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Climbing the Ladder: DeFoe Reaches Another Bass Fishing Pinnacle

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Climbing the Ladder: DeFoe Reaches Another Bass Fishing Pinnacle

Humminbird / Minn Kota Pro Breaks Through with First Elite Series Win

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Racine, WI (Sept 16, 2016) – At just thirty years old, Ott DeFoe had a long list of pro fishing accomplishments. Bassmaster Rookie of the Year. FLW Series winner. Bassmaster Open champion. Yet, despite amassing over a million-dollars in prize earnings, DeFoe had yet to take down a Bassmaster Elite title – something he’d dreamed about since childhood.

That all changed last week, as DeFoe beat the nation’s best, claiming the champion’s trophy at the Plano Bassmaster Elite Series event on the Mississippi River. With the win, DeFoe placed himself solidly within the Angler of the Year Championship event, and high in the Bassmaster Classic hunt.

Many considered DeFoe long overdue for the win, but he didn’t discount the difficulty in accomplishing such a feat. “To beat 106 of the world’s best bass fishermen is something I don’t take lightly,” DeFoe emphasized.

As in most Elite Series’ events, numerous competitors brought stellar catches to the weigh-in stage. But it was a few special spots, combined with intricate attention to lure choice that gave DeFoe the upper hand.

For the win, DeFoe concentrated his efforts in two locations, utilizing two very different fishing patterns. The majority of his fish were caught in swift current below the Lake Onalaska Dam, where DeFoe employed a unique method of fishing a swimbait.

“I didn’t want the bait to swim,” he ironically mentioned. “The bait had to tumble in the current.” DeFoe theorized that, by allowing the bait to sweep and fall in the roiling waters, it closely matched a disoriented baitfish, and triggered the area’s largemouth population.

New ICAST award-winning Minn Kota Ultrex

Just as important to the retrieve of the lure was making the correct cast. As often the case when fishing current, DeFoe’s found it necessary to make repeated casts to what seemed like the same spot. Then, even after multiple attempts, his lure would eventually tumble correctly and trigger a bite. DeFoe stated that he could only accomplish such exact presentations through the use of the Spot Lock feature on his Minn Kota Ultrex trolling motor. With water too deep and turbulent for the use of a shallow-water anchor, DeFoe accomplished exact anchoring through Spot-Lock, allowing him to make dozens of presentations, hook and land fish without ever moving the boat.

Each day, DeFoe supplemented his tailrace catch with heavy largemouths caught flipping matted vegetation. Here, again, finding the perfect spot was everything. While numerous areas offered thick duckweed mats, DeFoe’s key area had slightly deeper water and a harder bottom than similar looking grass beds.

New ICAST award-winning Humminbird HELIX 10

“In practice, I was fishing around, and noticed a small depression on my LakeMaster map.” DeFoe investigated the contour change and the rest, as they say, is history.

Likely due to the slight depth change, the area featured coontail as well as a “long, stringy grass”, rather than eelgrass, as in surrounding waters. This vegetative combo exhibited more caverns and holes within the mats, attracting big bass, which DeFoe quickly exploited with an ounce-and-a-half tungsten weight and creature bait. It’s not the first time LakeMaster mapping has paid off for DeFoe, and adds to a growing list of titles credited to Humminbird’s break-through cartography.

With final-day competitors consisting of the Bassmaster Angler of the Year leader, a local ace and a half-dozen Bassmaster Classic champs, the Mississippi win proved that DeFoe is a truly a force to be reckoned with. Of course, his fans and fellow competitors knew that all along.

 

A Trip to Tennessee and My Wife’s First Bass

Sep 15, 2016

I took a bass fishing trip to Tennessee to meet up with Chad Hoover of Kayak Bass Fishing. Our day started at 4am and didn’t slow down. With some help from Chad my wife was able to catch and land her first bass. What great trip.

Low Water At Champlain Will Challenge Northern Open Field

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Opens competitors will take on Lake Champlain during the third Bass Pro Shops Bassmaster Northern Open of the season, held out of Plattsburgh, N.Y., Sept. 21-23
Photo by James Overstreet/Bassmaster

Sept. 15, 2016

Low Water At Champlain Will Challenge Northern Open Field

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PLATTSBURGH, N.Y. — A hot, dry summer is likely to alter the shallow-water bite at Lake Champlain during the Bass Pro Shops Bassmaster Northern Open Sept. 21-23.

While pre-fishing for the tournament, New York B.A.S.S. Nation angler Jamie Hartman has noticed conditions are different than the last time the Northern Open visited Lake Champlain in the summer of 2014. “The lake is extremely low,” said Hartman, who has fished the lake for about 15 years “It is the lowest I have ever seen it in all the times I’ve fished there.

“A lot of that shallow stuff that I used to fish in 6 to 8 feet of water is now only in 3 and 4 feet of water,” he said. “So there will have to be an adjustment to the low water.”

Summer patterns prevailed in 2014 when Texan Shin Fukae won the Northern Open on Champlain mixing in finesse tactics to catch both largemouth and smallmouth bass. Fukae tricked smallmouth in deep water with a drop shot rig to complete a limit each day and targeted kicker largemouth in the shallows with a Yamamoto Senko attached to a Gamakatsu G-Finesse Wacky Head jig.

The unusually hot weather has kept the water warm at Champlain even at the beginning of September. During his most recent pre-fishing trip, Hartman noticed the water temperature was still around 74 degrees. “Unless the weather changes and we get a lot of cool nights with some cool days thrown in, I think it is still going to be set up for summer patterns,” Hartman said. “There will be a lot of scattered fish and a lot of different ways to catch them.

Hartman struggled his first day of pre-fishing, but made an adjustment the next day and found plenty of action. “They seem to be eating pretty well,” he said. “It’s going to be a bass buffet. Everything is going to come into play. You just have to figure it out or find a bunch of fish.”

Finding bunches of bass could be a problem, though. Hartman found smallmouth scattered at various depths during his pre-fishing days. “A lot of shallow patterns will play and a lot of deep patterns will play,” Hartman said. He saw fish cruising as shallow at 4 feet and caught smallmouth as deep at 28 feet.

So Hartman believes diversity will be the key to succeeding in the Open. “You got to have several different patterns going and move around a lot,” he said. “I don’t think you will be able to sit in one spot.”

The New York angler predicts the most productive patterns for smallmouth will be working jerkbaits and topwater baits or soft plastics on Carolina rigs and drop shot rigs around deep rocks or shallow grass.

The Fort Ticonderoga area produced good largemouth fishing earlier this year, but the action there has tailed off lately due to the low water. “I don’t know if the Ti area is going to come into play,” Hartman said. “The grass grows out to about 4 to 4 1/2 feet and that seems to be about it. The water is so low down there that the grass never grew out deep.” The low lake level has also eliminated shallow largemouth hideouts such as reeds, tules and boat docks.

Hartman expects the largemouth will be scattered in the shallow grass so he doubts anyone can sit in one spot and consistently catch fish. Making a milk run to various grass spots and throwing topwater frogs, buzzbaits, spinnerbaits and swim jigs will more likely be the best way to catch largemouth during the event.

Despite the low lake level, Champlain offers vast amounts of fishable water. “It is a big lake between the entire Champlain area and then the Inland Sea, so everything can play,” Hartman said. “The way it is setting up, I found the mid-lake area seems to be pretty decent. It seems like the low water has pulled the fish to the dropoffs.”

Catching about 34 1/2 pounds of mainly smallmouth in two days could be enough for a Pro Division angler to make the Top 12 cut for the final round, according to Hartman. He guesses it will take about 56 1/4 pounds to win.

Swindle Maintains Lead In Toyota Bassmaster Angler Of The Year Race

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Gerald Swindle of Guntersville, Ala., holds on to first place in Toyota Bassmaster Angler of the Year points on the first day of the Toyota Bassmaster Angler of the Year Championship held on Mille Lacs Lake out of Onamia, Minn. 

Photo by Seigo Saito/Bassmaster

Sept. 15, 2016

Swindle Maintains Lead In Toyota Bassmaster Angler Of The Year Race

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ONAMIA, Minn. — Giant limits of smallmouth bass created quite the spectacle during the first weigh-in of the Toyota Bassmaster Angler of the Year Championship at Mille Lacs Lake in central Minnesota.

Twenty-three anglers crested the 20-pound mark with their individual five-fish daily limits. While that’s very impressive, this tournament isn’t won by the heaviest three-day total. Rather, it’s all about crowning the best angler of the 2016 season.

Gerald Swindle of Warrior, Ala., came to Mille Lacs with a 43-point lead over Keith Combs of Huntington, Texas. Swindle didn’t have to do much coming into this tournament to lock up the AOY title. But during Thursday’s first round, the 15-time Classic qualifier struggled to locate the right fish.

Swindle brought only three bass to the scales that weighed 9 pounds, 9 ounces.

“I just didn’t get many bites today,” Swindle said. “I wish I had a good story to tell, or an explanation to give, but I just couldn’t figure out where the fish were located or what they would be willing to eat.”

Swindle said he had four to five spots where he figured finding five good bass wouldn’t be too difficult. After going through several presentations, and considering the windy conditions, the seasoned veteran just couldn’t settle in.

“It’s not a good feeling coming into the championship with the lead in hand only to fall on your face the first day,” he said. “But all I can do is get back out there tomorrow and figure out where I went wrong. I’m mad at them now, so that’s exactly what I’m going to do.”

Swindle likely has to have a solid Day 2 in order to lock up the AOY title, but mathematically, it’s too close to call at this point.

Seth Feider of Bloomington, Minn., defied long odds and qualified for the AOY Championship after a second-place finish on the Mississippi River last week out of La Crosse, Wis. The 31-year-old pro weighed in five bass today that tipped the scales at 25-8. The mark tied South Carolina pro Jason Williamson for the second-heaviest sack of the day.

“I know today’s weights won’t tell you this, but Mille Lacs isn’t fishing as well as it could right now,” Feider said. “I think the smallmouth are in transition from their summer patterns, and the fish are spread out as a result.”

In order to qualify for the 2017 GEICO Bassmaster Classic presented by GoPro, Feider needs to finish in the Top 3 this week.

“I’m not even thinking about the Classic right now,” he said. “I’m having too much fun to be sweating a tournament six months from now. I’m more concerned about finishing strong and really showcasing this fishery — I truly believe it’s the best smallmouth fishery in the world right now, and these guys are showing it off.”

Feider also said that as the Top 50 Elites are demonstrating the true potential of this legendary Northern fishery, it needs protection.

“Knowing how many 20-year-old smallmouth bass are swimming in this lake, it’s obvious how important conservation is,” he said. “I’d love to see this lake go to 100 percent catch and release on the smallies. This is a very special place, and that quality needs to be preserved.”

The other big story of the day was rookie pro Drew Benton from Panama City, Fla., being officially crowned Bassmaster Rookie of the Year. After a very dominating first season on the Elite Series, Benton was recognized as the best of the freshman class on tour.

“Professional bass fishing is a sport based on momentum, and after a good start on the St. Johns River this year, I felt like I was able to make good decisions and keep the streak alive,” Benton said. “This is a tough sport to make your mark in, and being recognized as the top rookie this year means a lot to me.”

After Thursday, the unofficial Top 5 in AOY points include: Swindle still holding down the lead with (905 points); Combs is in second (870); Greg Hackney of Gonzales, La., is in third (860); Randall Tharp of Port St. Joe, Fla., is in fourth (856); and Jordan Lee of Vinemont, Ala., is in fifth (841).

Takahiro Omori, winner of the 2004 Bassmaster Classic, weighed the day’s heaviest five-bass limit at 26-7. Feider and Williamson were next with 25-8, followed by Brent Ehrler of Newport Beach, Calif., with 25-5 and Matt Herren of Ashville, Ala., with 23-14.

Competition will resume on Friday with takeoff beginning at 6:40 a.m. CT at Eddy’s Resort in Onamia, Minn. Weigh-in will take place at Grand Casino Mille Lacs at 3:45 p.m.

2016 Points Report
PROFESSIONAL ELITE SERIES
as of 15-Sep-2016

Angler                                Points Lbs-Oz 
1   Gerald Swindle     Guntersville, AL        905   278-14
2   Keith Combs        Huntington, TX          870   271-13
3   Greg Hackney       Gonzales, LA            860   277- 6
4   Randall Tharp      Port St. Joe, FL        856   272-10
5   Jordan Lee         Grant, AL               841   284- 7
6   Jacob Powroznik    Port Haywood, VA        821   279-13
7   Edwin Evers        Talala, OK              789   276- 6
8   Ott DeFoe          Knoxville, TN           786   267- 8
9   Chris Zaldain      Laughlin, NV            785   263- 7
10 Jason Christie     Park Hill, OK            778   260- 7
11 Justin Lucas       Guntersville, AL         777   272- 4
12 Takahiro Omori     Emory, TX                773   258-11
13 Drew Benton        Panama City, FL          768   258- 3
14 Bobby Lane Jr.     Lakeland, FL             767   267- 6
15 Hank Cherry Jr     Maiden, NC               765   262- 3
16 Michael Iaconelli Pittsgrove, NJ            763   266- 2
17 Alton Jones        Lorena, TX               758   253- 8
18 Aaron Martens      Leeds, AL                747   265- 3
19 Steve Kennedy      Auburn, AL               747   264- 3
20 Matt Herren        Ashville, AL             740   253-15
21 Brandon Palaniuk   Rathdrum, ID             737   264- 5
22 Dean Rojas         Lake Havasu City, AZ     737   249- 2
23 Bill Lowen         Brookville, IN           731   263-12
24 Brett Hite         Phoenix, AZ              728   264- 7
25 James Elam         Tulsa, OK                727   254- 3
26 Todd Faircloth     Jasper, TX               724   250- 5
27  Jared Lintner      Arroyo Grande, CA       714   239-11
28 Skeet Reese        Auburn, CA               712   251- 0
29 Bradley Roy        Lancaster, KY            710   264-10
30 Jason Williamson   Wagener, SC              688   254-11
31 Kevin VanDam       Kalamazoo, MI            682   256-14
32 Brent Ehrler       Newport Beach, CA        669   265- 1
33 Shaw Grigsby Jr.   Gainesville, FL          669   244- 1
34 Casey Ashley       Donalds, SC              668   244-11
35 Keith Poche        Pike Road, AL            667   251-13
36 Dave Lefebre       Erie, PA                 662   252- 3
37 Andy Montgomery    Blacksburg, SC           658   249-15
38 Ish Monroe         Hughson, CA              657   247-10
39 Fred Roumbanis     London, AR               656   243-11
40 Boyd Duckett       Guntersville, AL         654   243-10
41 Chris Lane         Guntersville, AL         647   262-15
42 Clifford Pirch     Payson, AZ               645   251- 7
43 Randy Howell       Guntersville, AL         639   235- 1
44 Seth Feider        Bloomington, MN          636   240-15
45 Adrian Avena       Vineland, NJ             634   232- 1
46 Cliff Pace         Petal, MS                633   237- 2
47 Tommy Biffle       Wagoner, OK              632   237-12
48 Stephen Browning   Hot Springs, AR          617   241- 6
49 Gary Klein         Weatherford, TX          613   242- 2
50 Kelly Jordon       Flint, TX                600   236- 6

CHARLOTTE’S HIRAPETIAN TAKES DAY ONE LEAD AT WALMART FLW TOUR INVITATIONAL ON LAKE NORMAN PRESENTED BY LOWRANCE

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CHARLOTTE’S HIRAPETIAN TAKES DAY ONE LEAD AT WALMART FLW TOUR INVITATIONAL ON LAKE NORMAN PRESENTED BY LOWRANCE

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HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. (Sept. 15, 2016) – George Hirapetian of Charlotte, North Carolina, brought a five-bass limit to the scale weighing 14 pounds, 7 ounces, Thursday to grab the early lead after Day One of the Walmart FLW Tour Invitational at Lake Norman presented by Lowrance. Right behind him in second place is Wesley Strader of Spring City, Tennessee, who weighed in five bass totaling 13-0. Hirapetian now brings a 1-pound, 7-ounce lead into Day Two of the three-day event that features competitors casting for huge cash payouts and a coveted spot in the world championship of bass fishing – the 2017 Forrest Wood Cup.

“Lake Norman is a lake that I’m confident on,” said Hirapetian, who has two career wins – one on Lake Norman – in FLW competition. “It doesn’t matter what season it is, I can come here and catch a lot of fish.

“Right now I’m using a Texas-rigged worm and a drop-shot rig fishing short grass on the bottom,” Hirapetian continued. “I’m also skipping the worm under docks. I didn’t catch a fish until 10:30 a.m., and then I started bringing in 2- and 3-pounders. I’m fishing very slowly. When I got my limit, I slowed down even more. That helped me catch more fish.”

Hirapetian said his docks and grassy areas are scattered all over the lake, including stretches near Governor’s Island and Mountain Creek.

“I hit around 30 different docks today,” said Hirapetian. “In practice I was looking for ones in 10 to 12 feet of water. If I saw brush, I would stop and catch one, and then I’d move on.”

Hirapetian said he caught many of the same fish today that he had caught in practice. Of his ten keepers, his limit that he weighed in consisted of three largemouth and two spotted bass.

“I was able to catch five bass off of one dock,” said Hirapetian. “I’m not sure what I’m going to do tomorrow – hopefully my docks replenish.”

The top 10 pros after Day One on Lake Norman are:

1st:          George Hirapetian, Charlotte, N.C., five bass, 14-7

2nd:         Wesley Strader, Spring City, Tenn., five bass, 13-0

3rd:          John Cox, DeBary, Fla., five bass, 12-12

4th:          Jason Meninger, Gainesville, Ga., five bass, 12-3

5th:          Scott Beattie, Lincolnton, N.C., five bass, 12-0

6th:          Quaker State pro Scott Canterbury, Springville, Ala., five bass, 11-15

7th:          Todd Hollowell, Fishers, Ind., five bass, 11-12

8th:          Walmart pro David Dudley, Lynchburg, Va., five bass, 11-10

8th:          Tracy Adams, Wilkesboro, N.C., five bass, 11-10

10th:        Ronald Farrow, Rock Hill, S.C., five bass, 11-7

For a full list of results visit FLWFishing.com.

Overall there were 296 bass weighing 561 pounds, 14 ounces caught by 73 pros Thursday. The catch included 46 five-bass limits.

Anglers will take off from Blythe Landing Park located at 15901 N.C. Highway 73 in Huntersville at 7 a.m. EDT Friday and Saturday. Weigh-in each day will be held at the park, beginning at 3 p.m. Takeoffs and weigh-ins are free and open to the public.

The Walmart FLW Tour Invitational at Lake Norman presented by Lowrance is being hosted by Visit Lake Norman, Visit Charlotte and Mecklenburg County Parks & Recreation.

For complete details and updated information visit FLWFishing.com. For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow us on Facebook at Facebook.com/FLWFishing and on Twitter at Twitter.com/FLWFishing.

 

 

How the Pros Modify Skirted Bass Jigs for More Bites September 15,2016

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How the Pros Modify Skirted Bass Jigs for More Bites

David A. Brown

12:30 AM

How you modify the skirts of your bass jigs can make all the difference on how they fish and how well they get bit.

Skirted bass jigs earned their place as big-fish baits with a with a wide range of applications from flipping/pitching to stroking and swimming. When you fish a jig, however, the modifying jig skirts can be the hot ticket to the most bites.

It’s as much about form as it is function, and Bassmaster Elite pro Mike Iaconelli suggests a holistic approach to striking the right balance.

The key factors for jig skirt decisions comprise 3 simple considerations

  • color
  • length
  • thickness

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Kayak Fishing with the YakAddicts – BIG GEORGIA BASS

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Sep 14, 2016

Chad Hoover heads to Live Oak Plantation in Adel, Georgia with the YakAddicts, UFC star Clay Guida, and YouTuber Gene the Flukemaster Jensen.


Bass Fishing Matted Grass with Hollow Body Frogs by Gene Jensen

Published on Sep 13, 2016

I went bass fishing on Lake Chickamauga specifically to film a frog video. Although it won’t get good for a few more weeks I was able to put something together that should help you catch more bass out of matted grass when the time comes no matter where you live.

From the budget-minded to hippest millennial, St. Croix’s BASS X tragets the bass-centric

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Earning the ‘X”

From the budget-minded to hippest millennial, St. Croix’s BASS X tragets the bass-centric

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Park Falls, WI (September 14, 2016) – ‘X’ marks the spot. It’s the Sharpie scribble on Grandpa’s composting lake map on the fridge, where lunker largemouth hunker as promised. It’s the four billionth Navionics waypoint; that microscopic seam between the point and hump – visually referenced by the purple martin house and ranger tower – that only you and the bronzebacks know about.

‘X’ also marks that immaculate intersection of quality, price…and coolness. And that’s why St. Croix Rod stamps a big fat blue ‘X’ on the blank of every rod in the new BASS X series.

Bass fisherman have been liberated, now able to cross the threshold into St. Croix ownership for a about a hundred bucks – and a little something for the taxman, of course. Not lost in the value-proposition, though, is the supreme technology and performance infused in BASS X.

BASS X combines St. Croix’s legendary, handcrafted quality with purely-premium componentry. The magic begins with St. Croix’s proven SCII graphite blank; not the amalgamation of anonymous carbon fibers found in similarly priced rods. Moreover, the SCII graphite blank gets two baths of Flex Coat finish to add durability and fuel that awesome BASS X mark with extra pop.

BASS X’s guides and reel seat don’t come out of the bargain bin, either. Hard aluminum-oxide guides line the train from stripper guide to tip. A Fuji ECS® reel seat ensures ironclad connection with the reel while yielding all-day casting comfort.

Speaking of comfortably throwing baits, all 10 casting and 4 spinning models feature sporty split-grips. The supremely balanced configuration not only positions your hands for serious catapulting, but also reduces the overall weight of the rod.

Designed with super-fast tips on some models, moderate deflections on others, bassers will find the 14 models in the BASS X lineup able to cover every technique from dropshotting to slopping to punching jigs through gnarly weed mats.

Put to the ‘cool and competent test,’ St. Croix put BASS X in the paws of an up-and-coming bass-head, 15-year old Jackson Bailey, member of the Benton, Arkansas bass team. His first impression: “BASS X is really lightweight, throws well…and I like the looks.

“To know that a company like St. Croix built a rod for fisherman like me is pretty cool.”

BASS X rods were designed in Park Falls, Wisconsin and are handcrafted in our Fresnillo, Mexico facility. Retailing for $100 – $110, BASS X delivers incomparable value. When paired with a 5-year warranty backed by its Superstar Service…St Croix delivers on its goal of affordable performance.

BASS X will be available through the St. Croix dealer network in November.

FEATURES

  • Premium-quality SCII
  • Designed and built for bass anglers.
  • Hard aluminum-oxide guides with black frames.
  • Fuji® ECS reel seat with black hood on casting models.
  • Fuji® DPS reel seat with black hoods on spinning models.
  • Split-grip / premium-grade cork handle with EVA trim.
  • Two coats of Flex Coat slow-cure finish.
  • 5-year warranty backed by St. Croix Superstar Service.
  • Designed in Park Falls and handcrafted in Fresnillo, Mexico.

 

 

#StCroixRod

Skeeter And B.A.S.S. Sign Multi-Year Sponsorship Extension

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Sept. 13, 2016

Skeeter And B.A.S.S. Sign Multi-Year Sponsorship Extension

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BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Skeeter Products Inc., maker of high-performance bass boats, and B.A.S.S., the world’s most prestigious bass tournament organization, have signed a multiyear agreement for Skeeter to continue as an official premier boat sponsor of all B.A.S.S. circuits.

The agreement includes all Bassmaster events conducted within the Bassmaster Elite Series, Bass Pro Shops Bassmaster Opens Series, Carhartt Bassmaster College Series, the Costa Bassmaster High School Series, the Toyota Bonus Bucks Team Championship and the grass-roots B.A.S.S. Nation regional tournaments. Also included is the GEICO Bassmaster Classic presented by GoPro, the annual Super Bowl of professional bass fishing.

B.A.S.S. CEO Bruke Akin was thrilled to make the announcement.

“Skeeter has been a longtime, dedicated sponsor focused on growing the sport of bass fishing,” Akin said. “The Skeeter sponsorship underlines the company’s passion for the sport and commitment to loyal Skeeter customers who share in that passion. We look forward to the opportunities that will arise during the next phase of our sponsorship.”

Jeff Stone, senior vice president/general manager of Skeeter Boats, echoed Akin’s excitement.

“Our commitment to the sport of bass fishing is reinforced through our commitment to B.A.S.S.,” Stone said. “Bass fishing is a way of life for us and for our customers, many of whom compete in the B.A.S.S. Nation tournaments each weekend. From the Classic to the Elite tournaments throughout the year, B.A.S.S. showcases the professionalism of the sport, and we are grateful to be a part of this sponsorship.”

Skeeter, based in Kilgore, Texas, and B.A.S.S., which is headquartered in Birmingham, Ala., have collaborated since 2008 to promote their products and the sport. The sponsorship agreement announced today assures their partnership through 2020.

Skeeter bass boats include models in the FX, ZX and TZX series. They are showcased at many Bassmaster competitions, including the Classic, Bassmaster Elite Series events, Opens tournaments, college and high school events and regional events in each of the B.A.S.S. Nation circuits.

Especially popular with fans is the free Skeeter Performance Boats Demo Tour at the Classic and Elite Series events. The program allows bass fishing fans to experience the smooth, fast and controlled ride of a Skeeter boat powered by a Yamaha V MAX SHO engine.

Fishing enthusiasts also learn about Skeeter boats through other B.A.S.S. properties. They include The Bassmasters TV show, Bassmaster and B.A.S.S. Times magazines, and Bassmaster.com.

About Skeeter Products, Inc.
Skeeter Products, Inc., a leader of performance fishing boats, is proud to support America’s fishing consumer for half a decade. Skeeter is the recipient of 14 consecutive NMMA® C.S.I. Customer Satisfaction Index awards, and its boats are certified to meet strict U.S. Coast Guard and American Boat & Yacht Council standards. For a catalog, call (800) SKEETER, or for more information visit www.skeeterboats.com.

About B.A.S.S.
B.A.S.S. is the worldwide authority on bass fishing and keeper of the culture of the sport, providing cutting edge content on bass fishing whenever, wherever and however bass fishing fans want to use it. Headquartered in Birmingham, Ala., the 500,000-member organization’s fully integrated media platforms include the industry’s leading magazines (Bassmaster and B.A.S.S. Times), website (Bassmaster.com), television show (The Bassmasters on ESPN2), social media programs and events. For more than 45 years, B.A.S.S. has been dedicated to access, conservation and youth fishing.

The Bassmaster Tournament Trail includes the most prestigious events at each level of competition, including the Bassmaster Elite Series, Bass Pro Shops Bassmaster Open Series, B.A.S.S. Nation, Carhartt Bassmaster College Series presented by Bass Pro Shops, Costa Bassmaster High School Series, Toyota Bonus Bucks Bassmaster Team Championship and the ultimate celebration of competitive fishing, the GEICO Bassmaster Classic presented by GoPro.