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Tennessee Angler Griffin Heffington Wins MLF Toyota Series at Lake Guntersville

SCOTTSBORO, Ala. (Feb. 21, 2023) – Pro Griffin Heffington of Murfreesboro, Tennessee brought a five-bass limit to the scale Saturday weighing 24 pounds, 12 ounces to win the Toyota Series Presented by Phoenix Boats at Lake Guntersville and earn the top payout of $65,000. Although Day 1 of the Central Division season opener was cancelled due to high winds and the threat of severe weather, Heffington made the most of the two-day event, weighing in 10 bass totaling 52-5 to earn the win by a whopping 9-pound, 7-ounce margin over Corey Bradley of McDonald, Tennessee, who finished with a two-day total of 42-14, good for second place and $27,500.

Despite a tumultuous practice, rife with electronic issues and only a few bites, followed by the cancellation on Day 1, Heffington said he went into the first day of competition optimistic about his chances in the event.

“Because my practice was so bad, I really only had one spot, but I figured I could still do pretty good with this one area,” said Heffington. “My co-angler and I planned to fish shallow grass, but just didn’t really see anything we liked and weren’t catching many fish up shallow.

“As we idled under the bridges during practice, we noticed that was really the only place we were seeing baitfish. I decided to drop the trolling motor and fish under the Spring Creek bridge on the last day of practice and was shocked,” continued Heffington. “There were easily more than a hundred 4 to 5-pounders swimming around under that bridge chasing bait. I made two casts and caught a five-pounder.”

While he doesn’t typically rely on his electronics much, Heffington said his Garmin LiveScope made a big difference in this event.

“There were a lot of guys that pulled up to fish there as well, but they mostly stayed closer to the bridge,” said Heffington. “I trolled away from the bridge, about the length of a football field, to go further into the creek. It took forever to troll that far, but there was a huge ball of bait there, so thick that my graph said we were in 8 feet of water, although we were really at a depth of 30 feet.

“The key area was right outside that ball of bait,” Heffington continued. “That’s where the fish had set up and were chasing other smaller bait balls outside of that big group. Using LiveScope, we were able to find that point where the bait ball broke up and throw to the fish outside that area.”

Heffington said his key bait was an umbrella rig with green-bean colored True Bass Hollow Body Swimbaits on it.

“The green tint on that swimbait looked really good in the water,” Heffington said. “I’d caught the 5-pounder in practice on it and that’s just really what they seemed to be biting.”

On Friday, Heffington caught seven bass total, bringing a five-bass limit to the scale weighing 27-9 – the biggest bag of the event.

“I caught a 7-12 close to the ramp toward the end of the first day, but I still only thought I had 24 pounds,” Heffington said. “And since I caught that big one shallow, I figured they were really biting for guys up shallow, and we’d see a 30-pound bag. So, I was super surprised when I had over 27 pounds and didn’t get knocked out of the lead.”

Following his weigh-in after the first day of competition, Heffington said he got a call from a friend and fellow angler, who was dead on the water and didn’t think he would be able to make it back for his check-in time. Heffington drove over to help jump his boat and get him back to weigh-in, a decision that almost cost him on Championship Saturday.

“On the morning of the final day, I went to turn on my trolling motor and it was dead,” Heffington said. “Turns out jumping the other boat fried my battery. We reset it and it worked, but soon after we took off, it went dead again.”

Fortunately, Heffinton was able to swap batteries with one of the MLF camera boats and get back on his trolling motor to continue the tournament.

“Going into Day 2, I figured if I could get 23 pounds, I could probably shut the door and make it pretty tough to get beat,” Heffington said. “I ended the day with 24-12 and a victory.

“It’s still hard to wrap my head around,” Heffington continued.  “I was able to look back and really think about the fact that we only had two days of competition on the fabled Lake Guntersville, and to win with a nearly 10-pound margin – it’s just mind-blowing to me.

“I feel like I was really blessed in this event and despite all the issues we had, things just fell into place. I’m looking forward to the next event at Smith Lake,” Heffington finished.

The top 10 pros on Lake Guntersville finished:

1st:           Griffin Heffington, Murfreesboro, Tenn., 10 bass, 52-5, $66,500
2nd:          Corey Bradley, McDonald, Tenn., 10 bass, 42-14, $27,500
3rd:          Gabe Jelley, Mulkeytown, Ill., 10 bass, 42-12, $18,000
4th:           Aaron Stephens, Hanceville, Ala., 10 bass, 41-15, $16,000
5th:           Terry Fisher, Decatur, Ala., 10 bass, 41-14, $15,000
6th:           Josh Bragg, Fayetteville, Ga., 10 bass, 41-13, $12,500
7th:           Vernon Lowe, Oneida, Tenn., 10 bass, 39-11, $10,000
8th:           Jake Lee, Powell, Tenn., eight bass, 39-10, $8,500
9th:           Isaac Warta, Mount Juliet, Tenn., 10 bass, 37-14, $7,500
10th:        Travis Alcock, Burlington, Wis., 10 bass, 36-7, $5,500

Complete results can be found at MajorLeagueFishing.com.

Pro Chris Ferguson of Wittensville, Kentucky won the $500 Day 1 Berkley Big Bass award in the pro division Friday with a bass weighing 8 pounds, 5 ounces. On Saturday, pro Donavan Carson of Bluff City, Tennessee, earned the $500 Berkley Big Bass prize after bringing an 8-pound, 3-ounce bass to the scale.

Bragg took home an extra $1,000 as the highest finishing Phoenix MLF 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 Bonus contingency program can be found at PhoenixBassBoats.com.

Alan Hults of Gautier, Mississippi won the Strike King Co-angler Division Saturday with a two-day total of nine bass weighing 36 pounds, 2 ounces. Hults took home the top prize package worth $33,500, including a new Phoenix 518 Pro bass boat with a 115-horsepower Mercury outboard motor.

The top 10 Strike King co-anglers on Lake Guntersville finished:

1st:           Alan Hults, Gautier, Miss., nine bass, 36-2, Phoenix 518 Pro boat w/115-hp Mercury outboard
2nd:          Kyle Gelles, Pingree, Idaho, eight bass, 32-2, $8,150
3rd:          Andy Miles, White House, Tenn., eight bass, 29-12, $6,500
4th:           Sam Maxwell, Vincennes, Ind., 10 bass, 28-7, $5,150
5th:           Dakota Bishop, Brodhead, Ky., nine bass, 27-15, $4,500
6th:           Andrew Kilgore, Whitewell, Tenn., six bass, 27-2, $3,750
7th:           Michael Miller, Greenville, S.C., seven bass, 26-11, $3,250
8th:           Jon Fatheree, Grantsburg, Ill., seven bass, 26-10, $2,500
9th:           Mark Lyons, Marion, Ind., six bass, 25-10, $1,800
10th:        Joseph Koch, Kewaskum, Wis., seven bass, 25-4, $1,600

Gelles was the Berkley Big Bass $150 award winner in the Strike King co-angler division, Friday, with an 8-pound, 10-ounce bass, while Saturday’s $150 award went to Kevin Lankford of Hollywood, Alabama, with a 7-pound, 1-ounce bass.

With one regular-season event in the Toyota Series Central Division now complete, pro Griffin Heffington of Murfreesboro, Tennessee leads the Central Division Angler of the Year (AOY) race with 260 points, while Alan Hults of Gautier, Mississippi leads the Strike King Co-angler Division AOY race with 260 points.

The Toyota Series at Lake Gunterville, hosted by the Mountain Lakes Chamber of Commerce, was the first of three regular-season events for the Toyota Series Central Division. The next event for Toyota Series anglers will be the Toyota Series at the California Delta Presented by Psycho Tuna, March 15-17, in Bethel Island, California. For a complete schedule of events, visit MajorLeagueFishing.com.

The 2023 Toyota Series Presented by Phoenix Boats consists of six divisions – Central, Northern, Plains, Southern, Southwestern and the Western Division Presented by Tackle Warehouse – each holding three regular-season events, along with the International and Wild Card divisions. Anglers who fish in any of the six divisions or the Wild Card division and finish in the top 25 will qualify for the no-entry-fee Toyota Series Championship for a shot at winning up to $235,000 and a qualification to REDCREST V. The winning Strike King co-angler at the championship earns a new Phoenix 518 Pro bass boat with a 115-horsepower Mercury outboard. The 2023 Toyota Series Championship will be held Nov. 2-4 on Table Rock Lake in Branson, Missouri, and is hosted by ExploreBranson.com.

Proud sponsors of the 2023 MLF Toyota Series include: 4WP, 13 Fishing, Abu Garcia, B&W Trailer Hitches, Black Rifle Coffee Company, E3, Favorite Fishing, Fox Rent a Car, General Tire, Gill, Grundéns, Lew’s, Lowrance, Mercury, Mossy Oak, Onyx, Phoenix, Polaris, Power-Pole, Strike King, Tackle Warehouse, T-H Marine, Wiley X and YETI.

For complete details and updated information visit MajorLeagueFishing.com. For regular Toyota Series updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow the MLF5 social media outlets at Facebook, Instagram and YouTube.

Jimmy Trigg Wins CATT Santee Cooper, SC Feb 18, 2023

May 6, 2023! The 2023 Phantom Outdoors Santee Cooper edition! $10,000 1st Place. No membership for this one! Tap on the link below for info! If you want to pay on line tap on ‘Shop”! You can pay at the ramp PLUS we will have food served by the Skeeter Cooking Team!

2023 Phantom Outdoors Open Series – Carolina Anglers Team Trail (cattteamtrail.com)

Next Santee CATT is March 11 and is a GOLD $120 on line or $130 at the ramp! 

Jimmy Trigg brought in a SACK! 2- 8 pounders plus 3 more nice uns pushed his total weight to 32.76 lbs! His 8.19 lb BF took 2nd BF honors! Total winnings $802.00!

Wade Groom brought in another SACK weighing up at 25.19 lbs! Wade took home a boat load of cash! $400.00 for 2nd Place, $238.00 for the 1st BF at 8.34 lbs PLUS Wade took the Side pot of $700.00! Total winnings $1,338.00!

Bucky Clarke & Robert Clarke 3rd Place 24.23 lbs!

Michael Craven & Brian Crosby finished 4th with 21.88 lbs!

Brad Beatson & Brian Scott 5th Place 21.40 lbs! They take over the Points lead!

Justin Cromer & Mark Barnes 6th Place with 20.86 lbs!

Will Timmons with his $40 Anglers Headquarters Gift Card!

TeamBFWeightWinningsPoints
JIMMY TRIGG8.1932.76$802.00110
WADE GROOMS 8.3425.19$1,338.00109
ROBERT CLARKE-BUCKY CLARKE7.6224.23$300.00108
MICHAEL CRAVEN-BRIAN CROSBY5.5921.88$175.00107
BRIAN SCOTT-BRAD BEATSON6.3521.40$120.00106
JUSTIN CROMER-MARK BARNES0.0020.86$100.00105
WILL TIMMONS-CASEY WARREN (S)5.3020.71104
BRADFORD BEAVERS-DWIGHT BEAVERS0.0020.57103
MAX TERRY-JAMIE GLASSCOCK5.9719.90102
TRIP MILLS-RONNIE MILLS0.0017.78101
BUGZY TERRY-COLLIN CRIBB6.8417.40100
PAUL GEDDINGS-RICKY IRICK5.5117.3199
MATTHEW NETTLES0.0016.6198
CHAD CROSBY-KEITH BRITT6.5815.5997
FREDDIE GIBBS-CLARK GIBBS0.0014.9496
WESLEY BILTON-TRAWICK BURCHMORE (S)4.9214.8095
ANDREW BULL-WILLIAM DIXON0.0014.0194
DAVE MURDOCK-STEVE BORTON0.0011.3493
RANDALL MILLER-MAC ALTMAN5.369.8992
KEITH BROWN-TODD BROWN0.008.5891
BENNETT LAWSHE-JEREMY HEWITT0.008.2690
KEVIN BROCK7.977.9789
TODD OLDS-BRIAN MAXWELL0.007.2088
PATRICK-REECE WILLIAMS4.766.8387
NICK GANT-PATRICK COOK0.000.0077
BILLY WILLIS-GLENN PORTER0.000.0077
BILL ROGERS-ROSE ROGERS0.000.0077
J WEINBERG-PATRICK OLIVER0.000.0077
ANDREW MCLEOD0.000.0077
CHRIS SMITH-DAVID SKINNER0.000.0077
JERED THOMPSON0.000.0077
JASON MORSE-ZEKE LYNAM0.000.0077
T.J. ANDERSON0.000.0077
BRENT WAYNICK-EMMETT MCCAULEY0.000.0077
Total Entrys$2,720.00
BONUS $$700.00
Total Paid At Ramp$2,845.00
2023 Santee Cooper Spring Final Total$475.00
CATT$50.00
2023 CATT Championship/Phantom Fund$50.00
2023 Santee Cooper Spring Final Total$840.00

New B.A.S.S. Nation format creates more opportunities for grass-roots anglers

February 21, 2023

New B.A.S.S. Nation format creates more opportunities for grass-roots anglers

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Officials have unveiled a new format for the TNT Fireworks B.A.S.S. Nation Series beginning with the 2024 season. Under the new format, individual, grass-roots anglers — even those who are not affiliated with a local club — will have more opportunities to qualify for the B.A.S.S. Nation Championship and a shot at a berth in the iconic Academy Sports + Outdoors Bassmaster Classic presented by Toyota.

Beginning in 2024, both individual B.A.S.S. Nation anglers and club members from each state will be able to enter national qualifier events, with the Top 20 finishers advancing to the B.A.S.S. Nation Championship. Additionally, club anglers will be able to qualify directly from their state tournaments to the championship. The Top 3 finishers at the championship earn a berth into the Bassmaster Classic.

“Our goal is to give the everyday angler more chances to make it to the B.A.S.S. Nation Championship, whether they get in via a state-run event or a national qualifier,” said GL Compton, tournament director for the B.A.S.S. Nation. “We know that for many anglers — especially when you’re working or in college — joining a local club isn’t practical, so opening our regional qualifying events to unaffiliated individuals is a way to accommodate those competitors. But, if you’re a club angler, now you’ll have two paths to qualify for the Nation Championship. It really is an all-around win for grass-roots anglers.”

Currently, to qualify for the TNT Fireworks B.A.S.S. Nation Championship, an angler must first qualify for a 20-member state team via state-level tournaments before competing in a B.A.S.S. Nation regional championship, where only the top boater and nonboater from each state move on to the championship.

The B.A.S.S. Nation Championship tournament will feature qualifiers from the states and the four national qualifier tournaments, as well as international anglers. Not only will the Top 3 anglers from the overall standings realize a dream of competing in the Bassmaster Classic, but the Nation Champion will earn the title of “Nation’s Best,” which includes the use of a fully-rigged tournament boat for a year, an invitation to join the Bassmaster Elite Series and a cash prize. The second- and third-place finishers and nonboater champion will each earn paid entry fees for all divisions of the St. Croix Bassmaster Opens with the opportunity to qualify for the Elites.

Johns Rebounds From Tough Start to Win APEX Championship on Folsom

By David A. Brown
FOLSOM, Calif. — Winners don’t shine only in the good times; they often must overcome discouraging days to reach the mountaintop. Just ask Luke Johns who sacked up a limit of 16.16 pounds to win the APEX Pro Tour Championship on Folsom Lake presented by Bridgford Foods and Visit Folsom.

The hometown favorite, Johns qualified through the Most Scorable Fish division, but doing so required him to overcome a disappointing first day that yielded only two scorable fish. Shaking off the frustration, he bounced back with a Day-2 total of 12 fish.

“This is definitely the biggest win of my career and the most memorable,” Johns said. “I had such a terrible start and to even come back and make a top 10 was incredible.

“To have the day that I had; it was one of those special days you dream about.”

After catching most of his Day-2 fish on a long tapering point in the South Fork, Johns started Championship Sunday on this spot. Nabbing a 3 1/2-pounder right off the bat helped him settle in for the final-round drama that included back-to-back 3-plus-pounders.

Johns caught his fish on a 3.3 Keitech Swing Impact Fat on a 1/4-ounce Owner football head. He fished his bait on spinning tackle with braided line tied to 10-pound Sunline Sniper fluorocarbon leader.

“I made sure the bait sunk to the bottom and slow rolled it as slow as I could go,” Johns said. “It was painful but that’s what it took to get bit.”

Catching eight fish today, Johns said his vast array of local knowledge actually played less of a role than most might assume. For him, it was more a matter of trusting his instincts to make wise decisions on the water.

“I know what’s in the lake and where most of the spots are, but I wouldn’t say my past memories really helped me much; I pretty much just flew by instinct today,” Johns said. “Luckily, my gut pointed me in the right direction.

“Nothing I fished was stuff that I necessarily knew fish were on. I just flew around and happened to stumble across the right stuff. I capitalized on the bites that I had and everything managed to work out the way I needed it to.

Johns said his victory was particularly special, as it closed out a big chapter in his life. Having recently purchased a boat, this tournament was the final event he’d fish out of the 1996 Skeeter ZX 202 in which he’s competed over the past four years.

“This boat was with me at the start of my pro-am journey, so it saw my first regular season win on New Melones in 2020, it saw me win an Angler of the Year title in 2021 and to finally get an APEX trophy and to win a Championship on the last day I’ll ever take this boat out is pretty incredible. I completed the trifecta.”

Jason Austin of Ione, Calif., who qualified through the Overall Weight division with a 2-day total of 26.09, placed second with 13.81. Spending his day in the North Fork, Austin directed his effort to offshore structure and boulders.

“I found that 25 feet was most consistent, but I also caught some shallower in 15 feet later in the day when we got some cloud cover,” Austin said. “I focused on the hazard buoys marking underwater boulders.”

Austin caught all of his fish on an umbrella rig with 1/4-ounce Ed’s Lead ball heads with 2/0 hooks and 3.3 Keitech Swing Impact Fat swimbaits in Tennessee shad. He found that getting bites required a glacial pace.

“You had to go as slow as you could possibly go,” Austin said. “The water temperature played a role. It was 48-49 in my area.

“Even with the cold water, they were chasing bait. I tried to stay where there was bait. There were birds in the area and bait on the graph.”

Struggling with a slow start, Austin reported his first consequential catch at 11. Prior to that he had to fish slow with a Z-Man FattyZ on a ned head just to get a couple of scorable fish to steady his confidence.

Nick Cloutier of Oakley, Calif. finished third with 13.63. His qualification came through the Scorable Bass division, in which he caught 18 over the first two days.

Sticking with the plan that served him well during the qualifying rounds, Cloutier fished the North Fork and targeted a point with two main rock piles rising from 30 feet to 10.

“I would just go back and forth; there was one on each side of the point and I just did a figure-8 around them,” Cloutier said. “They were pretty close and I think the fish were moving back and forth between the two rock piles searching for bait.

Cloutier caught his fish on a 1st Gen Topspin with a 3.8 Keitech Swing Impact Fat in smallmouth magic and light hitch. He also caught fish on a G Funk umbrella rig with 1/4-ounce Owner InShore heads and 3.8 Keitech Swing Impact Fats.

Cloutier also found he had to fish his umbrella rig extremely slow and close to the bottom to get bit. He marked a lot of bait in the area, but the fish only seemed interested in find on the bottom-hugging schools.

Cloutier caught fish throughout the day, but one in particular provided a memorable experience. The moment, he said, was made possible by Garmin Panoptix.

“I watched a 4 1/2-pounder come and eat my (umbrella rig) on Panoptix,” Cloutier said. “I probably would have reeled it back in if I hadn’t seen her, but I was able to slow it down and she came up and ate it.”

Rounding out the Top-5 were William Ponting of Temecula, Calif. with 12.52 and Marty Lawrence of Mesa, Ariz. with 11.32.

After two days of full-field competition, the top-10 anglers advanced to Sunday’s Championship round. The final field comprised the top-5 anglers with the Most Scorable Bass and the top-5 anglers with the highest Total Weight. Total weight and Scorable Bass count from days 1 and 2 are accumulated. In the final round, weights and keeper count are zeroed.

Hampton’s Nalley Makes Splash in Win at Phoenix Bass Fishing League Event on Lake Lanier

Boater Justin Nalley of Hampton, Georgia, and Strike-King co-angler Lance Spencer of Donalsonville, Georgia.
Donalsonville’s Spencer Tops Strike King Co-Angler Division

GAINESVILLE, Ga. (Feb. 20, 2023) – Boater Justin Nalley of Hampton, Georgia, caught a five-bass limit weighing 22 pounds, 8 ounces, Saturday to win the MLF Phoenix Bass Fishing League (BFL) Presented by T-H Marine on Lake Lanier. The tournament was the first event of the 2023 season for the BFL Bulldog Division. Nalley earned $5,970 for his victory.

Nalley’s win came in his first BFL event fished as a boater after learning the tournament ropes in prior seasons as a co-angler.

“I can’t even really fathom this,” said Nalley. “It hasn’t really set in yet. I had fished as a co-angler for four years and had some early success and just stuck with it. Then last year, for my 30th birthday, my wife surprised me with a bass boat she had bought from my father-in-law. So I took the leap and registered as a boater.”

Nalley said he practiced on Lanier before the tournament but only managed to catch three fish Thursday and two Friday.

“On tournament day I knew from past experience that the tournament would be won on the south end of the lake where the big spotted bass live,” Nalley said. “So, I started offshore fishing chunk rock and caught two fish early.

“Then I started running new stuff,” Nalley went on to say. “I caught a big spotted bass, a 5-7, which is my personal best for a spotted bass, then ran into a creek and caught my personal best largemouth on Lanier.”

Nalley relocated, caught some short fish, then managed to catch his fifth keeper – a largemouth. Nalley said his baits of choice during the day were a Berkley Powerbait The General Worm, a Rapala DT8 crankbait around chunk rock for spotted bass and an Advantage Bait Company Jawbreaker jig in the backs of creeks.

“The bites weren’t plentiful; they were really spread out, Nalley said. “But when I caught that last keeper I thought maybe I had a shot at winning,” Nalley said. “I was lowballing my weight and thought I had maybe 17 or 18 pounds.”

The top 10 boaters finished the tournament:

                1st:        Justin Nalley, Hampton, Ga., five bass, 22-8, $5,970
                2nd:       Alex Prince, Blue Ridge, Ga., five bass, 21-2, $2,582
                3rd:       Paul Marks, Cumming, Ga., five bass, 21-0, $2,222 (includes $500 Phoenix MLF Contingency Bonus)
                4th:        Matthew O’Connell, Brooks, Ga., five bass, 20-14, $1,505
                5th:        Randy Dover, Buford, Ga., five bass, 20-1, $1,033
                6th:        Rene Leon, Flowery Branch, Ga., five bass, 19-3, $947
                7th:        Brad Stalnaker, Eatonton, Ga., five bass, 18-15, $861
                8th:        Richie Brown, Dahlonega, Ga, five bass, 18-11, $775
                9th:        Matt Green, Cartersville, Ga., five bass, 18-8, $646
                9th:        Reid Daniel, Gainesville, Ga., five bass, 18-8, $646

Complete results can be found at MajorLeagueFishing.com.

Nalley’s biggest largemouth that weighed 5 pounds, 13 ounces, also earned him the Berkley Big Bass Boater award of $805.



Lance Spencer of Donalsonville, Georgia, won the Strike King co-angler division and a total of $2,582 Saturday, after bringing five bass to the scale that totaled 17 pounds, 11 ounces.

The top 10 Strike King co-anglers finished:

                1st:        Lance Spencer, Donalsonville, Ga., five bass, 17-11, $2,582
                2nd:       Jake Staley, Atlanta, Ga., five bass, 16-13, $1,291
                3rd:       Colton Sowash, Gainesville, Ga., five bass, 15-13, $863
                4th:        Grayson Brewster, Anderson, S.C., five bass, 15-4, $603
                5th:        Charles Ellington, Cumming, Ga., five bass, 14-1, $494
                5th:        Max Heaton, Hartwell, Ga., five bass, 14-1, $494
                7th:        Eric Lovvorn, Archer, Fla., four bass, 14-0, $430
                8th:        Guy Jordan, Gainesville, Ga., five bass, 13-12, $387
                9th:        Justin Farmer, Woodstock, Ga., four bass, 13-7, $344
                10th:     Austin Zigler, Clarkesville, Ga., five bass, 13-6, $301

Randy Reece of Woodstock, Georgia, earned the Berkley Big Bass co-angler award of $402, catching a bass that weighed in at 5 pounds, 7 ounces – the largest co-angler catch of the day.

The top 45 boaters and co-anglers in the region based on point standings, along with the five tournament winners of each qualifying event, will qualify for the Oct. 19-21 BFL Regional tournament on Lake Norman in Huntersville, North Carolina. Boaters will fish for a top award of $60,000, including a new Phoenix 819 Pro with a 200-horsepower Mercury outboard and $10,000, while co-anglers will compete for a top award of $50,000, including a new Phoenix 819 Pro with a 200-horsepower Mercury outboard.

The 2023 Phoenix BFL Presented by T-H Marine is a 24-division circuit devoted to weekend anglers, with 128 events throughout the season, five qualifying tournaments in each division. The top 45 boaters and Strike King co-anglers from each division, along with the five qualifying event winners, will advance to one of six BFL Regional tournaments where they 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. The 2023 All-American event will take place May 31-June 2, on Lake Hartwell in Seneca, South Carolina. The event is hosted by Visit Oconee SC.

Proud sponsors of the 2023 MLF Phoenix Bass Fishing League Presented by T-H Marine include: 4WP, 13 Fishing, Abu Garcia, B&W Trailer Hitches, Berkley, Black Rifle Coffee, E3, Epic Baits, Favorite Fishing, General Tire, Grundéns, Gill, Lew’s, Lowrance, Mercury, Mossy Oak, Onyx, Phoenix, Polaris, Power-Pole, Strike King, Tackle Warehouse, T-H Marine, Toyota, Wiley X and YETI.

For complete details and updated tournament information, visit MajorLeagueFishing.com. For regular Bass Fishing League updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow MLF5’s social media outlets at Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.

Rock An Elite Series Mimic Swim Jig 

Rock An Elite Series Mimic Swim Jig 
Northland Fishing Tackle’s new Elite Series Mimic Swim Jig works wonders for fishing swimbaits through weeds, brush, and over open water
BEMIDJI, Minn. (February 20, 2023) – Designed for serious bass anglers working paddletails, flukes, and other swimbait variations, Northland’s new Elite Series Mimic Swim Jig is perfect for rippin’ through salad and wood, as well as over open water—shallow to deep and everywhere in between.Featuring a 60-degree line tie to leverage the bait through cover, the Elite Series Mimic Swim Jig almost magically slips through vegetation, brush, and other woody cover. It’s also a great option for stalking pods of largemouths, smallmouths, or spotted bass feeding on pelagic baitfish over expansive open-water areas, around humps, and along deeper grass-lines.  
Northland Elite Series Mimic Swim Jig (BLUEGILL)
Especially aimed at tempting visually-feeding bass in clear water, the Northland design team sought to create a jighead that was beyond ultra-realistic. Each size and weight in the Elite Series Mimic Swim Jig family features a baitfish-mimicking head complete with 3D eyes, gill rakers, and multi-hued, forage-matching color patterns.“We started with the iconic, super-selling Northland Mimic Minnow jighead and made it super heavy duty. The result—after countless prototypes—is the current Elite Series Mimic Swim Jig, which features a super-strong and ultra-sharp Gamakatsu hook to ensure solid hooksets when targeting trophy bass,” said Northland Fishing Tackle Marketing Director (and serious bass angler), Mike Anselmo. 
Anselmo continues: “But it all starts with the new jig’s 60-degree line-tie eyelet, which allows the jig to slide through everything from coontail to cabbage and wood—precisely the places you find big bass. It also keeps the bait horizontal when worked through open water.”Aware of the deficiencies of other swimbait jigheads, Northland architects instituted wire-form and molded-lead bait keepers to provide balance, superior action, and ease when rigging the gamut of TPE and PVC soft-plastic swimbaits available to bass anglers today. Northland marketing manager, Charlie Peterson, adds: “While a lot of bass guys will use an adhesive like Loctite Gel to keep their plastics pinned to jig heads, you don’t really need to do that with this jig—although you can if you want. Even without adhesive, your bigger flukes, paddletails, and other swimbaits tend to stay up on the shank of the hook thanks to the dual keeper design.” 
SEXY SHAD
PERCH
PURPLE SHAD
WALLEYE
GREEN PUMPKIN
WHITE
SMELT
While aimed at bass anglers, the new Northland Elite Series Mimic Swim Jig has also caught on with the ever-growing crowd of walleye anglers casting to fish. “Rip Jigging is a surefire way to draw a lot of reaction strikes from walleyes,” says Peterson. “During testing, we crushed a lot of ‘eyes ripping this jig through cabbage. Same goes for walleyes feeding in open water, shallow to deep. River walleye anglers, too, are also starting to use them with success. And with sizes up to ¾-ounce with a beefy 5/0 Gamakatsu hook, they also translate to pike and even lake trout fishing.”Northland Fishing Tackle’s Elite Series Mimic Swim Jig is available in four sizes: ¼-ounce, 3/0 hook; 3/8-ounce, 4/0 hook; ½-ounce, 5/0 hook; and ¾-ounce, 5/0 hook. Colors include Black, Walleye, Perch, Bluegill, Sexy Shad, Smelt, Purple Shad, and Green Pumpkin. Packaged two per card with an MSRP of $6.49.

Clarks Hill Lake Set to Host MLF Tackle Warehouse Invitational Stop 2

Full Field of 150 Professional Anglers to Compete in Invitational Tournament for Top Prize of up to $115,000 and Qualification into REDCREST 2024

APPLING, Ga. (Feb. 20, 2023) – The second Major League Fishing (MLF) Tackle Warehouse Invitational event of the season is set to take place in Appling, Georgia, next week, Feb. 28- March 2, with the MLF Tackle Warehouse Invitational Stop 2 at Clarks Hill Lake. The MLF Tackle Warehouse Invitationals feature a roster of 150 anglers, competing at each event for a top prize of up to $115,000 and an invitation to compete at REDCREST 2024 – the Bass Pro Tour championship – for the chance to win up to $300,000.

Hosted by the Columbia County Convention and Visitors Bureau and the Thomson-McDuffie County Convention & Visitors Bureau, the tournament marks the second of six Tackle Warehouse Invitational events in 2023, offering competitors a total season purse of more than $3.9 million. The field is also competing for valuable points to win the coveted Invitational Angler of the Year (AOY) title. The top eight pros in the Tackle Warehouse Invitational AOY standings at the end of the season will receive an invitation to compete on the Bass Pro Tour.

Clarks Hill Lake has played host to numerous MLF Phoenix Bass Fishing League (BFL) events over the years, but this event marks the first time the fishery has hosted a professional-level MLF event. While the professional history on Clarks Hill is limited, the BFL stats are pretty telling – it took more than 20 pounds to win two of the last five events, and the biggest winning weight over the years came back in 1997, when Majors Hamby walloped 24-14 at the end of April.

“We are excited to be welcoming some of the best anglers in the world to Wildwood Park as part of the Tackle Warehouse Invitational,” said John Luton, Director of Community Services for the Columbia County Convention and Visitors Bureau. “Wildwood Park and Clarks Hill Lake are consistently voted the top fishing and camping sites in Columbia County, and we are happy to be able to show them off on a national level.”

One thing is for sure – this event is scheduled at a prime time for big weight. February and March have produced consistent weights on Clarks Hill over the years. So, while the potential to catch a really big bag is there during the spawn, we’re likely to see really good fishing for the Invitational.

“The lake is really big – it’s pretty much a home lake for me. I grew up fishing club tournaments there, and it’s so big there’s a whole half of the lake I know nothing about,” said Belton, South Carolina, pro Brian Latimer. “The whole Georgia arm, I’ve fished about twice.

“The lake is very diverse, it used to have grass in it, it’s not there anymore,” Latimer said. “Everything is going to play in this tournament. It has the potential to be a forward-facing sonar tournament because the fish get in the ditches. There’s a strong offshore bite there, so the potential of it being a LiveScope tournament is extremely high. Also, depending on the weather, it could be snowing, or it could be 70 and the fish moving up to spawn.

“There’s always the potential to catch them shallow, because there are so many water clarities,” Latimer continued. “You’re going to have extremely clear water, you can go in the creeks and it’ll be muddy, you can get in between in a nice pretty strain. There’s timber, there’s docks, it’s just got a lot of different options. Everybody is going to spread out and probably have something that’ll fit what they like.”

Latimer said to look for a winning weight around 60 pounds and that he expects a strong prespawn tournament.

“They move up a little quicker on Clarks Hill than they do on other lakes,” Latimer went on to say. “It’s a little flatter, so it warms up quicker. You get that initial push pretty fast. I can’t imagine it not being a good tournament.”

Anglers will take off at 7 a.m. ET, Tuesday through Thursday, from Wildwood Park, located at 6212 Holloway Road in Appling. Weigh-ins will also be held at the park beginning at 3 p.m. each day. Fans are welcome to attend the event or follow the live on-the-water action all three days of competition online on MLF NOW! beginning at 7:30 a.m. ET at MajorLeagueFishing.com.

In MLF Tackle Warehouse Invitational competition, the full field of 150 anglers compete in the two-day opening round on Tuesday and Wednesday in a traditional five-fish, weigh-in format. Only the top 50 pros based on their two-day cumulative weight will advance to the final round on Championship Thursday, where they will compete for the grand prize of up to $115,000. The winner of the MLF Tackle Warehouse Invitational Stop 2 at Clarks Hill Lake will be determined by the heaviest three-day cumulative weight and will receive an invitation to compete at REDCREST 2024.

The MLF NOW!® broadcast team of Chad McKee, Marty Stone and J.T. Kenney will break down the extended action live on all four days of competition. MLF NOW!®  will be live streamed on MajorLeagueFishing.com and the MyOutdoorTV (MOTV) app.

The MLF Tackle Warehouse Invitational Stop 1 at Clarks Hill Lake will also feature a two-hour television broadcast that will premiere on the CBS Sports Network on Saturday, Oct. 7.

Proud sponsors of the 2023 MLF Tackle Warehouse Invitationals include: 4WP, 13 Fishing, Abu Garcia, B&W Trailer Hitches, Berkley, Black Rifle Coffee, E3, Favorite Fishing, Fox Rent a Car, General Tire, Grundéns, Lew’s, Lowrance, Mercury, Mossy Oak, Onyx, Phoenix Boats, Polaris, Power-Pole, Strike King, Tackle Warehouse, T-H Marine, Wiley X and YETI.

For complete details and updated information visit MajorLeagueFishing.com. For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow the Tackle Warehouse Invitationals on the MLF5 social media outlets at FacebookInstagram and  YouTube.

Landon Siggers & Brittany Weston Win CATT SML with 23.74lbs

We would like to thank Alicia Matherly for covering out CARR SML events in 2023.

What a great turnout for for the 1st CATT Smith Mountain Lake event of the 2023 Spring Season. With over half the anglers weighing fish & the weights showing off for the winner Landon Siggers & Brittany Weston. We have to wonder & hope that the bite holds up.

Click Here to See Results

Louisiana’s Tyler Rivet claims first Bassmaster Elite Series victory at Lake Okeechobee

Tyler Rivet of Raceland, La., has won the 2023 SiteOne Bassmaster Elite at Lake Okeechobee with a four-day total of 86 pounds, 15 ounces.

Photo by Seigo Saito/B.A.S.S.

February 19, 2023

Louisiana’s Tyler Rivet claims first Bassmaster Elite Series victory at Lake Okeechobee

OKEECHOBEE, Fla. — Tyler Rivet called his shot on Day 1.

The fifth-year Elite Series pro from Raceland, La., said Thursday he had the location and game plan to win the SiteOne Bassmaster Elite at Lake Okeechobee — and on Sunday, his claim came to fruition as he finished with a four-day total of 86 pounds, 15 ounces to earn his first career blue trophy.

After placing third on Day 1 with 24-5, Rivet gained one spot with a second-round limit of 29-2 on Friday. A slower Saturday yielded only 14-11 and Rivet dropped back to third. But he turned in a Championship Sunday bag that went 18-13 to seal the deal and collect the $100,000 top prize.

“This is what I’ve dreamed of since I was a kid,” Rivet said. “I remember every day at the (Lake Cataouatche) Tank Ponds during the 2011 Bassmaster Classic in New Orleans, hearing boats coming through the fog and seeing all the big names and thinking ‘One day, I want to do that.’”

Rivet spent this week in the Kissimmee River, about two miles upstream from the lake. With the exception of a few local boats, he had the river all to himself.

“Nobody else was doing what I was doing and that’s the key to winning an Elite tournament — finding that one little thing off the wall,” Rivet said. “That’s how it’s won (most) of the time.

“I thought this one would be won out in the lake on one of the community holes. But when I found my spot in the river, I thought, ‘This could be something.’ But I didn’t know until that first day and I was like ‘We could win.’”

The story of how Rivet landed in this area enhanced his victory experience.

“I just went sac-a-lait (French for crappie) fishing before the tournament,” Rivet said. “I’m the cook in my travel family, so I went up the river and caught some sac-a-lait. Then I looked to the left on Garmin LiveScope and said ‘That looks like a bass.’

“I threw over there with a jerkbait and caught a 6-pounder. I went down about 20 yards, saw another one, caught it on the first cast — 4-pounder. I just kept going down the river and they were staging everywhere.”

In the river, Rivet targeted hard-bottom spots off the bank. These classic prespawn staging areas attracted groups of bass that seemed to periodically come and go throughout each day.

“The main spot was a dead-end canal with a little dam at the back of it, and I guess the fish were going in there to spawn, or they were sitting on a little hard point that was coming off of it,” Rivet said. “They would come in waves. You’d see them on Garmin LiveScope.

“You’d have to hit them perfectly. You’d have to throw in front of them and not behind them. If you come from behind, it would spook them away, so you had to have that perfect angle.”

Rivet said he caught 80% of his bass on a Berkley Stunna jerkbait. He also caught a few of his weight fish by punching hyacinth mats and Kissimmee grass with a black/blue and junebug Xcite Baits Sucka Punch. A Carolina-rigged Xcite Baits Hawgalicious produced a couple more keepers.

Rivet dedicated his victory to his grandmother who passed in January.

“She was watching me from up there every day,” Rivet said with a trembling voice. “Every fish that I caught this week that was over 4, I said, ‘Thank you Mammaw.’”

Elite Series veteran Clark Wendlandt of Leander, Texas, placed second with 83 pounds. Committing all four days to the South Bay region, Wendlandt turned in daily bags of 18-9, 25-5, 23-4 and 15-14.

“I just felt most confident in that area,” Wendlandt said. “I practiced at the north end, too, but I just felt like my better bites would be down south.

“I honestly didn’t get any big bites in practice, but I caught some big fish in the tournament.”

Wendlandt caught the majority of his bass on a junebug Strike King Cut-R Worm with a 3/16-ounce weight. He also caught a couple of key fish on a Strike King Thunder Cricket with a Strike King Blade Minnow trailer.

“I was fishing dead reeds that were below the surface,” Wendlandt said. “In between the clumps were open spots, so I’d fish my worm over those reeds and let it fall down into those lower spots.”

Brandon Cobb of Greenwood, S.C., placed third with 81-9. After placing sixth in the first round with 22-9, Cobb added 32-15, 14-4 and 11-13.

With days 1 and 2 bringing warm, partly sunny conditions, Cobb found his bass in shallow cover mostly cooperative. The cold front on Day 3 rattled his area, but he hoped the final day’s calm warming conditions would deliver a revival that never materialized.

“Day 1, most everything I caught was spawning fish,” Cobb said. “On Day 2, most of my big ones were prespawn, so that made me excited. On Day 3, the weather wasn’t right and they weren’t ready. Today, I fully expected them to be spawning. I expected it to get hot any hour, but it just never did.”

After catching his bass on a black and blue 3/8-ounce ChatterBait with a Zoom Super Fluke and flipping a Texas-rigged Zoom Fluke Stick, Cobb’s tough final day saw him switch to a Yo-Zuri prop bait. The color was bluegill and Cobb accented the belly with a black marker.

Rookie Logan Latuso of Gonzales, La., earned the $1,000 daily bonus for catching the Phoenix Boats Big Bass of the Day Sunday with his 6-14 largemouth. Cobb won the Day 2 award, as well as the overall $2,000 Phoenix Boats Big Bass of the tournament title, with an 8-12.

Cobb’s Day 2 catch of 32-15 won the $2,000 VMC Monster Bag honors. 

Rivet also took home an additional $3,000 for being the highest-placing entrant in the Toyota Bonus Bucks program while Cobb earned $2,000 for being the second-highest placing entrant.

As part of the Yamaha Power Pay program, Wendlandt also earned an additional $2,500 as the highest-placing entrant and Australian pro Carl Jocumsen claimed an additional $1,500 for being the second-highest placing entrant.

Pennsylvania’s Jonathan Kelley won the $1,000 BassTrakk Contingency award for the most accurate weight reporting.

Since this was the first event of the Elite Series season, Rivet claimed the lead in the Progressive Insurance Bassmaster Angler of the Year standings with 104 points. Wendlandt is in second with 103, followed by Cobb with 102, Latuso with 101 and Steve Kennedy of Auburn, Ala., with 100.

Latuso also leads the Bassmaster Rookie of the Year standings

The Bassmaster Elite at Lake Okeechobee was hosted by Okeechobee County

2023 SiteOne Bassmaster Elite at Lake Okeechobee 2/16-2/19
Lake Okeechobee, Okeechobee  FL.
(PROFESSIONAL) Standings Day 4

   Angler                   Hometown              No./lbs-oz  Pts   Total $$$

1.  Tyler Rivet            Raceland, LA            20  86-15  104 $101,000.00
  Day 1: 5   24-05     Day 2: 5   29-02     Day 3: 5   14-11     Day 4: 5   18-13   
2.  Clark Wendlandt        Leander, TX             20  83-00  103  $35,000.00
  Day 1: 5   18-09     Day 2: 5   25-05     Day 3: 5   23-04     Day 4: 5   15-14   
3.  Brandon Cobb           Greenwood, SC           20  81-09  102  $35,000.00
  Day 1: 5   22-09     Day 2: 5   32-15     Day 3: 5   14-04     Day 4: 5   11-13   
4.  Logan Latuso           Gonzales, LA            20  81-04  101  $26,000.00
  Day 1: 5   17-01     Day 2: 5   21-03     Day 3: 5   24-15     Day 4: 5   18-01   
5.  Steve Kennedy          Auburn, AL              20  77-02  100  $20,000.00
  Day 1: 5   23-08     Day 2: 5   23-09     Day 3: 5   23-01     Day 4: 5   07-00   
6.  Carl Jocumsen          Queensland AUSTRALIA    20  75-07   99  $19,000.00
  Day 1: 5   12-14     Day 2: 5   24-13     Day 3: 5   23-06     Day 4: 5   14-06   
7.  Brandon Card           Salisbury, NC           20  73-04   98  $18,000.00
  Day 1: 5   16-01     Day 2: 5   23-04     Day 3: 5   18-09     Day 4: 5   15-06   
8.  Jake Whitaker          Hendersonville, NC      20  71-06   97  $17,000.00
  Day 1: 5   15-03     Day 2: 5   27-12     Day 3: 5   18-11     Day 4: 5   09-12   
9.  Marc Frazier           Newnan, GA              20  66-13   96  $16,000.00
  Day 1: 5   21-00     Day 2: 5   13-13     Day 3: 5   21-09     Day 4: 5   10-07   
10. Drew Cook              Cairo, GA               20  66-11   95  $15,000.00
  Day 1: 5   22-12     Day 2: 5   22-14     Day 3: 5   11-07     Day 4: 5   09-10   
———————————————————————–

PHOENIX BOATS BIG BASS 
Day
 1   Bernie Schultz           Gainesville, FL     08-10      $1,000.00
 2   Brandon Cobb             Greenwood, SC       08-12      $1,000.00
 3   Cody Huff                Ava, MO             08-06      $1,000.00
 4   Logan Latuso             Gonzales, LA        06-14      $1,000.00

———————————————————————–
PHOENIX BOATS BIG BASS
     Brandon Cobb             Greenwood, SC       08-12      $2,000.00
VMC MONSTER BAG
     Brandon Cobb             Greenwood, SC       32-15      $2,000.00

———————————————————————–
Totals
Day   #Limits    #Fish      Weight
 1        99       506      1495-09
 2       103       515      1625-11
 3        46       240       660-12
 4        10        50       131-02
———————————-
         258      1311      3913-02

What an honor to have a Bait made just for The Bass Cast

On this weekend update we congratulate all of our weekend winners as well as our 1st Bassmaster fantasy fishing winner Danielle Englund.
Then we do a box reveal from SpearPoint Performance Hooks & Louie’s Lures.
A special thanks to them for sponsoring out giveaways for the 2023 season. By the way the only way to win the limited edition Bass Cast Louie’s lures baits is by playing fantasy fishing with the Bass Cast.

https://www.spearpointhooks.com/
https://louieslures.com/