Sunday, November 17, 2024
Home Blog Page 1342

Bryant Copley Wins it all ……2012 Cabela’s B.A.S.S. Federation Nation Mid Atlantic Divisional

Mr Bryant Copley from Lynchburg VA, wins the 2012 Cabela’s B.A.S.S. Federation Nation Mid Atlantic Divisional. Bryant Finished the event with a total weight of 51.8 lbs to take the win.

The Guys at The Bass Cast.Com would like to congratulate him on this amazing win..


STORY BY BASSMATER.COM

Copley wins Mid-Atlantic by an ounce

Massive bag from Elk River puts Virginian over top

Bryant Copley
Ed Harp
Bryant Copley (here on Day One in third place with 15-3) found three milfoil beds in 2- to 3-feet of water. He used a spinnerbait in those spots all three days, and the fishing “was getting better every day.”

NORTHEAST, Md. — Bryant Copley of Virginia won the overall 2012 Cabela’s Bassmaster Federation Nation Mid-Atlantic Divisional this afternoon in a come-from-behind performance. He brought in 21 pounds, 2 ounces today to make his total weight 52-4. He edged two-day leader Robby Fleshman of West Virginia by a single ounce.

Copley shunned the flats: “I knew a lot of the other guys would be out there.” He instead chose the Elk River, where he found three milfoil beds in 2 to 3 feet of water. He ran a spinnerbait through those three spots all three days.

“I knew they were there and the fishing was getting better every day, so why would I go anywhere else?” Copley explained. “I wanted something that looked like the Potomac River, and this was it. I’m just glad it paid off in the end. One ounce isn’t much of a margin of victory.”

Both Copley and Fleshman finished more than 10 pounds ahead of their nearest competitor, Jeff Freeman of Virginia, who placed third.

The Maryland B.A.S.S. Federation Nation state team won the state competition. The team bested second-place Delaware by less than 4 pounds. Seven of winning team Maryland’s competitors brought more than 10 pounds each to the scales to help make up the state’s total weight of 314 pounds, 6 ounces. The team weighed 119 fish over the three-day event.

Richard Svoboda is tops for Maryland with a total of 35 pounds, 7 ounces, and he’ll be representing the state at the 2012 Cabela’s Bassmaster Federation Nation Championship, Oct. 25-27, on Alabama’s Wheeler Lake.

Other championship qualifiers are Robby Fleshman, West Virginia; Mike Morris, Delaware; Bryant Copley, Virginia; Darin Doll, Pennsylvania; Dean Lewis, Zimbabwe; and Antonio Gomez, New Jersey. Because Zimbabwe only competes every other year, Lewis will fish the 2013 Cabela’s Bassmaster Federation Nation Championship instead.

The Cabela’s Big Bass award went to Mike Morris (Delaware) for his 7-pound, 3-ounce catch. It was also the biggest bass of the tournament. Morris caught her on his third cast this morning. She grabbed a frog.

A total of 300 bass were caught today. That’s 44 more than yesterday and 97 more than Wednesday. The total weight was 752 pounds, 2 ounces, making today’s average weight per fish 2 1/2 pounds. That weight is consistent with the average fish weight all week.

Walmart FLW Tour – FLW Tour Opens Wheeler Lake (Sept. 20-23, 2012)

0
Steam rises over the Tennessee River as FLW Tour competitors head out on a chilly day one. (Photo by David A. Brown)
FLW Tour pros competing with natural buffet on Lake Wheeler

20.Sep.2012 by David A. Brown

DECATUR, Ala. – There are no vegetarian bass, and the Tennessee River’s offering no incentive for such a dietary option, as the FLW Tour Open field takes to a Lake Wheeler literally brimming with bait.

“There’s bait from the top of the water column to the bottom, out on the river ledges all the way to the backs of the pockets,” said Straight Talk pro Scott Canterbury.

Such baitfish prevalence, he said, is exacerbating an existing seasonal challenge. This is the time of year when bass abandon their hot summer patterns and head for creeks and pockets where they’ll gorge on shad. This week isn’t likely to see any mass migrations, as conditions and food status are not prompting any significant changes.

“There’s tons of fish in the river but they’re just in a funk right now. It’s the late summer and the water temperature hasn’t really fallen yet. The summer fish that have been out on ledges have been beaten on all summer long and they’re wanting to transition (to fall patterns) and go shallow. But the fish can be anywhere. They don’t have to go back (shallow) to find bait – they can eat anywhere they want. They can be in between the ledge and the backs of creeks or pockets. Anywhere they open their mouth, they can eat.”

Canterbury said he’ll keep a variety of baits handy, but he believes his best bet will be slower presentations with plastics. He didn’t catch a lot of fish in practice, but those he did seemed to prefer a bait that stayed in easy reach.

Chevy pro Jay Yelas will look for bass schooling on baitfish and tempt them with a jigging spoon, crankbait and worms. He’ll also try to find a few flipping bites.

Ohio pro Charlie Hartley agrees with the bait analyses, but he’ll take a more wide open approach. He pulled out multiple rods this morning with an assortment of jigs, Texas-rigged plastics, Rat-L-Traps and small crankbaits.

“I’ve had a lot of success this time of year on this body of water just junk fishing,” Hartley said. “If something will sit still, I’ll pitch at it and then keep moving. The fish are scattered this time of year and you’re happy to get a bite or two and if I fish really hard, I can get a bite or two.

“You want to throw anything that imitates a shad. They are eating shad and you want to be where the bait is and that’s the key. You want to look like the bait, or just a little bit different.”

CLICK TO READ MORE

Robby Fleshman grabs the lead – 2012 Cabela's B.A.S.S. Federation Nation Mid Atlantic Divisional

0

Robby Fleshman grabs the lead

Ed Harp
Robby Fleshman shows off a couple of bass from his 21-5 catch.

NORTHEAST, Md. — The individual competition was fairly close as the weigh-in moved along in the 2012 Cabela’s Bassmaster Federation Nation Mid-Atlantic Divisional this afternoon. A dozen anglers were in the 12-, 13- and 14-pound range with Kevin Waterman from Maryland claiming first place with 15 pounds, 14 ounces of dark green bass. And then Robby Fleshman from West Virginia stepped up to the scales.

The size of his stringer caught the crowd by surprise. At first there was a stunned silence, then cheers and clapping. His five-fish limit tipped the scales at 21 pounds, 5 ounces. That put him 5 pounds, 7 ounces out in front.   Standings | Photos

“I fished weeds and wood,” said the Mountain State angler immediately after carrying his fish to the release boat. “I was shallow — in the 4- to 5-foot range — and moved around a lot with a moving bait. I don’t want to say any more than that right now. I’ll tell you more on Friday afternoon.”

Asked if he had enough fish left for tomorrow and Friday, Fleshman replied that he was confident his fish would hold up as far as numbers are concerned but he didn’t know about the weather affecting his bite. He was clearly worried that warming temperatures and clearing skies would not be kind to him.

CLICK TO SEE MORE

Robby Fleshman grabs the lead – 2012 Cabela’s B.A.S.S. Federation Nation Mid Atlantic Divisional

0

Robby Fleshman grabs the lead

Ed Harp
Robby Fleshman shows off a couple of bass from his 21-5 catch.

NORTHEAST, Md. — The individual competition was fairly close as the weigh-in moved along in the 2012 Cabela’s Bassmaster Federation Nation Mid-Atlantic Divisional this afternoon. A dozen anglers were in the 12-, 13- and 14-pound range with Kevin Waterman from Maryland claiming first place with 15 pounds, 14 ounces of dark green bass. And then Robby Fleshman from West Virginia stepped up to the scales.

The size of his stringer caught the crowd by surprise. At first there was a stunned silence, then cheers and clapping. His five-fish limit tipped the scales at 21 pounds, 5 ounces. That put him 5 pounds, 7 ounces out in front.   Standings | Photos

“I fished weeds and wood,” said the Mountain State angler immediately after carrying his fish to the release boat. “I was shallow — in the 4- to 5-foot range — and moved around a lot with a moving bait. I don’t want to say any more than that right now. I’ll tell you more on Friday afternoon.”

Asked if he had enough fish left for tomorrow and Friday, Fleshman replied that he was confident his fish would hold up as far as numbers are concerned but he didn’t know about the weather affecting his bite. He was clearly worried that warming temperatures and clearing skies would not be kind to him.

CLICK TO SEE MORE

Déjà vu with Evers, DeFoe – 2012 Elite Series – All-Star Semi-final – Day 1

0

Déjà vu with Evers, DeFoe

Last year’s All-Star finalists pick up where they left off

Seigo Saito
Edwin Evers holds the lead in the All-Star Semi-FInal.

By Ken Duke

DECATUR, Ill. — The second annual Toyota Trucks All-Star Week is shaping up a lot like the first one ended, with Oklahoma’s Edwin Evers and Tennessee’s Ott DeFoe sitting atop the leaderboard.

After finishing second and first, respectively, at the inaugural All-Star Week in 2012, the two are poised to advance yet again. With one day to go before the 12-angler field is cut to the Top 4, Evers’ limit of five Lake Shelbyville bass weighing 13 pounds, 1 ounce looks like it will propel him to the semifinals with ease.

DeFoe, last year’s All-Star champion, is in second place with four bass weighing 11-3. No other angler has more than 7-7.

Evers was the only angler in the field to catch a limit in the first round. He caught a total of seven keepers, culling down to the tournament limit of five. He’s working two patterns — one that’s “fairly shallow” and another offshore. Though he’s in great shape to finish in the Top 4 and advance, he wasn’t ready to talk about the details of his methods just yet.

“I’m doing something that I don’t think anyone else is doing,” Evers said. “If I can catch five more keepers tomorrow that weigh 7 or 8 pounds, I’ll feel really good about my chances.”

Though DeFoe managed the second-best total of the day, he fell one short of a limit. Like Evers, he was predictably reserved in his comments, but did offer a few details. “I caught my three biggest bass in about a 15-minute span — all on the same bait — and I lost another in the same area. I’m fishing shallow, less than 5 feet deep.”

DeFoe believes that if he can catch two keepers of any size — about three pounds — he’ll be in good shape to advance to the semifinals.

CLICK TO READ MORE

Cover lots and lots of water – 2012 Cabela's B.A.S.S. Federation Nation Mid Atlantic Divisional

0

Cover lots and lots of water

Ed Harp
Kevin Waterman (Maryland) is currently in second place in the individual standings.

NORTHEAST, Md. — The anglers fishing the 2012 Cabela’s Bassmaster Federation Nation Mid-Atlantic Divisional have a full day under their belt and, according to some, it’s now up to the fish.

The individual leader, Robby Fleshman (West Virginia) moved constantly all day Tuesday with what can be described as an intermittent bite. Although he wouldn’t say much about what he was doing, it was obvious to everyone around him that he was far from confident about the future of his bite. He made several references to the weather and how it was affecting his fish — they’re shallow.

CLICK TO READ MORE

Cover lots and lots of water – 2012 Cabela’s B.A.S.S. Federation Nation Mid Atlantic Divisional

0

Cover lots and lots of water

Ed Harp
Kevin Waterman (Maryland) is currently in second place in the individual standings.

NORTHEAST, Md. — The anglers fishing the 2012 Cabela’s Bassmaster Federation Nation Mid-Atlantic Divisional have a full day under their belt and, according to some, it’s now up to the fish.

The individual leader, Robby Fleshman (West Virginia) moved constantly all day Tuesday with what can be described as an intermittent bite. Although he wouldn’t say much about what he was doing, it was obvious to everyone around him that he was far from confident about the future of his bite. He made several references to the weather and how it was affecting his fish — they’re shallow.

CLICK TO READ MORE

Hooked: It could happen to anyone – Ivan Morris

0

Hooked: It could happen to anyone

Ivan Morris

Ed Harp
Mid Atlantic Divisional competitor Ivan Morris had a close encounter with a fishing hook on Day One of competition.

NORTHEAST, Md. — At first, Ivan Morris — brother of Bassmaster Elite Series pro Rick Morris — didn’t realize what had happened. There was a loud pop that startled him, and then some pain below his left eye.

“We were cranking real shallow (Wednesday), and my partner put a gorilla hook set on one. The lure came out of the water at the speed of sound and hit me right in the eyeball. Actually, it didn’t hit me right in the eyeball. It hit my left glasses lens. It broke and fell out of the frame. We never found it. After we looked around we realized I was hooked just below the eye.

“We cut part of the hook off, and I finished the day. I’ll have to get it out tonight. I don’t know if I’m going to a doctor or have one of the guys jerk it out with a string. To me a string would work but some of the other guys are saying I should go to the doctor. We’re still talking about that.

CLICK TO READ MORE

Tournament Preparation – FLW Pro Kevin Hawk


FLW Pro Kevin Hawk gives us his tips on what he does before fishing that next tournament. Take a listen…..


___________________________________________________________________________________

Kevin Hawk – A look Back @ Cayuga Lake Northern Open #3

Take a listen as Kevin Gives a look back at the last northern Open of the 2012 season on Cayuga Lake. Take a listen to what he learned from this event and what you can do the next time you are on the water….

_______________________________________________________________________________