh Clark of Chester, Texas, 15 bass, 33-08, $3,150
6th:       Michael Hebert of Lafayette, La., 15 bass, 32-15, $2,650
7th:       Gilbert Herald of Pittsburg, Texas, 11 bass, 32-02, $2,150
8th:       Heath Ard of Silsbee, Texas, 12 bass, 31-05, $1,825
9th:       John Goebel of Lumberton, Texas, 11 bass, 29-13, $1,530
10th:     Justin Garza of San Angelo, Texas, 12 bass, 29-05, $1,290

The Toyota Series at Sam Rayburn was presented by Berkley and was hosted by the Jasper-Lake Sam Rayburn Chamber of Commerce. It was the first of three regular-season tournaments in 2021 for Southwestern Division anglers. The next event for Toyota Series anglers will take place on Feb. 4-6 – the Toyota Series at Lake Toho presented by Googan Baits in Kissimmee, Florida. For a complete schedule, visit MajorLeagueFishing.com.

The 2021 Toyota Series presented by A.R.E. consists of six divisions – Central, Northern, Plains, Southern, Southwestern and Western – each holding three regular-season events, along with the International division. Anglers who fish all three qualifiers in any of the eight divisions and finish in the top 25 will qualify for the no-entry-fee Toyota Series presented by A.R.E. Championship for a shot at winning $235,000 cash, including a $35,000 Phoenix MLF BIG5 Bonus for qualified anglers. The winning Strike King co-angler at the championship earns a new Phoenix 518 Pro bass boat with a 115-horsepower Mercury outboard.

The 2021 Toyota Series Championship presented by A.R.E. will be held Oct. 28-30 on Pickwick Lake in Counce, Tennessee, and is hosted by the Hardin County Convention and Visitors Bureau.

For complete details and updated information visit MajorLeagueFishing.com. For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow the Toyota Series presented by A.R.E. on the MLF BIG5’s social media outlets at FacebookTwitterInstagram and  YouTube.

From Majorleagufishing.com

Derek Mundy is the hottest stick on Rayburn right now. Photo by Kory Savage.

JANUARY 30, 2021 • KYLE WOOD • TOYOTA SERIES

Derek Mundy has been firing on all cylinders since the calendar rolled over to 2021. He started the year off by crushing 40 pounds, 10 ounces (with an 11-10 kicker) to win a Phoenix Bass Fishing League presented by T-H Marine event on Sam Rayburn just a few weeks ago. So, it’s only fitting that he would end the month in the same fashion.

Mundy’s Day Two Pattern

Complete Results

Derek Mundy weighed two bass over 10 pounds this week.

Mundy nearly hit the 40-pound mark yet again this week en route to his first Toyota Series presented by A.R.E. win of his career. Weighing 12-13 on day one of the event – which was presented by Berkley – Mundy dropped 39-7 on the scale Friday to easily climb from a tie at 59th to first. That bag included a massive 13-10 kicker that gave him more than a 12-pound cushion over second-place heading into the final round. Today, things were slow for Mundy, but with a small limit and time running out he landed a 10-pounder to more than seal the deal.

So, if January wasn’t Mundy’s favorite month before, it certainly has to be now.

“January used to be the month I always hated,” Mundy jokes. “I did. With a passion. But starting last year I started getting in the groove of things and studied some things and my fishing partner and I come up with some things and stuff to try and it’s worked out.”

Doing his homework has paid off, but it’s still hard to beat good ol’ time on the water.

“Oh, golly, it’s a bunch of time spent on the lake,” Mundy says of dialing-in late-winter bass. “I can’t tell you how many hours I’ve spent on the water this January, but it’s a bunch. That’s probably a better question for my wife.”

Swinging for the fence may be an overused term in the bass fishing world, but it certainly fits for Mundy. While many anglers in the field this week were drawn to the drains and lush hydrilla found throughout the lake, Mundy knew he had to keep some offshore stuff honest, especially after his first day didn’t pan out how he hoped.

Derek Mundy spent some of his tournament fishing grass.

The Broaddus, Texas pro did spend some time fishing grass and caught fishing from it during the tournament, but all of his big fish came offshore.

“I was throwing [a lipless crankbait] in grass to try and bail me out when I couldn’t catch them offshore,” Mundy says. “They like a red ‘trap on Rayburn and you can catch a big bag doing it.

“But all of my big fish came from hard spots in little transition areas,” he says. “I fished probably five or six throughout the week. Sometimes I’d rotate through the same ones trying to catch them when they’d set up right. When we get them old hard winds like we had today they don’t set up right. They’ll get up off the bottom and they like to roam around and chase them gizzard shad.”

Today, Mundy spent a few hours offshore early to try and capitalize on a good morning bite, but abandoned it to fish grass to try to get a limit. With a very small limit in the boat, he ran back to his starting spot to finish the day and finally connected with the key bite he was hoping for.

Derek Mundy’s confidence offshore bait is a Strike King 8XD.

“I sat there and drug a Carolina rig around when I went back. Getting towards the end, I thought I needed to pull something out of the hat,” Mundy says. “So, I picked up my No. 1 confidence bait for this time of year and that 10-pounder bit on my last cast.”

That confidence bait is a Strike King 8XD. He builds his own rods and opts for Lew’s Super Duty Wide Speed Spool reels for his big crankbaits. As far as line goes, he throws anything from 15- to 20-pound-test fluorocarbon depending on what depth he’s trying to target.

Fishing the tournament out of a borrowed boat due to a blown motor on his, Mundy was hoping to make a little money to be able to pay for the engine. With over $50,000 in winnings this month, that shouldn’t be much of an issue.

“That ought to get me [a motor] and a still have little money to play with anyway,” he laughs. “This is amazing. It really is.”

Ray Takes Strike King Co-Angler Win on Rayburn

Image for Ray Takes Strike King Co-Angler Win on Rayburn

JANUARY 30, 2021 • KYLE WOOD • TOYOTA SERIES

Fishing in his first MLF event, Kelsey Ray of Joplin, Missouri, won the Strike King co-angler title in the Toyota Series presented by A.R.E. event. His winning total was 36 pounds, 12 ounces. The top co-angler prize for the event, which was presented by Berkley, was a brand new Phoenix bass boat package.

Complete Results

Winning Pro Pattern

“My cousin Marco Vaca fishes the pro side and he’s been telling me to do this for a couple years,” Ray says of committing to fishing as a co-angler. “And my wife has given me a lot of support for it, too.”

Never falling outside of the top 10, Ray got the ball rolling on day one with a limit worth 14-11 to sit in sixth. He’d catch another, yet smaller, limit (9-4) on day two to slide up to third. Today, fishing with Jason Conn, Ray weighed the biggest bag on the co-angler side despite not bringing in a limit. Weighing 12-13 with four bass, it was more than enough to give him the W.

“I had great pros all three days and that’s what we did in practice,” Ray says. “It was basically a ChatterBait, a lipless crankbait and a flat-sided crankbait all week.”

Using an “ol’ faithful” Rayburn red XCalibur One Knocker lipless crankbait and a black and red  Z-Man ChatterBait Jack Hammer all week, Ray was in his element.

“I’d rather be power fishing up shallow,” Ray says. “Anything from about 2 foot of water to 8 foot of water is about where we caught ‘em.”

Hailing from Missouri, Ray doesn’t make it Rayburn often, but the fact he could get the win here means a lot to him.

“This is my second trip down here, and my first co-angler event, so it’s awesome,” says Ray. “I love this lake. Big bass. A lot of grass; it’s awesome.”