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Phoenix Boats Signs Deal To Become B.A.S.S. Supporting Sponsor

Former Toyota Bassmaster Angler of the Year champion Greg Hackney of Gonzales, La., is a member of the Phoenix Boats pro staff. Hackney represents the company with a Phoenix boat wrap on the Bassmaster Elite Series tour.

Photo by Seigo Saito/Bassmaster

April 27, 2016

Phoenix Boats Signs Deal To Become B.A.S.S. Supporting Sponsor

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BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Phoenix Boats, a young, fast-growing bass boat company based in Winchester, Tenn., has signed a multi-year deal to be a supporting level sponsor of 2016 Bassmaster tournament circuits.

Under the agreement with B.A.S.S., Phoenix will sponsor the Bassmaster Elite Series, Bass Pro Shops Bassmaster Opens Series, Academy Sports + Outdoors B.A.S.S. Nation events, Carhartt Bassmaster College Series presented by Bass Pro Shops, Costa Bassmaster High School Series and Toyota Bonus Bucks Bassmaster Team Championship through the 2018 season.

“B.A.S.S. has been a part of my life and career for over 40 years,” said Gary Clouse, president of Phoenix Boats. “Having been a B.A.S.S. member and tournament angler since I was 14 years old, it is very exciting to be partnered with them.”

“Phoenix has risen to become one of the premier bass boats in the nation, and we are excited to partner with B.A.S.S. moving forward,” added Teresa Johnson, COO of Phoenix. “It is a natural fit.”

“Members of B.A.S.S. and other fans of our Bassmaster tournaments are known to be some of the most knowledgeable and discriminating bass boat buyers in the country,” noted Bruce Akin, B.A.S.S. CEO. “We’re glad that Phoenix has decided to use our media and events to reach these consumers, and we welcome them to our family of sponsors as we strive to grow the sport of bass fishing.”

The sponsorship agreement entitles Phoenix to exhibit space at the Classic Outdoor Expo to be held in conjunction with the GEICO Bassmaster Classic presented by GoPro in Houston next March, as well as expos at Elite Series and other B.A.S.S. events.

Phoenix will also provide three fully rigged boat/motor packages for the B.A.S.S. Nation’s Best program, which offers a truck, boat and motor for each of the Top 3 finishers in the Academy Sports + Outdoors B.A.S.S. Nation Championship.

In addition, Phoenix will be the title sponsor of tournament big-bass competitions, beginning with the Academy Sports + Outdoors Bassmaster Elite at Wheeler Lake, which gets under way Thursday. The Phoenix Boats Big Bass prize will be $1,500 for the heaviest bass weighed in during each regular Elite Series event for the remainder of the year, plus the Toyota Bassmaster Angler of the Year Championship in September.

The Phoenix Boats Big Bass award will pay $750 for the biggest bass in the pro division and $250 for big bass of the co-angler division in each Bass Pro Shops Bassmaster Opens tournament beginning with the Southern Open on Douglas Lake May 19-21.

The Tennessee company’s pro staff includes some of the top anglers in professional fishing, including Aaron Martens of Leeds, Ala., reigning Toyota Bassmaster Angler of the Year; 2014 AOY Greg Hackney of Gonzales, La.; and former Classic winner and Angler of the Year Davy Hite of Ninety Six, S.C. Other Elite Series pros fishing for Phoenix are Bobby Lane of Lakeland, Fla.; Russ Lane of Prattville, Ala.; Brandon Lester of Fayetteville, Tenn.; Justin Lucas of Guntersville, Ala.; Chad Morgenthaler of Coulterville, Mo.; Randall Tharp of Port St. Joe, Fla.; and J Todd Tucker of Moultrie, Ga.

Phoenix offers a tournament incentive program, paying up to $7,000 to owners of its boats who win Bassmaster Elites or Opens or other “Tier One” tournaments.

About Phoenix
Built on a foundation of unsurpassed performance, quality and customer service, Phoenix Boats is headquartered in Winchester, Tennessee, in a modern, 75,000-square-foot facility on 10 acres. As the fastest growing bass boat brand, Phoenix has risen to become one of the premier brands. For more information, go to phoenixbassboats.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, Academy Sports + Outdoors B.A.S.S. Nation events, 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.

Jeff & Gary Brantley Win HillCity Bassmasters event on Mill Creek April 23,2016

It only took one fish to win our Mill Creek event with the team of Jeff & Gary Brantley bringing in the 4.8lb hog. Congratulations to them and we like to thank everyone that was able to come out we know it was a busy weakened.

Click Here To See Results

Click Here To See Standings

 

 

 

Kluender/Burns Win Castaway Anglers Lake Anna Club Tournament Results – 4/24/2016

Hey Everybody,
We had a great turn out Sunday (4/24/2016) with 17 boats Congrats to Kluender/Burns who finished first with 14 lbs even; Perez/Funk finished second with 12.6 lbs; Carter/Allen finished third with 12.02 lbs; and Dalton/Hall had big fish with a 4.54 lb largemouth. It was a great weekend of fellowship and fishing. Thanks to all who came out. Our next tournament is a club tournament at Claytor Lake  on Sunday, May 22, 2016 from 6 to 3PM out of Bear Drive ramp. See everybody there.
Jimmy
Lake Anna 2016 2 Lake Anna 2016 3 Lake Anna 2016 4 Lake Anna 2016

Nelson Troyer Wins Reel Drag Bass Anglers event on SML April 24,2016

Good weather greeted our anglers for our second event for 2016.

First place was Nelson Troyer with 16.98 bag and a kicker of 4.57 to win our
second event.
Great catch to to him and thanks for fishing with us.
Second was Seth Brogan and Hunter Tolly with 15.83 and had big fish of 5.35.
awesome fish.
Sorry for the late post, working on other things.
Thanks to Smith Mountain Dock & Lodge for having this event.
Thank you Donna For feeding our anglers.
Please check out Smith Mt. Dock & Lodge on facebook and call me for info.

 

KENTUCKY REGIONAL FISHING TOURNAMENTS SEND 64 HIGH SCHOOLS TO KHSAA STATE COMPETITION

KENTUCKY REGIONAL FISHING TOURNAMENTS SEND 64 HIGH SCHOOLS TO KHSAA STATE COMPETITION

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BENTON, Ky. (April 26, 2016) – The Bass Federation (TBF) and FLW, the world’s largest tournament-fishing organization, partnered with the Kentucky High School Athletic Association (KHSAA) to present the 2016 KHSAA bass fishing regional tournaments on Saturday. More than 292 teams across Kentucky competed in four different regional tournaments with the goal of advancing to the KHSAA State competition.

The top 16 teams in Region 1 that advanced to the KHSAA State Championship from Lake Barkley were:

1st:       Muhlenberg County High School – Taylor Harris and Drew Mendoza, five bass, 12-15

2nd:      Muhlenberg County High School – Billy Hardison and Nathan Flener, five bass, 12-13

3rd:       Christian County High School – Brandon Boyd and Chance Glass, five bass, 12-0

4th:       McCracken County High School – Wesley Dunn and Sarah Morehead, five bass, 11-15

5th:       Trigg County High School – Douglas Colson and Drake Oliver, five bass, 11-13

6th:       Calloway County High School – Brandon Falwell and Colton Jennings, five bass, 11-5

7th:       Logan County High School – Christian Wright and Trevor McIntosh, five bass, 10-14

8th:       Calloway County High School – Colton Cox and Andrew Douglas, four bass, 10-10

9th:       McCracken County High School – Austin Braboy and Ethan Carson, four bass, 10-1

10th:     Calloway County High School – Clayton Bobo and Myles McManus, five bass, 9-10

11th:     Marshall County High School – Peyton Porter and Barrett Washburn, four bass, 9-2

12th:     Muhlenberg County High School – Brandon Payne and Peyton Lipe, four bass, 8-15

13th:     Trigg County High School – Austin Greene and Zack Colbert, four bass, 8-8

14th:     Muhlenberg County High School – James Hampton and Cole Noffsinger, three bass, 8-2

15th:     McCracken County High School – Daniel Schroeder and Ashton Goff, three bass, 8-0

16th:     Oldham County High School – Levi Patterson and Colton Porter, four bass, 7-12

The top 16 teams in Region 2 that advanced to the KHSAA State Championship from Lake Cumberland were:

1st:       Washington County High School – Trevor Sagrecy and Michael Shelton, five bass, 16-8

2nd:      Trinity High School – Will O’Rourke and Clay Evans, five bass, 14-10

3rd:       Madison Southern High School – Ricky Hembree and Jacob Walters, five bass, 14-3

4th:       Lafayette High School – Riley Cobb and Landon Orr, five bass, 13-12

4th:       Kentucky Student Angler Federation – Leslie Owens and Brandon Turner, five bass, 13-12

6th:       Dixie Heights High School – Andrew Bernard and Noah Caple, five bass, 13-1

7th:       Metcalfe County High School – Nick Pennington and Tucker Scroggy, five bass, 13-0

8th:       Washington County High School – Nathaniel Messer and Mason Hamilton, five bass, 12-13

9th:       Spencer County High School – Clayton Rountree and Dillon Stallings, five bass, 12-9

10th:     North Oldham High School – Lucas Walz and Nicholas Walz, five bass, 12-1

11th:     St. Xavier High School – Chris Armstrong and Jacob Gruneisen, five bass, 11-11

12th:     Carroll County High School – John Glauber and Caleb Stephenson, five bass, 11-9

13th:     Madison Southern High School – Blake Harold and Cameron Cochran, five bass, 11-7

14th:     North Oldham High School – Trey Marksbury and Alex Hinton, five bass, 10-12

15th:     Burgin High School – Zach Bell and Riley Bradshaw, four bass, 10-3

16th:     Elizabethtown High School – Jordan Smallwood and Wes Irwin, four bass, 9-14

The top 16 teams in Region 3 that advanced to the KHSAA State Championship from Lake Cumberland were:

1st:       South Laurel High School – Tad Barton and Matthew Woods, five bass, 16-8

2nd:      Wayne County High School – Tray Hardwick and Bradley Dunnagan, five bass, 16-8

3rd:       Southwestern High School – Benjamin Hughes and Tyler Murphy, five bass, 14-9

4th:       Lincoln County High School – Mason Moore and Logan Estes, five bass, 14-5

5th:       North Laurel High School – Austin Williams and Jordan Cassidy, four bass, 13-8

6th:       Wayne County High School – Bailey Hardwick and Logan Rigney, five bass, 13-6

7th:       South Laurel High School – Kyler Petrey and Logan Martin, five bass, 12-11

8th:       Wayne County High School – Jacob Sweet and Justin Mann, five bass, 12-2

9th:       Taylor County High School – Peyton Cox and Shawn Mills, five bass, 12-0

10th:     South Laurel High School – Austin Turner and Lucas Powell, five bass, 11-11

11th:     South Laurel High School – Zach Wilson and Eli Singleton, five bass, 11-9

12th:     Corbin High School – Jeremy Elliott and Jordan Elliott, five bass, 11-9

13th:     South Laurel High School – Hunter Jones and Jackson Douglas, five bass, 11-7

14th:     Boyle County High School – Michael Steinhauer and Tate Goggin, four bass, 11-6

15th:     Pulaski County High School – Colby Hays and Austin Bray, five bass, 11-2

16th:     North Laurel High School – Josh Boone and Brian Oliver, five bass, 11-1

The top 16 teams in Region 4 that advanced to the KHSAA State Championship from Cave Run Lake were:

1st:       George Rogers Clark High School – Robert Powe and Colby Kerr, five bass, 13-11

2nd:      Montgomery County High School – Quinten McGuire and Brady McGuire, five bass, 11-5

3rd:       Bourbon County High School – Jacob Cleaver and Ethan Johnson, five bass, 10-0

4th:       George Rogers Clark High School – Preston Losh and Triston Duckworth, five bass, 8-8

5th:       Lawrence County High School – Michael Scaggs and Conner May, five bass, 8-7

6th:       Sheldon Clark High School – Lafe Messer and Grant Marcum, five bass, 8-5

7th:       Bourbon County High School – Chris Hinkle and Jacob Ingram, five bass, 8-2

8th:       Montgomery County High School – Logan Watkins and Kyle Workman, five bass, 8-1

9th:       Allen Central High School – Chase Soler and Austin Branham, five bass, 7-11

9th:       Shelby Valley High School – Gabriel Maynard, five bass, 7-11

11th:     Perry County High School – Matthew Roberts and Richard Cornett, five bass, 7-4

12th:     Montgomery County High School – Tristan Powell and Dalton Crowe, five bass, 7-3

13th:     Johnson Central High School – Blake Martin and Kenneth Powers, five bass, 7-3

14th:     Perry County High School – Zachary Holbrook and Jacob Boggs, five bass, 7-1

15th:     Lawrence County High School – Noah West and Eric Price, five bass, 6-14

16th:     Sheldon Clark High School – Jacob Jude and Heath Maynard, five bass, 6-10

Complete results can be found at HighSchoolFishing.org.

High school anglers were competing with the goal of advancing to the KHSAA State competition. Fifty percent of the number of boats entering the regional, not greater than 16 boats from any region, advanced to the State competition. The full KHSAA bass fishing rules can be found here. The KHSAA State competition is scheduled for May 13-14 on Kentucky Lake at Kentucky Dam Marina, located at 466 Marina Drive in Gilbertsville, Kentucky.

EASTANOLLEE’S MORROW WINS FLW BASS FISHING LEAGUE SAVANNAH RIVER DIVISION EVENT ON LAKE HARTWELL PRESENTED BY NAVIONICS

EASTANOLLEE’S MORROW WINS FLW BASS FISHING LEAGUE SAVANNAH RIVER DIVISION EVENT ON LAKE HARTWELL PRESENTED BY NAVIONICS

Rogers wins co-angler title

ANDERSON, S.C. (April 25, 2016) – Pro angler Troy Morrow of Eastanollee, Georgia, weighed a five-bass limit totaling 17 pounds, 11 ounces, Saturday to win the FLW Bass Fishing League (BFL) Savannah River Division tournament on Lake Hartwell presented by Navionics. For his victory, Morrow took home $7,684.

“My original intention was to head up the river and look for bedding fish, but when I arrived at my area they were gone,” said Morrow, a four-time Forrest Wood Cup qualifier. “I had to adjust on the fly.”

“I flipped a tree laydown using a plum-apple-colored Zoom Lizard and had some success,” said Morrow. “I found that there was also a flipping bite near smaller bushes. There were a bunch of bucks in them. At some larger willow bushes, I caught one that I eventually weighed in.”

Around 1 p.m., Morrow said he ran south to a pocket where he ended up catching the heaviest bass of the tournament.

“I saw a big female in there and threw the Lizard, but she wasn’t biting,” said Morrow. “I left her alone for awhile, then went back, pitched in a green-pumpkin Lizard, and she bit.”

Morrow said his final two limit fish came on a Zoom swimbait off of docks on a nearby main-lake flat.

“Even though I wasn’t able to go with my original pattern, I was still able to patch things up,” said Morrow. “It was an interesting day out there.”

The top 10 boaters finished the tournament in:

1st:          Troy Morrow, Eastanollee, Ga., five bass, 17-11, $5,684 + $2,000 Ranger Cup Bonus

2nd:         Derek Champion, Tryon, N.C., five bass, 17-5, $2,059

3rd:          Matthew Roesch, Toccoa, Ga., five bass, 16-10, $1,374

4th:          Randy Childers, Anderson, S.C., five bass, 15-9, $961

5th:          Greg Glouse, Liberty, S.C., five bass, 15-1, $824

6th:          Mike Bouknight, Greenwood, S.C., five bass, 14-12, $755

7th:          Eddie Whiten Jr., Pickens, S.C., five bass, 14-3, $652

8th:          Chris Baxter, Winder, Ga., five bass, 14-3, $952

9th:          David Wright, Lexington, N.C., five bass, 14-2, $514

9th:          Michael Brehm, Rock Hill, S.C., five bass, 14-2, $514

Complete results can be found at FLWFishing.com.

Morrow also caught a 7-pound, 6-ounce bass – the biggest of the tournament in the pro division – and earned the day’s Boater Big Bass award of $565.

Jody Rogers Sr. of Clarkesville, Georgia, weighed in five bass totaling 12 pounds, 6 ounces, Saturday to win the co-angler division and earn $2,059.

The top 10 co-anglers were:

1st:          Jody Rogers Sr., Clarkesville, Ga., five bass, 12-6, $2,059

2nd:         Christopher Chavis, Rincon, Ga., five bass, 12-0, $1,030

3rd:          Barry Myers, Anderson, S.C., five bass, 11-13, $687

4th:          Bill Hawkins, Piedmont, S.C., five bass, 11-3, $480

5th:          Bobby Smith, Asheville, N.C., five bass, 10-10, $412

6th:          Lesley Childers, Anderson, S.C., five bass, 10-9, $378

7th:          Stewart Uldrick, Anderson, S.C., five bass, 10-5, $326

7th:          Tony Holbrooks, Franklin, N.C., five bass, 10-5, $326

9th:          Keith Lewis, Franklin, N.C., five bass, 10-2, $275

10th:        Stephen Burress, Mills River, N.C., five bass, 9-14, $240

Ethan Monk of Long Creek, South Carolina, caught the biggest bass of the tournament in the co-angler division, a fish weighing 4 pounds, 9 ounces and earned the day’s Co-angler Big Bass award of $282.

The top 50 boaters and 50 co-anglers based on point standings will qualify for the Oct. 6-8 Regional Championship on Kerr Lake in Henderson, North Carolina. Boaters will compete for a top award of a Ranger Z518C with a 200-horsepower Evinrude or Mercury outboard and $20,000, while co-anglers will fish for a new Ranger Z518C with a 200-horsepower Evinrude or Mercury outboard.

The BFL is a 24-division circuit devoted to weekend anglers, with 120 tournaments throughout the season, five in each division. The top 50 boaters and co-anglers from each division qualify for a regional tournament and are competing to finish in the top six, which then qualifies them for one of the longest-running championships in all of competitive bass fishing – the BFL All-American. Top winners in the BFL can move up to the Costa FLW Series or even the Walmart FLW Tour.

For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow the BFL on Facebook at Facebook.com/FLWFishing and on Twitter at Twitter.com/FLWFishing.

CALEDONIA HIGH SCHOOL WINS MISSISSIPPI STATE HIGH SCHOOL FISHING CHAMPIONSHIP ON TENN-TOM WATERWAY

CALEDONIA HIGH SCHOOL WINS MISSISSIPPI STATE HIGH SCHOOL FISHING CHAMPIONSHIP ON TENN-TOM WATERWAY

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ABERDEEN, Miss. (April 26, 2016) – The Caledonia High School duo of Parker Humble and Kody White brought a five-bass limit to the scale Saturday weighing 13 pounds, 1 ounce, to win the 2016 TBF/FLW High School Fishing Mississippi State Championship on the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway. The win earned the team trophies, the title of state champions and advanced the team to the High School Fishing Southeastern Conference championship on Lake Cumberland in Somerset, Kentucky, on September 16-17.

Even though the final outcome ended in their favor, champions Humble and White had a tougher day than most.  They lost the lower unit of their outboard around 7 a.m. before they made it to their first stop.  They were able to find a replacement boat with lots of help from their boat captain and were able to finish the day. Despite the odds, Humble and White managed to bring the only five-fish limit to the scales, which weighed 13-1, anchored by a 4-pound, 6-ounce kicker..

The top two teams on Tenn-Tom Waterway that advanced to the Southeastern Conference championship were:

1st:       Caledonia High School, Caledonia, Miss. – Parker Humble and Kody White, five bass, 13-1

2nd:      Smithville High School, Smithville, Miss. – Brock Kennedy and Tyler Murray, four bass, 8-14

Rounding out the top 10 teams were:

3rd:       St. Martin High School, Ocean Springs, Miss. – Paul Swan and Gaibe Bean, four bass, 8-9

4th:       Amory High School South, Amory, Miss. – Trent Pace and Austin Rowell, four bass, 7-1

5th:       West Point High School, West Point, Miss. – Jordan Camp and Chance Mathis, three bass, 6-3

6th:       St. Martin High School, Ocean Springs, Miss.  – Devin Milsted and Christopher Triplett, three bass, 5-11

7th:       Hatley High School, Amory, Miss. – Logan Mitchel and Cameron Wright, two bass, 4-12

8th:       Hatley High School, Amory, Miss. – Austin Ballard and Chase Sanders, two bass, 4-5

9th:       Hatley High School, Amory, Miss. – James McCain and Britleigh Parish, two bass, 4-4

10th:     Smithville High School, Smithville, Miss. – Landon McMellon and Peyton Collums, two bass, 3-15

Complete results and photos from the event can be found at HighSchoolFishing.org.

The 2016 Mississippi 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 along with the top three teams from each of the seven TBF/FLW High School Fishing Opens held this season. 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 2017. 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 2016 High School Fishing World Finals. At the 2015 World Finals more than $20,000 in scholarships and prizes were awarded. Visit HighSchoolFishing.org for details.

Clear Lake Top 10 Patterns FLW April 25, 2016 by Chris Burgan

Clear Lake Top 10 Patterns

Todd Woods

Practice was perfect for the Costa FLW Series Western Division event presented by Mercury on Clear Lake. Bass were moving up to spawn, and the fishing was good. Anglers brought in hefty limits on day one, but as so often happens, Mother Nature changed the game, and a front moved in mid-tournament. Scattered clouds on day one turned to rain on day two, which was followed by clear, chilly conditions on day three.

No two days saw the same conditions. No two anglers in the top 10 utilized the same pattern.

Bass were caught in all three phases of the spawn, but nobody caught more than Todd Woods, the tournament champion. Woods worked a mile-long gravel bank where prespawn bass were feeding on spawning shad. He alternated between a swimbait and umbrella rig to bring in 77 pounds of bass in three days.

Here’s a look at how the rest of the top 10 found their fish.

 

Woods’ Winning pattern

Top 10 Baits

Complete results

 

Roy Hawk

2. Hawk makes final-day jump

Roy Hawk of Lake Havasu City, Ariz., went from eighth to second on the final day of competition thanks to a 26-pound, 3-ounce limit. His three-day total was 70 pounds.

Hawk sight-fished and threw a homemade bladed jig around tule lines on the first two days of competition. On the final day, he suffered mechanical issues. A creek mouth near the Konocti Vista Resort Casino & Marina takeoff site was one of his few options.

“When I realized we were without a motor, I turned the trolling motor on high and went straight there,” he says. “We sat there all day.”

Slow-rolling a bladed jig, Hawk upgrade every hour or so to put together his big stringer.

“The fish replenished throughout the day, moving up in waves,” he adds “They went from deeper to shallow and started to lift in the water column.”

 

Wade Curtiss

3. Curtiss goes to moving baits

Wade Curtiss of Meadow Vista, Calif., caught 69 pounds, 11 ounces for third place.

Curtiss sight-fished his way to sixth place on day one, but the incoming front forced him to switch game plans on the final two days.

He ended up throwing a 3.8-inch Keitech Swing Impact FAT swimbait around tule points and creek mouths.

“The front really slowed them down, and they seemed to pull off,” he says. “They were still in the same areas. On day two they were around the bank, and on the colder day three they were way off.”

 

Wayne Breazeale

4. Breazeale catches bed fish

Wayne Breazeale of Kelseyville, Calif., was committed to one program, no matter the conditions. He sight-fished from start to finish.

“In my three days of practice, I never picked up a rod,” he says. “I had 57 fish over 7 pounds marked [on GPS].”

Doing his homework paid off on day one when Breazeale brought in 28 pounds, 3 ounces, which was good enough for fourth place.

“I ran out of fish after day one. They got picked over, and the cold weather made them get off the beds,” Breazeale says.

After that, Breazeale kept the trolling motor on high in his search for new fish. He targeted pockets out of the wind with clear water and put together a three-day total of 66-14.

Breazeale’s bed-fishing bait was a white Yamamoto Hula Grub on a 5/8-ounce jighead.

 

Hunter Schlander

5. Schlander adjusts daily for fifth

Hunter Schlander of Modesto, Calif., moved up from 10th to fifth on the final day with a 24-pound, 8-ounce bag that bumped his tournament total to 66-07.

“All three days I had to make adjustments. It was never the same,” he explains. “My pattern was to stay around the docks and the shad.

“I looked for the deeper spawning bays and headed to the back of them. Whenever there was a bit of depth and some weeds, I’d throw in the shade pockets. That’s how I got my fish.”

On day one Schlander skipped Yamamoto Senkos and under-spins rigged with Keitech swimbaits under docks. He found the fish starting to pull away from the bank as the weekend progressed. Making an adjustment, he threw a YUM YUMbrella Flash Mob umbrella rig on day two and mixed it up with the umbrella rig and under-spin for a solid final-day limit.

 

Jim Moulton

6. Moulton sticks to sight-fishing

“If I can’t see them, I can’t catch them,” was Jim Moulton’s mantra for the week. It paid off big time on day one, when he caught the largest single-day bag of the event at 33 pounds, 2 ounces. He unfortunately wasn’t able to repeat his opening-round performance and slipped to sixth place with 66-04.

Moulton used a 1/2-ounce white and chartreuse California Reservoir Lures swim jig paired with a white Yamamoto Single Tail Grub for the trailer.

Moulton fished tule lines in the southern half of the lake. While other anglers worked the outer edge of the tules, Moulton was right in the thick of it.

 

Michael Caruso

7. Caruso shallow-shots docks

Michael Caruso of Peoria, Ariz., totaled 65 pounds, 13 ounces over the three days of competition.

Every fish Caruso weighed was caught on a drop-shot around docks. He cast to each individual dock piling to target his fish. When the wind blew on the final days, Caruso ran protected pockets in the northern end of the lake.

Caruso switched between MMIII and margarita mutilator-colored 6-inch Roboworm FAT Worms.

 

Garrett Dixon

8. Dixon starts with bed fish, moves to postspawn bass

Garrett Dixon of Durham, Calif., brought spawning and postspawn fish to the scales to amass 61 pounds, 3 ounces.

Dixon caught a limit of bed fish early on day one and spent the afternoon searching for new fish. On day two, he caught the fish that he’d located in the afternoon of day one, then keyed in on a new pattern for day three.

Dixon finished by targeting tule points with a white Koppers LIVETARGET Frog and a G-Rat Custom Baits Walking Mouse, a homemade jointed topwater.

“They were actually postspawn fish,” Dixon says of his topwater bass. “You’re not going to catch a lot of them, but they’ll be good ones.

“I would ideally cast the bait on a hard bank and bring it out. Most of the bites would come in open water about 3 feet off the structure.”

 

David Valdivia

9. Valdivia switches up to take ninth

David Valdivia of Norwalk, Calif., caught 59 pounds, 10 ounces to finish ninth.

Valdivia did his homework in practice, marking several bed fish. He then joined in on day one’s bed-fishing bonanza using a Texas-rigged Senko. Day two had him switching up his strategy.

“Knowing the weather was coming in, I decided to throw reaction baits around the deep grass lines,” he says. “I was fishing for the same fish. They were pulling off due to the weather.”

A 3/16-ounce under-spin with a Zoom Super Fluke Jr. rigged on a spinning reel got the job done on day two. Valdivia tried to use the same strategy on the third day with little success. After noticing that the water temperature was rising, he switched to bed-fishing to finish out the remainder of the day and caught 15-11.

 

Rusty Salewske

10. Salewske keeps it simple for 10th

Rusty Salewske of Alpine, Calif., brought in a three-day total of 52 pounds for the final spot in the top 10. He flipped tule lines all week and was targeting prespawn bass.

“I think they were en route,” he says. “They were about ready to jump in there and start spawning.”

Salewske slowly worked deeper tule lines. He had several key areas that included several tule islands and a couple of stretches of straight bank. A green pumpkin Reaction Innovations Sweet Beaver with a pegged 1/2-ounce weight was his bait of choice.

MAPLEWOOD’S GINTER WINS FLW BASS FISHING LEAGUE BUCKEYE DIVISION OPENER ON GRAND LAKE

MAPLEWOOD’S GINTER WINS FLW BASS FISHING LEAGUE BUCKEYE DIVISION OPENER ON GRAND LAKE

Knapmeyer wins co-angler title

CELINA, Ohio (April 25, 2016) – Gary Ginter of Maplewood, Ohio, weighed a five-bass limit totaling 13 pounds, 1 ounce, Saturday to win the first FLW Bass Fishing League (BFL) Buckeye Division tournament of 2016 on Grand Lake. For his victory, Ginter took home $5,905.

“I started out my day on the south side of the lake fishing canals that I had marked in practice,” said Ginter, who earned his third win in FLW competition. “I had to adjust my pattern a bit due to boat traffic and ended up at my backup spot targeting wood and caught a few fish fairly quick.”

Ginter said he flipped the wood using a custom black soft-plastic creature bait.

“I moved it slow with short hops,” said Ginter. “It resembles a Zoom Brush Hog and it got me through the seven areas I hit throughout my day.”

At 12:30 p.m., Ginter said he had four fish in the boat and decided to finish the event running his bait along rocks.

“After the sun came out, I filled my limit and culled when I could,” said Ginter. “I ended up with nine keepers. Basically I paid attention to what others were doing and did the opposite.”

The top 10 boaters finished the tournament in:

1st:          Gary Ginter, Maplewood, Ohio, five bass, 13-1, $5,905

2nd:         Todd Hahn, Heath, Ohio, five bass, 12-0, $2,453

3rd:          Scott Tangeman, Chickasaw, Ohio, five bass, 11-4, $2,375

4th:          Kenneth Pincombe, Hamilton, Ohio, five bass, 10-15, $1,063

4th:          Dan Moran, London, Ohio, five bass, 10-15, $1,063

6th:          Brad Baldwin, Waynesville, Ohio, five bass, 10-14, $899

7th:          Miles Johnson, Kettering, Ohio, five bass, 10-4, $1,118

8th:          Cody Seeger, Lewistown, Ohio, five bass, 10-3, $695

8th:          Ray Philhower, Milford, Ohio, four bass, 10-3, $695

10th:        Bob Abrams, Williamsburg, Ohio, four bass, 10-0, $572

Complete results can be found at FLWFishing.com.

Tangeman caught a 5-pound, 3-ounce bass – the biggest of the tournament in the pro division – and earned the day’s Boater Big Bass award of $740.

Brandon Knapmeyer of Union, Kentucky, weighed in four bass totaling 8 pounds, 2 ounces, Saturday to win the co-angler division and earn $2,436.

The top 10 co-anglers were:

1st:          Brandon Knapmeyer, Union, Ky., four bass, 8-2, $2,436

2nd:         John Long, New Bremen, Ohio, four bass, 8-1, $1,016

2nd:         Dennis Sepeck, Bethel, Ohio, three bass, 8-1, $1,016

4th:          Brett Warrick, Westerville, Ohio, five bass, 7-9, $568

5th:          Mark Henderson, Martinsville, Ohio, four bass, 7-3, $487

6th:          Jacob Bierman, Cincinnati, Ohio, four bass, 6-15, $447

7th:          Owen Warner, Fairborn, Ohio, three bass, 6-9, $406

8th:          Brody Campbell, Oxford, Ohio, three bass, 5-12, $345

8th:          Brent Jones, Okeana, Ohio, three bass, 5-12, $345

10th:        William Miller, Perry, Ohio, one bass, 5-11, $651

Miller caught the biggest bass of the tournament in the co-angler division, a fish weighing 5 pounds, 11 ounces and earned the day’s Co-angler Big Bass award of $367.

The top 50 boaters and 50 co-anglers based on point standings will qualify for the Oct. 13-15 Regional Championship on Kentucky Lake in Gilbertsville, Kentucky. Boaters will compete for a top award of a Ranger Z518C with a 200-horsepower Evinrude or Mercury outboard and $20,000, while co-anglers will fish for a new Ranger Z518C with a 200-horsepower Evinrude or Mercury outboard.

The BFL is a 24-division circuit devoted to weekend anglers, with 120 tournaments throughout the season, five in each division. The top 50 boaters and co-anglers from each division qualify for a regional tournament and are competing to finish in the top six, which then qualifies them for one of the longest-running championships in all of competitive bass fishing – the BFL All-American. Top winners in the BFL can move up to the Costa FLW Series or even the Walmart FLW Tour.

For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow the BFL on Facebook at Facebook.com/FLWFishing and on Twitter at Twitter.com/FLWFishing.

Michael Murphy & Kevin Sanders win Carolina’s Bass Challenge SC Division April

Click Here for Results

Michael Murphy & Kevin Sanders take 1st at Winyah Bay with 16.04 lbs worth $8,000.00!

John Proctor & Lee Cannon finished 3rd and earned 1st Skeeter Bonus! Total winnings $5,250.00!

Chris McDuffie & Greg Creech claimed 5th with 13.42 lbs and received 2nd Skeeter Bonus. They took home $3,400.00!

Reid McDowell & Jess White claimed 6th and 3rd Skeeter Bonus with 12.37 lbs totaling up to $2,300.00!

Ed Owens & Chris Jones finished 23rd with 9.89 lbs and took home 4th Skeeter Bonus worth $1,000.00!