Soukup Takes Lead On Day 2 Of Bassmaster Central Open On Grand Lake

John Soukup, of Sapulpa, Okla., is leading after Day 2 of the 2021 Basspro.com Bassmaster Central Open at Grand Lake with a two-day total of 34 pounds, 11 ounces.
Photo by Dalton Tumblin/B.A.S.S.

October 22, 2021

GROVE, Okla. — Astute observation and timely adjustments proved essential for Oklahoma pro John Soukup, who leads Day 2 of the Basspro.com Bassmaster Central Open at Grand Lake with 34 pounds, 11 ounces.

After placing second on Day 1 with 19-1, Soukup added 15-10 Friday. He enters Championship Saturday with a margin of 1-12 over Nick LeBrun of Bossier City, La.

Starting his day near takeoff, Soukup ran as far as 25 miles and fared best with a mobile game plan. Noting that he fished a variety of habitat in 1 to 50 feet of water, Soukup said his electronics were essential.

“I had my Garmin LiveScope on all day and the key to where I was catching fish was 100% bait oriented,” Soukup said. “If you can’t see the bait, you should probably get out of there.

“It was just an environmental study. You’d look down there and it’s full of bait, but they weren’t flickering. That’s the key — if the bait is flickering, that tells you to fish something high in the water column. If they’re not, that tells you to slow down and fish deeper.”

Soukup anchored his bag with a 5-5 that bit around noon. His most aggressive bite, by far, this fish started his only flurry of the day.

“That 5-pounder nearly ripped the rod out of my hand,” Soukup said. “It literally came out of my hand; I had to grab it and that was the hook set — just hold on!

“That was around noon and I only had two fish, but I put that one in the boat, caught another two really quickly and continued to fish around that area because I caught two good ones there yesterday and two today.”

Soukup said the scattered nature of fall denied him any more consistency. He fished bluffs, flat banks and docks and caught bass on a buzzbait, a Zara Spook, a squarebill crankbait and a jig.

“One thing would be on fire for an hour or two and then another one would be on fire,” he said. “The last 15 minutes of the day, I just fished off my gut and caught three fish doing three different things.

“It’s just typical fall stuff. You have (several) rods on your deck, you see a place that looks good and it’s right, but you try to repeat it on 20 different places and it’s not right.”

LeBrun is in second place with 32-15. He placed third on Day 1 with a limit of 17-12 and gained a spot Friday by adding 15-3.

Capitalizing on a particular pattern he established on Day 1, LeBrun said he had to work harder Friday. He’s fishing multiple spots and working a reaction bait with what he described as an atypical presentation.

“I had to cover a lot more water and I never had a big one,” LeBrun said. “I just had some good ones. The ones I had weren’t that aggressive and I think that was because of the lack of wind.”

Day 1 leader Kenta Kimura of Osaka, Japan, is in third with 32-14. After opening with 21-14 — the event’s biggest bag — he struggled to add 11 pounds Friday.

On Day 1, Kimura fished in the last of 18 flights. On Friday, he was the first to weigh in, so his day was significantly shorter. Also, he needed more of the wind that delivered a huge Day 1 afternoon.

“I still caught a couple the first thing in the morning when there was no wind at all, but then it just completely shut down,” Kimura said. “I knew it was going to happen, so I just tried to catch my limit the rest of the day.”

Kimura fished a Deps 1/2-ounce wobble head with a Deps creature bait around rock with brushpiles and a 3/8-ounce Deps flipping jig with a creature bait around docks. He also fished a Japanese finesse rig.

Jacob Walker of Alabaster, Ala., is in the lead for Phoenix Boats Big Bass honors with his 6-9.

Scott Hill of Saint Louis, Mo., won the co-angler division with a two-day total of 14-12. He placed second on Day 1 with 8-14 and added 5-14 Friday.

Bill Benford of Phil Campbell, Ala., won Phoenix Boats Big Bass honors among co-anglers with a 6-4.

Cody Huff of Ava., Mo., leads the Central Opens standings with 568 points. Jay Przekurat of Stevens Point, Wis., is in second with 558, followed by Jacob Powroznik of North Prince George, Va., with 546, Joseph Webster of Winfield, Ala., with 544 and John Garrett of Union City, Tenn., with 543.

Powroznik won the $10,000 Falcon Rods Basspro.com Bassmaster Opens Angler of the Year award with 1,547 points. Committing to all three divisions, he notched three Top 10 finishes, including a win on Smith Lake, an eight at the season opener on Florida’s Harris Chain and 10th on New York’s Oneida Lake.

Powroznik, who never finished below 59th, achieved his goal of qualifying for the 2022 Bassmaster Elite Series. For his Smith Lake win, he qualified for the 2022 Academy Sports + Outdoors Bassmaster Classic presented by Huk on Lake Hartwell.

He attributed his success to a disciplined game plan.

“Catch five a day, that was my plan throughout the whole deal — to catch five a day,” Powroznik said. “A lot of guys came in with two or three (in some events) and that hurt them.

“There were a lot of nerves and emotions that I had to go through this week, but it’s been a blessing. It’s something I worked hard for. Any kind of dream you have, if you put your mind to it, dreams do come true. I guess the good Lord wanted me to be back on the Elites, so that’s where I’m headed.”

Jon Jezierski of Troy, Mich., won the Falcon Rods Basspro.com Bassmaster Opens Co-Angler of the Year award with 1,380 points. Jezierski receives paid entries to fish as a pro or co-angler in the 2022 Bassmaster Opens.

Saturday’s takeoff is scheduled for 7:15 a.m. CT at Wolf Creek Park. The final weigh in will be at the Bass Pro Shops in Broken Arrow, Okla., at 4:45 p.m.

The final day’s action will be available on Bassmaster Opens LIVE presented by Bassmaster Fishing 2022, the Official Video Game, starting at 7 a.m. CT on FS1, Bassmaster.com and the FOX Sports digital platforms.