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Lowrance® Offers New Low Price on Elite FS™ Displays

Lowrance® Offers New Low Price on

Elite FS™ Displays

Free C-MAP® REVEAL™ Chart Card is available via rebate

with the purchase of an Elite FS display

 

Tulsa, Okla. – Lowrance is offering consumers incredible savings with new, low pricing on Elite FS™ displays beginning June 1. With this competitive price reduction, the Elite FS 9 portion of the current ActiveTarget® Live Sonar rebate will be discontinued on May 31. Additionally, the current ActiveTarget Live Sonar $200 rebate, as well as a $200 rebate on the Elite FS 9 and ActiveTarget bundle, will be available through July 4.

The new pricing on Elite FS displays is:

  • $999 for Elite FS 9 with Active Imaging 3-in-1
  • $849 for Elite FS 9, no transducer
  • $899 for Elite FS 7 with Active Imaging 3-in-1
  • $799 for Elite FS 7 HDI

As a bonus, consumers can also get a free C-MAP® REVEAL™ Lakes or Coastal chart card (up to $250 in retail value) through mail-in rebate with the purchase of any Elite FS 9 display beginning June 1 through August 31, 2022.

For avid anglers, the Elite FS offers a full line-up of Lowrance fish finding tools to make time on the water more productive. Compatible with the Elite FS, Lowrance’s revolutionary ActiveTarget Live Sonar provides anglers immediate feedback on how fish are relating to structure and reacting to a lure presentation, letting them know if their approach is working or if it is time to change things up to get fish to strike.

For more information on these savings, please visit please visit www.lowrance.com/offers.

June 2022 Kerr Lake Fishing Report by Dennie Gilbert

Dennie Gilbert
Kerr Lake
Largemouth Bass update:
Welcome to June, as of this writing the lake has risen over 3’in 5 days. The full moon begins tonight. The vast majority of bass have finished spawning. They should be chasing brim in the flooded bushes and trees. Pitching soft plastics and throwing a frog should become a major player. If they start pulling the water start looking on flats and points around 6 to 20’ deep Top water may work. Everything will depend on the lake level. Good luck and good fishing, be safe, wear your life jacket and watch out for the crazies out there. Kerr lake bass.com

Robert Clements Win’s Bass Cast Kayak Bass Series on Philpott Lake

We would like to thank everyone for making the journey to fish Philpott Lake with the Bass Cast. Congratulations again to the only angler to catch a scoreable limit, Robert Clements.

CLICK HERE TO SEE RESULTS

CLICK HERE TO SEE CURRENT POINTS STANDINGS

Patrick Walters Wins it all on Watts Bar

Story by Justin Brouillard | Photos by Tanner & Travis Lyons

Leading after both days one and two, Patrick Walters‘ Finale Friday began with a 9-ounce lead and ended with a 2-pound, 5-ounce victory. With 15-pounds, 9-ounces on day three, he claims his first NPFL victory with a three-day total of 45-pounds, 9-ounces.

Walters fished a run and gun pattern this week on Watts Bar and averaged just over 15-pounds a day under tough conditions. With the sun shining once again on day three, Walters was able to take advantage of fish setting on how he needed them and caught fish in small flurries throughout the day.

“I was fishing high percentage areas, brush and stumps, and I was running a ton of spots every day. Yesterday we had cloud and they were not set up correct and it was a tougher day. Today the sunshine came back out and it got them set up where I could catch them.”

While not fishing for the fish on live sonar, Walters was able to locate his high percentage targets with dialed in electronics set up and installed by Sonar Pros. He fished a big worm all week and rotated between two different Zoom Baits.

“I fished a Texas rig Zoom Magnum Trick Worm in plum color and a Zoom Ol’ Monster in redbug. I fished them on a heavy action 7’ 6” Daiwa Tatula Elite rod and used 17 or 20-pound Suffix fluorocarbon.

Sheldon Collings
Sheldon Collings caught 14-pounds, 10-ounces on day three to finish the tournament in the 2nd place spot. With a three-day total of 43-pounds, 4-ounces, Collings worked a combination of shallow docks and offshore brush piles to catch his fish this week.

After a really slow morning, with only 9 or 10-pounds at 2 PM, Collings went to a stretch of docks and within 5 minutes did his damage for the day.

“I pulled in and literally first flip I caught a 5-pounder, the next flip was a 4-pounder, and then a few minutes after I got the 3-pounder. That was basically all my weight and I never caught a fish the rest of the day.”

Collings wanted to thank his sponsors for their support. Baseline Labs, Fish Tek, Mark Collings Construction, Sports Center in Grove, OK, Whiz Plumbing, Phoenix Boats and Bills Marina in Skiatook, OK.

Pug Clements
Adding 14-pounds, 9-ounces on day three, Pug Clements fished a combination of a shad spawn bite and a swim jig around marina docks to finish the event in the 3rd place spot with a total weight of 41-pounds, 5-ounces.

Matt Massey
Matt Massey caught the biggest bag of the tournament on day two, and added 12-pounds on the final day to finish the event in 4th place. He amassed a three-day total of 40-pounds, 7-ounces and worked a pattern that involved a bladed jig and transition areas to catch his fish this week.

“Today I focused more on the isolated patches of coontail grass. The area was in the back of a pocket and there was a little ditch that came out of the back – the fish were stacked around the grass.”

To get his bait through the area without getting hung, Massey relied on a Strike King Thunder Cricket in 3/8 ounce and paired it with a Strike King Rage Grub trailer. He used several retrieves to keep the bait moving with an erratic action and that was key to getting those bigger bites.

“After a rough practice, I am thrilled with this finish. I located some fish but by no means did I expect a top five finish. I didn’t lose any fish and I executed this week and I absolutely cannot complain – it was a great week.”

Ryan Satterfield
Ryan Satterfield added 9-pounds, 14-ounces to his total to finish the event in the 5th place spot with a total weight of 39-pounds, 5-ounces. Satterfield worked a channel swing flat near a spawning area and was targeting isolated grass patches.

Rest of the Best:
6th James Clements 38-10
7th Bryant Smith 36-1
8th Brad Knight 35-12
9th Louis Fernandes 35-10
10th Todd Goade 35-7

Walters Maintains Watts Bar Lead at NPFL

Story by Justin Brouillard | Photos by Tanner & Travis Lyons

Patrick Walters
Adding 13-pounds, 2-ounces on day two to his day one tournament leading 16-pounds, 14-ounces, Patrick Walters retains the NPFL Watts Bar lead with a two-day total of 30-pounds. Walters was seen on live covering water both shallow and deep and had a slower start to his day than expected. He holds a 9-ounce lead going into Final Friday.

“I didn’t get to my good water until later this afternoon but I thought I could catch more fish on the way up there than I actually did – It was a grinder. I am fishing a lot of spots but I slowed down some today to try and work some areas more.”

Tomorrow, Walters is planning to fish double the waypoints he did today and try to convince some of the bigger bass in each area to bite. Getting into a rhythm is key and it just didn’t seem to work out for him on day two.

“These fish are educated and if you get one to bite and break up the group, they just settle back in and won’t t bite again. I am fishing mainly a Zoom Trick Worm and a Mag Trick worm and have been trying to get the cranking deal going but it just hasn’t happened yet. If they eat the Rapala DT20 tomorrow it will be a different ballgame.”

Ryan Satterfield
With his biggest bag of the tournament thus far, Ryan Satterfield weighed in 15-pounds, 10-ounces on day two for a two-day total of 29-pounds, 7-ounces to finish in the 2nd place spot. After a practice period with little or nothing to go to during the tournament, Satterfield settled in on an inside channel swing loaded with grass and post spawn bass.

“I don’t have a lot of spots, and yesterday I caught them in twenty minutes. Today I didn’t get as many bites, but still was able to leave them alone early in the day. They are the right size fish for this tournament and I got the right bites today; I was done by 10:30 AM this morning and left it alone.”

Focusing on a high percentage area that’s perfect for holding post spawn bass, Satterfield is fishing the outside bend of a creek channel on the edge of a big spawning flat. The other key, its loaded with grass.

“So far, I have not had to change my approach much, and I am dropping my Powerpoles in shallow water and casting out into the channel. If I can float a bait through the grass, I am getting bites. It’s a high percentage area and I am definitely around the right fish – I can’t wait to get back out there and see what happens.”

Sheldon Collings
With a two-day total of 28-pounds, 10-ounces, Sheldon Collings finishes day two in the 3rd place spot. Collings relied on a late afternoon charge to catch his bag of 13-pounds, 14-ounces after a slow start to his day on Live Coverage. The patience paid off as he landed on a school willing to bite and was able to cull up to his final weight.

“I have been catching them on docks and shallow wood but it was not going today at all. I fished a pile of new water and eventually got back to where I caught my bigger bass yesterday. I happened to notice some grass and brush out in front of the docks on my live sonar and went to work with a jerkbait.”

After culling up to his weight for the day in less than ten minutes, Collings used his final hour of the tournament to idle the pocket and mark all of the brush in the area. Depending on the weather, either the bass will slide back under docks or hang out on the cover in front.

“If I can catch them on Livescope and a jerkbait, I am happy. If they slide back under docks, I will be able to catch them there. There are a lot of fish in that area and I just have to adapt to the conditions tomorrow.”

Matt Massey
With the biggest bag of the tournament, including a lunker weighing 7-pounds even, Matt Massey weighed 19-pounds, 10-ounces to finish day two in the 4th place spot. He has a two-day total of 28-pounds, 7-ounces. Massey expanded on his day one water and specifically fished new water on day two.

“Man, it was one of those days. I stayed close this morning to get a quick limit, and I had about 8-pounds by 9 AM. After that, I just focused on transition areas where I thought they would go to after spawning.”

Massey was able to figure out a subtlety to the type of transition area he was running and made a lot of good decisions. He is fishing old school type presentations, rotating through three confidence baits from the days he has spent in Colorado fishing rock and wood.

“I was almost able to call my shots – I could do no wrong. Once I figured out the way it was working, I ran new water all day and caught fish between 1 foot and 22 feet deep. I didn’t lose any fish today and the areas I fished I have never seen before, I just expanded on what I fished yesterday.”

Massey is confident he can run around on day three and try to duplicate his success.

Pug Clements
Adding 12-pounds, 2-ounces on day two, Pug Clements worked his junk fishing pattern again to finish in the 5th place spot with a two-day total of 26-pounds, 12-ounces. Starting on a shad spawn deal to begin his day, he fished a spot he had saved and was able to capitalize on some bigger bites.

“I caught two of the fish in my bag on the shad spawn deal this morning and I think Taylor (Watkins) caught some there too. I then went to a place I have been saving and I caught the other three. Everyone probably saw on live but I was fishing a specific way I fish back home and its very specific to get bites.”

Making only one pass on his productive stretch, Clements is looking forward to putting the hammer down and trying to catch a big bag. He is fishing a bait and technique he is very comfortable with and hopes with changing conditions he can up his weight on Final Friday.

“I really think I can catch them good in there and as of now I am the only one in there. I have to present the bait very specifically and it’s a tight window. The only thing I am comfortable with is a white swim jig – once you can figure out the rate of fall and the retrieve, you can really catch them.”

Clements is fishing his swim jig on a Jenko DCBR High Roller Rod in a 7’ 1” medium heavy action.

Rest of the best:
6th Michael Brewer 26-3
7th Louis Fernandes 25-11
8th Eddie Carper 24-14
9th Marc Schilling 24-9
10th Shawn Murphy 24-2

Be sure to join us for Final Friday LIVE @ 8 AM for complete water-to-champion coverage.

MINOR POUNDS THE DEPTHS FOR WIN AT HOBIE® B.O.S. SERIES ANCHORED BY POWER-POLE® BROKEN BOW EVENT

MINOR POUNDS THE DEPTHS FOR WIN AT HOBIE® B.O.S. SERIES ANCHORED BY POWER-POLE® BROKEN BOW EVENT

Vue second, Brewer third as all three punch tickets to Hobie TOC.

OCEANSIDE, Calif. (May 26, 2022) – In some of the stiffest competition of the 2022 season to date, Ewing Minor edged Tou Vue and Justin Brewer for the win at the Hobie® B.O.S. Series Anchored By Power-Pole® Broken Bow Lake event held May 14-15 in Southeastern Oklahoma.

“Broken Bow produced some of the best catches we’ve seen this year,” said tournament director, Cody Prather. “The fishing was on fire as nearly 2,000 fish were submitted, many competitors entered full limits, and a field of 173 elite kayak anglers traveled from all across the country to beautiful and welcoming McCurtain County to see who could come out on top. Each day witnessed angler limits measuring from the mid-70- to upper 80-inch range. The final day battle between Minor and Vue was epic, while third-place finisher Justin Brewer drilled his second top-three finish here in two years having placed second in 2021. He’s only fished the lake twice!”

For Ewing, of Charlottesville , Virginia, a steady pounding of the lake’s offshore waters proved the ticket to success. The 20-year-old, a member of Carson-Newman’s fully-funded college kayak fishing team along with Jaxton Orr, another standout on the Hobie BOS Anchored by Power-Pole® trail, put his Live Scope to work locating bass in 14- to 18-foot depths on long, flatter points and humps.

“I caught some fish near the bottom and some suspending, too,” revealed Minor, who mostly used a drop-shot to tally 88.5 inches of bass on Day 1 and 86.5 inches on Day 2 for a 175-inch total. “I just kept moving around and cycling through water to stay on fresh fish all day long. It didn’t matter if I probed around rocks, grass or brush, there were good fish all over this lake. I had steady action on Day 1, but Day 2 was slower. Fortunately, I caught a good flurry toward the end that boosted me over the top.”

Ewing attributed at least part of his success to his PA12 360, noting that it can be especially helpful when fishing offshore. “That’s really hard to do in anything else,” stated Ewing. “With this platform, I can precisely target any fish I spot with my Live Scope. It holds position really well, even with the wind at your back, and it turns on a dime. If I spy fish behind me, I simply swing the boat around and I’m on them in a few seconds.”

Vue, 30, from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, had the lead at the end of Day 1 with an 88.5-inch tally. Running a few minutes late at the launch ramp, he hit a nearby point and found stellar topwater action tossing a 5-inch Evergreen SB125 topwater plug in chartreuse/white. “By 7:30, I already had a limit, so I left that spot and hit another not far away,” he revealed. “There I drilled a 19-inch bronzeback. I spent the rest of the day hitting my practice spots and catching fish but couldn’t find a solid cull. Still, I was very satisfied sitting in first at that point.”

Day 2 also featured a furious start for Vue as he drilled an 18-inch largemouth and followed it up with a bunch of 14- to 15-inch fish for a quick limit. After that, his topwater bite died. “I headed to deeper water, but then my battery drained out,” explained Vue, “so I had to fish blind the rest of the way. I still caught plenty of fish, I just couldn’t find a cull to push me over the top.”

Given his late start and battery drain, Vue said he was happy with his second-place finish and 174.5-inch total. “I was fortunate to get such good results,” he admitted.

Brewer, meanwhile, said that he benefited from the water being high and off color. “I like fishing under those conditions,” he stated. The 26-year-old from Lincoln, Arkansas, used his Hobie PA14 180 to work a pair of creek arms with a Foxy Shad pattern Booyah XCS squarebill crankbait. After finishing 20th on Day 1 with 84.75 inches of bass, he rallied for a second-place finish on Day 2 with an 88.5-inch limit and 173.25 total inches for the two-day, catch, photograph and release (CPR) event. “I really benefited from a 19-incher on Day 2 that flashed at my squarebill right under the boat. I stopped that lure on the spot, waited a second, and she came back and smashed it,” noted Brewer.

For their efforts, Ewing came away with a first-place check for $10,500, Vue cashed out with $5,500, and Brewer pocketed $3,200 as payouts were awarded to the top 10-percent of the field. Caymen Rasmussen scooped up Bassin’ Big Bass honors and a $500 payout with a 21-inch brute that bested several fish topping the 20-inch mark. Additionally, AFTCO Angler of the Year (AOY) points were awarded to the top 100 finishers in the field.

Minor, Vue and Brewer also punched their way to the 2022 Hobie Tournament of Champions (TOC) on Caddo Lake, November 11-13, in Shreveport- Bossier City, Louisiana. The TOC is a three-day 50-angler championship with a $100,000 payout guarantee.

“This was a terrific tournament,” stated Minor. “The competition was impressive, McCurtain County made us feel welcomed, and a lot of people caught really well. This is a beautiful, incredibly productive lake. The fishery showed out and the anglers did, too.”

Brewer agreed. “Hobie has the best series out there right now, and I’m thrilled to have already qualified for the TOC. It’s tough to break into the top-three spots on this trail because the competition is so fierce, but every one of these tourneys is run smoothly, features a great fishing destination, and draws kayak anglers from across the country so you can compete head-to-head with the best in the sport.”

That’s spot on, sums up Prather. “We love seeing everyone compete at the highest level, and this event really produced as there wasn’t much separation from spots 1 through 20 on the leader board. That’s the way we like to see it all play out.”

Next up on the Hobie® B.O.S. Series Anchored By Power-Pole® event list is Lake Chickamauga, June 4 – 5, which is already sold out. Registration is still open for the Lake Winnipesaukee event, June 25 – 26.

Current Will Play A Major Role In Bassmaster Elite Series Event At Pickwick Lake

Counce, Tenn., will host the Whataburger Bassmaster Elite at Pickwick Lake June 2-5, 2022. 

Photo by James Overstreet/B.A.S.S.

May 26, 2022

Current Will Play A Major Role In Bassmaster Elite Series Event At Pickwick Lake

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COUNCE, Tenn. — Brock Mosley didn’t grow up fishing Pickwick Lake, but it’s where he learned how to fish, so to speak.

“When I was (at East Mississippi Community College) I was only an hour and a half away from Pickwick,” the 33-year-old Elite Series pro from Collinsville, Miss., said. “It was my first chance to fish something other than a shallow mudhole. It’s a special place for me.”

Mosley is one of 91 pros who will compete in the Whataburger Bassmaster Elite at Pickwick Lake, which will be held June 2-5 on the eastern edge of the 43,000-acre impoundment of the Tennessee River. Anglers will take off from Pickwick Landing State Park in Counce, Tenn., at 7 a.m. CT daily with weigh-ins scheduled for 3:10 p.m. The field will be cut to the Top 47 Elites after Day 2 and to the Top 10 following the Day 3 weigh-in.

The winner will collect $100,000 and 100 points in the Progressive Insurance Bassmaster Angler of the Year standings.

Mosley came close to winning an Elite at Pickwick last March, finishing second to veteran angler Bill Lowen. The Tennessee Valley Authority had a hard current running throughout Pickwick in that derby, which was critical to Lowen, who grew up fishing similar conditions on the Ohio River.

Mosley said current could be a factor on Pickwick this year too.

“It’s supposed to rain every day of this week before the tournament, so that’s a big deal, especially this time of year,” he said. “The more current there is, the better the fish will bite.”

There are some complicating factors, though. Anglers will start on the Tennessee side of Pickwick, which Mosley said is the “partying” side of the impoundment. He said having practice days over Memorial Day weekend and on the holiday itself could shake things up a bit.

“There’s going to be some god-awful boat traffic,” he said. “The good times happen on the partying end of Pickwick. There’ll be houseboats, party barges. It’s usually a complete circus over there on Memorial Day and the Fourth of July.”

Mosley said he hasn’t fished Pickwick since placing 88th in the Bassmaster Open there in late spring 2021, but he has enough knowledge of the place to have a good idea of what the Elites will find under the heat of a June sun.

“Most of the fish should already be out on the ledges, and that’s where everybody will fish in this one,” he said. “Guys like Justin Atkins should do well. Joseph Webster is a really good hammer on Pickwick.”

Mosley likes his chances too, but he said home-water advantage isn’t as potent when offshore fishing reigns, as he expects it will.

“Guys have electronics and can find anything,” he said. “The difference is going to be who finds the right quality of fish. Some schools will have 2-pounders and some schools will have 4-pounders. That’ll make all the difference.”

As for a winning weight?

“I think it’ll take 20 pounds a day, maybe more, to take it,” Mosley said.

This will be the sixth event on the nine-tournament Elite Series schedule.

After five tournaments, Idaho pro Brandon Palaniuk leads the Progressive Insurance Bassmaster Angler of the Year race with 442 points. He’s followed by John Cox of DeBary, Fla., with 422, David Mullins of Mt. Carmel, Tenn., with 401, Drew Benton of Blakely, Ga., with 381 and Brandon Lester of Fayetteville, Tenn., with 377.

Jay Przekurat of Stevens Point, Wis., leads the Falcon Rods Rookie of the Year race with 320 points. He is trailed by Webster of Hamilton, Ala., with 298, Jacob Foutz of Charleston, Tenn., with 273, Matty Wong of Honolulu, Hawaii, with 261 and Cody Huff of Ava, Mo., with 230.

Full coverage from all four days of the Bassmaster Elite at Pickwick Lake, Tennessee will be available on Bassmaster.com and the FOX Sports digital platforms. FS1 will also broadcast live with the tournament leaders on Saturday and Sunday, June 4-5 beginning at 7 a.m. CT.

The Whataburger Bassmaster Elite at Pickwick Lake is being hosted by Tour Hardin County.

Inaugural Bassmaster High School Combine Nets Over $2.6 Million In Scholarships; Registration Opens Soon For 2022

The 2022 Abu Garcia Bassmaster High School Combine will be held Sept. 16-18, giving high school anglers an opportunity to showcase their skills to college fishing coaches. 

May 26, 2022

Inaugural Bassmaster High School Combine Nets Over $2.6 Million In Scholarships; Registration Opens Soon For 2022

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BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — After a wildly successful debut year, the Abu Garcia Bassmaster High School Combine returns to Wheeler Lake in Decatur, Ala., Sept. 16-18 for a weekend combining skills challenges and recruiting visits in hopes of reeling in college fishing scholarship money. The first Combine generated more than $2.6 million in scholarship offers.

“These high school anglers represent some of the finest athletes in the country, and it took the same drive and commitment to get here as it does to excel in any sport,”
said Abu Garcia Vice President of Marketing Communications Marc Kemper.
“They truly represent the ethos of Abu Garcia — Fish to Win.”

Only schools offering bass fishing scholarships were invited to the inaugural High School Combine, and coaches from 19 colleges attended. The experience offered young anglers and college coaches a chance to leverage rare face time to find the best fit for students ready to further both their education and their fishing at the next level.

“The Combine has given me the opportunity to meet and recruit anglers that I would’ve never been able to evaluate otherwise,” said Campbellsville University coach Tony Miracle. “It also gives kids the opportunity to meet and talk to universities and coaches that they never would’ve had the chance to meet. It’s an unbelievable opportunity for both sides.

“I signed two anglers from last year’s Bassmaster High School Combine and am excited to get them on campus and start their journey. I’m also recruiting several high school juniors for next year. I absolutely will be back this year. I wouldn’t miss it!”

The Abu Garcia Bassmaster High School Combine will be a three-day event where anglers will perform multiple tasks to showcase their skills not only on the water but also display their knowledge of the sport as a whole. Each of the disciplines will operate on a point system and will be timed by an official judge. Each angler will accumulate points to determine an overall winner.

After the first day, colleges will have the opportunity to select anglers for a “second look” where they can further explore everything that angler has to offer and see if they would be the perfect fit for their fishing program.

Fifty-seven scholarship offers came out of the first-ever High School Combine, with many students signing with a university on-site. Overall winner Levi Thibodaux of Thibodaux, La., inked an offer to fish for the Louisiana State University-Shreveport Pilots and Coach Charles Thompson, while Justin Frey of Landisburg, Pa., took home the victory in Casting Accuracy as well as an offer to fish for Bethel University.

“I connected with two universities during the combine that both have fantastic programs at an elite level,” said Frey. “What separated them the most in my mind was that both coaches were awesome, caring individuals. I was ecstatic and very blessed to sign with an athletic scholarship from Bethel University thanks to Coach Garry Mason … it’s been a dream come true.”

Prior to the combine, Frey was not being recruited by Bethel University, which was the first college in America to offer bass fishing scholarships and has claimed 11 national titles.

“B.A.S.S. is constantly looking for ways to grow the High School and College platforms and give young anglers opportunities to excel not only in the sport, but also in the industry,” said Glenn Cale, B.A.S.S. Nation tournament manager — College, High School and Junior. “The inaugural Abu Garcia Bassmaster High School Combine was a great success, and we’re looking forward to growing this experience for both these high school anglers and the coaches who attend.”

Registration for the Abu Garcia Bassmaster High School Combine will open at 1 p.m. CT on June 7 at Bassmaster.com/high-school and remain open until 100 participants have registered. The $500 registration fee includes accommodations for two nights and all meals for the weekend.

For more information, visit Bassmaster.com/high-school.

Elite Angler Yelas Takes Medical Hardship 

May 25, 2022

Elite Angler Yelas Takes Medical Hardship 

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BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — After dealing with severe tendinitis in both of his arms for the majority of the year, Bassmaster Elite Series angler Jay Yelas has decided to take a medical hardship and will miss the remainder of the season.

The pain began during the second event of the year at the Harris Chain of Lakes when Yelas made an awkward hook set that caused extreme pain in his right arm. Over time, that same pain began to take over his left arm from relying heavily on it to carry the weight that his right arm could no longer take.

The former Bassmaster Classic champion dealt with the pain and battled through it until Semifinal Saturday of the Simms Bassmaster Elite at Lake Fork. Despite the fact that Yelas was sitting in 13th place heading into Day 3, the pain had become so unbearable that he had to sit out the remainder of the event.

After a sports medicine doctor examined Yelas, he came to the conclusion that the best thing to do is take the medical hardship and let the condition heal rather than further irritate the injury.

“It’s really been a bummer,” said Yelas. “I’ve been having one of my better seasons that I’ve had in a while. After Friday’s weigh-in, I was sitting around 30th in Progressive Insurance Bassmaster Angler of the Year points.

“I went and saw a sports medicine doctor on Monday morning, and she suggested that I just need to cool it. It’s really common sense — if something is harming your body, you need to stop doing that thing.”

While the Oregon pro looked into short-term solutions, it was deemed that the risk for further injury was much greater if he didn’t get things worked out now, as opposed to after the season.

As it stands now, Yelas plans on resting and rehabbing his arms in hopes of being back to full health in four to six months.

“It’s just a matter of stretching, strengthening and rehabbing it with physical therapy to get it back to where it needs to be,” he said. “I’ve been really fortunate to never have an injury like this over the course of my 35 years fishing professionally.”