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MLF Toyota Series to Kickoff Northern Division on Lake Champlain

 

PLATTSBURGH, N.Y. (July 7, 2021) – The Major League Fishing (MLF) Toyota Series Presented by A.R.E. Northern Division will kick off  the 2021 season with a tournament next week in Plattsburgh, New York, July 15-17, with the Toyota Series Presented by A.R.E. at Lake Champlain. Hosted by the City of Plattsburgh, the three-day tournament will feature the region’s best bass-fishing pros and co-anglers casting for a top prize of up to $65,000, plus an additional $35,000 bonus if the winner is a qualified Phoenix Boat owner.

“Champlain is fishing pretty good right now,” said Toyota Series angler Alec Morrison of Peru, New York. “It always tends to be a little tougher in July during the post spawn, but we are a little ahead this year and I think the tournament will be pretty good.”

Morrison said many of the fish are in the mid-range depths of 14 to 18 feet and waiting to transition out to deeper water, but warmer temperatures could potentially push more fish out a little further by the date of the tournament.

“I’ve fished many events on this body of water, and actually came in 2nd and 3rd place as a co-angler,” said Morrison. “This will be my first time to fish a tournament on Champlain as a boater, so I’m really excited about that and looking forward to it.

“I’m a little nervous considering it’s a home body of water but I’m going to practice as hard as I can and try to come up with something,” continued Morrison. “I expect to see a mix of everything being fished next week. July seems to be the month you’re bouncing around, hitting a lot of spots and using a wide array of techniques, whether power-fishing with swimbaits, jerkbaits and topwater baits or slowing down with the typical finesse stuff like drop-shot and Ned rigs. I’m sure all of those will be used frequently by everyone during the event.”

Morrison said he anticipates it will take 17 to 18 pounds per day to slide into the top 10 and will take around 60 pounds to win the three-day event.

Anglers will take off daily at 6 a.m. ET from the Plattsburgh City Marina located at 5 Dock St. in Plattsburgh. Weigh-ins will also be held at the marina and will begin at 2 p.m. Fans are welcome to attend the event or follow the action online through the “MLF Live” weigh-in broadcasts and daily coverage at MajorLeagueFishing.com.

In Toyota Series regular-season competition, payouts are based on the number of participants competing in the event, scaling up for every 20 boats over 160 and scaling down for every boat below 160. With a 160-boat field, pros fish for a top prize of $40,000, plus an extra $35,000 if Phoenix MLF BIG5 Bonus qualified. Co-anglers cast for the top prize of a new Phoenix 518 Pro bass boat with a 115-horsepower Mercury outboard (valued at $33,500). With a 260-boat field, pros fish for a top award of $65,000, plus an extra $35,000 if Phoenix MLF BIG5 Bonus qualified. Co-anglers cast for the top prize of a new Phoenix 518 Pro bass boat with a 115-horsepower outboard (valued at $33,500) plus $5,000 cash.

The 2021 Toyota Series presented by A.R.E. consists of six divisions – Central, Northern, Plains, Southern, Southwestern and Western – each holding three regular-season events, along with the International division. Anglers who fish all three qualifiers in any of the eight divisions and finish in the top 25 will qualify for the no-entry-fee Toyota Series presented by A.R.E. Championship for a shot at winning $235,000 cash, including a $35,000 Phoenix MLF BIG5 Bonus for qualified anglers. The winning co-angler at the championship earns a new Phoenix 518 Pro bass boat with a 115-horsepower Mercury outboard. The 2021 Toyota Series Championship presented by A.R.E. will be held Oct. 28-30 on Pickwick Lake in Counce, Tennessee, and is hosted by the Hardin County Convention and Visitors Bureau.

For complete details and updated information visit MajorLeagueFishing.com. For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow the Toyota Series presented by A.R.E. on the MLF BIG5’s social media outlets at FacebookTwitter,  Instagram, and  YouTube.

Pennsylvania’s Central High School Wins 2021 High School Fishing National Championship on Lake Hartwell

ANDERSON, S.C. (July 6, 2021) – Martinsburg, Pennsylvania’s Central High School duo of Gerald Brumbaugh and Hunter Klotz brought a three-bass limit to the scale weighing 9 pounds, 9 ounces to win the 2021 High School Fishing National Championship on Lake Hartwell in Anderson, South Carolina, last week. Central’s three-day total of nine bass totaling 28-13 gave them the win by a 1-pound, 14-ounce margin and earned the duo $10,000, berths as Strike King co-anglers into the lucrative Toyota Series Championship event, and several scholarships offers from colleges with fishing teams.

Brumbaugh and Klotz are childhood friends, having fished and played backyard basketball together for as long as they can remember. The duo overcame a host of talented anglers to claim high school fishing’s top crown. To do so, they leaned on consistency and the teachings of their captain, Brumbaugh’s father Gerald.

“It was a grind today,” said Klotz. “We learned that when it gets tough, you don’t always need to change things up. You just keep grinding and grinding and grinding, because there isn’t one perfect thing you need to do.”

“I think a lot of people went in and beat the bank today,” added Brumbaugh. “But we learned to keep with it.”

“I told the camera boat today that we would need a kicker fish to win,” said Klotz.

That kicker never came, but the grind paid off an hour before weigh-in, when the duo boated a solid, 2-pound keeper that enabled them to cull a 1-pounder. Though it wasn’t the lunker bucketmouth they were hoping for, the bass propelled them to a finish just over a pound above Hart and Fisher, who they knocked off the hot seat before claiming their victory.

“We were running cane piles all week,” explained Brumbaugh. “It’s no secret. But without Garmin LiveScope, we aren’t winning this week. We aren’t sponsored by them or anything, that’s just how it is.”

“I had to do a double-take at first,” added Klotz. “You would throw the bait out there and the fish would all fly up to it. You could see them. It looked like a volcano rising up, but they would all sit there and they wouldn’t bite. Sometimes, you just watch them on the graph, they swim right under your boat and you have to go somewhere else.”

The teammates say they used a bait they’d never thrown before this week to take home the title, a jointed swimbait called the Sebile Magic Swimmer. By burning the unusual herring-imitating swimbait just under the surface, they were able to coax bass out of cover and towards the surface for a bite.

“Sometimes,” Klotz said, “They would smack it and you would miss them. Other times, they would suck it down.”

The Central High School duo found the bait by chance at a local tackle store. After reading about recent tournaments online, they coerced a store owner into selling them some of a precious stash that was kept behind the counter in unmarked boxes. And though they say that every fish they weighed came from a Magic Swimmer, their pattern did vary slightly throughout the week.

Early on, bream-colored baits and a medium-speed retrieve prevailed. As weather moved in, they switched to shad-colored baits and began reeling as fast as their 7:1:1 reels would allow – all in an attempt to trigger the reaction bite. At each cane pile, they would watch fish on LiveScope, make several casts and run on to the next waypoint.

The team estimated that they covered more than 50 spots each day.

A total of 259 high school teams competed for a share of the more than $3 million in scholarships and prizes in the National Championship and the High School Fishing World Finals tournaments, held in conjunction with each on Lake Hartwell in Anderson, South Carolina. The event was hosted by the Anderson Convention and Visitors Bureau.

The top 10 finishers from the event were:

1st:      Central High School, Martinsburg, Penn. – Gerald Brumbaugh and Hunter Klotz, nine bass, 28-13
2nd:     Madison County High School, Danielsville, Ga. – Logan Fisher and Will Hart, nine bass, 26-15
3rd:     South Forsyth High School, Cumming, Ga. – William Ayscue and Jacob Rogers, nine bass, 25-10
4th:      Hewitt-Trussville High School, Trussville, Ala. – Andrew Jones and Carson Underwood, nine bass, 25-6
5th:      Clarks Hill Youth Fishing Team, Martinez, Ga. – Brayden Batchelor and Evan Gonsalves, nine bass, 24-8
6th:      Madison County High School, Danielsville, Ga. – Blake Hooper and Levi Seagraves, nine bass, 23-8
7th:      Lumpkin County High School, Dahlonega, Ga. – Jake Barrett and Cooper McDonald, nine bass, 21-15
8th:      Alhambra High School, Martinez, Calif. – Luke Beaty and Emmett Gargaro, nine bass, 21-9
9th:      NCA Fishing, Harrison, Ark. – Lane King and Coleman Phillips, nine bass, 21-8
10th:   Hartleys Hawgs – Nathan Fiant and Brett Hill, six bass, 17-10

Complete results from the event can be found at MajorLeagueFishing.com.

The 2021 High School Fishing National Championship on Lake Hartwell was a three-day event that saw the entire field of 259 teams compete for two days. The National Championship field was cut to the top 10 for day three and the winner was determined by heaviest three-day cumulative weight. The tournament featured the top anglers from the 2020 TBF High School Fishing State Championships and MLF U.S. Army High School Fishing Open Presented by Favorite Fishing events.

For complete details and updated information on High School Fishing, visit MajorLeagueFishing.com. For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow the U.S. Army High School Fishing Presented by Favorite Fishing on the MLF BIG5’s social media outlets at Facebook TwitterInstagram, and YouTube.

Major League Fishing’s Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit Set to Premiere on This Week on Sportsman Channel and Outdoor Channel

Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit Episodes to Air Every Wednesday and Sunday Through Mid-December

TULSA, Okla. (July 6, 2021) – The 26th season of the Major League Fishing (MLF) Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit Presented by Bad Boy Mowers is set to premiere with a two-hour episode Wednesday, July 7, at 10 a.m. ET on the Sportsman Channel and re-air on Sunday, July 11, at 7 a.m. ET on the Outdoor Channel.

The 2021 Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit Presented by Bad Boy Mowers features a roster of the world’s best bass-fishing professionals competing across six regular-season events, each with a top award of up to $135,000. The field also competes for valuable points to qualify for the 2021 Tackle Warehouse TITLE Presented by Mercury – the Pro Circuit Championship.

The first two-hour episode of the Pro Circuit will showcase the 13 Fishing Stop 1 at Lake Okeechobee event in Clewiston, Florida. Episodes will premiere Wednesdays at 10 a.m. ET on the Sportsman Channel and re-air that same week on Sundays at 7 a.m. ET on the Outdoor Channel. The schedule will culminate with six new episodes of the Tackle Warehouse TITLE, the Pro Circuit Championship event, airing from October through mid-December.

The complete air schedule for the 2021 Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit Presented by Bad Boy Mowers on the Sportsman Channel and Outdoor Channel is:

– July 7                   13 Fishing Stop 1 at Lake Okeechobee – Sportsman Channel
– July 11                 13 Fishing Stop 1 at Lake Okeechobee – Outdoor Channel
– July 14                 Covercraft Stop 2 at Lewis Smith Lake – Sportsman Channel
– July 18                 Covercraft Stop 2 at Lewis Smith Lake – Outdoor Channel
– July 21                 Googan Baits Stop 3 at Lake Murray Presented by Favorite Fishing – Sportsman Channel
– July 25                 Googan Baits Stop 3 at Lake Murray Presented by Favorite Fishing – Outdoor Channel
– Aug. 18                Grundens Stop 4 at Lake Eufaula Presented by A.R.E. – Sportsman Channel
– Aug. 22                Grundens Stop 4 at Lake Eufaula Presented by A.R.E. – Outdoor Channel
– Aug. 25                Federal Ammunition Stop 5 at Potomac River Presented by Lucas Oil – Sportsman Channel
– Aug. 29                Federal Ammunition Stop 5 at Potomac River Presented by Lucas Oil – Outdoor Channel
– Sept. 1                 Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit Stop 6 at St. Lawrence River Presented by Googan Baits– Sportsman Channel
– Sept. 5                 Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit Stop 6 at St. Lawrence River Presented by Googan Baits– Outdoor Channel
– Oct. 6                   Tackle Warehouse TITLE at Mississippi River Presented by Mercury Day 1 – Sportsman Channel
– Oct. 10                 Tackle Warehouse TITLE at Mississippi River Presented by Mercury Day 1 – Outdoor Channel
– Oct. 13                 Tackle Warehouse TITLE at Mississippi River Presented by Mercury Day 2 – Sportsman Channel
– Oct. 17                Tackle Warehouse TITLE at Mississippi River Presented by Mercury Day 2 – Outdoor Channel
– Oct. 20                 Tackle Warehouse TITLE at Mississippi River Presented by Mercury Day 3– Sportsman Channel
– Oct. 24                 Tackle Warehouse TITLE at Mississippi River Presented by Mercury Day 3 – Outdoor Channel
– Oct. 27                Tackle Warehouse TITLE at Mississippi River Presented by Mercury Day 4 – Sportsman Channel
– Oct. 31                 Tackle Warehouse TITLE at Mississippi River Presented by Mercury Day 4 – Outdoor Channel
– Nov. 3                  Tackle Warehouse TITLE at Mississippi River Presented by Mercury Day 5 – Sportsman Channel
– Nov. 7                  Tackle Warehouse TITLE at Mississippi River Presented by Mercury Day 5 – Outdoor Channel
– Nov. 10               Tackle Warehouse TITLE at Mississippi River Presented by Mercury Day 6 – Sportsman Channel
– Nov. 14               Tackle Warehouse TITLE at Mississippi River Presented by Mercury Day 6 – Outdoor Channel

The full television schedule can be found at MajorLeagueFishing.com.

For complete details and updated information visit MajorLeagueFishing.com. For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow MLF’s social media outlets at Facebook, TwitterInstagram, and YouTube.

July 2021 Smith Mountain Lake Fishing Report by Captain Dale Wilson

SMITH MOUNTAIN LAKE FISHING REPORT
June 2021
DALE WILSON’S
SML GUIDE SERVICE
PHONE NO: 540-297-5650 / 540-874-4950
www.captaindalewilson.us

Summer citation smallmouth bass. Caught & released by Captain Dale.

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This will be one of the most challenging months to fish at Smith Mountain Lake due to the hot weather and heavy boat traffic. Anglers should consider limiting their fishing to early mornings and at night.
Water temperature will be in the 80s this month.

Largemouth Bass
Fishing for largemouth bass will be good at night this month. Best lures will be large plastic worms, jigs, drop shots, crank baits, Carolina rigs and shaky heads. Points, brush piles, rock piles, ledges and deep docks will be the best areas. Best depths will be from the surface to 30 feet. Practice catch and release as bass do not live long in a boat’s live well once the water temperature gets warm. The shad will continue to come to the shoreline later at night. The best lures to use at night are crank baits, wake baits, large plastic baits and football head jigs.

Smallmouth Bass
Fishing will be fair. The best areas will be humps, ledges and deep rocky areas. Best lures will be tubes, Ned rigs, hair jigs and crank baits, and the best areas will be in the mid- to the lower sections of the lake. Cloudy days and early morning are the best times. Look for areas with rocks, humps and ledges next to deep water.

Striped bass
Striper fishing has been slow. Fishing should improve this month. Stripers will be caught in the mid-sections of the lake and the mid- to lower sections toward the dam and in the large creeks. The best lures will be swim baits, jigging spoons and Zoom flukes fished on ½- to ¾-ounce lead heads. The best times to fish are cloudy days and early mornings. The best depths will be from 25 to 80 feet. Live bait fished on down lines and planer boards will work, too. They will constantly be on the move. Try to find the largest concentration of baitfish to locate the striped bass. Start looking for striper to be schooled up in deeper water this month.

Crappie
Fishing for crappie will be poor. The best depths will be 10 to 20 feet. Crappie may be found around deep docks, brush piles and fallen tree tops. Docks with brush piles are usually good areas to hold them. Small live minnows and 1½- to 2-inch tubes or shad-shaped plastic lures fished on 1/16- to 1/8-ounce lead heads will work best to catch crappie this month. The best areas are the main creeks and the upper section of both rivers.

Tips of the month
Nighttime is almost always the best time to fish in July. Always wear a life jacket and never fish alone at night. Try to find the areas with the largest concentration of baitfish. Make sure running lights are on after dark. Reports about local fishing are available on The Bass Cast Radio Show. Be courteous, obey all the boating laws and take a kid fishing.

July 2021 Kerr Lake Fishing Report by Dennie Gilbert

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Dennie Gilbert
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Largemouth Bass update:
Fishing will start to get tough beginning in July. The blue back herring will start to move over deeper water taking the bass with them. The herring are a pelagic bait fish which means they’re constantly roaming. This makes a top water bite better with the sun out. Some bass will move to deep brush, stumps or rock piles On occasion you can catch them on deep cranks, worm, jigs and some finesse baits, don’t forget the Brim will still be spawning. Good luck and good fishing!! Dennie

July 2021 Albermarle and Pamlico Sound Fishing Report by Capt. Scooter Lilley

Capt. Scooter Lilley
Albermarle and Pamlico sound
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Largemouth Bass update:
The largemouth are still chewing! The Roanoke has been fishing good, as most of all the rivers and creeks off the Albermarle. The bite has been good on top water baits, buzzbait, poppers and frogs. Later in the day worms and creature baits fished around trees and hard cover have also been very productive. If your interested in a trip to experience the Bass fishing our area has to offer give me a call 252-799-9536. Speckled trout and Red drum on the Pamlico Sound another great adventure for the salt water fishermen! The trout have been biting extremely well, with several big fish caught every day. Zman plastics and mirror lures have been doing the job. The red drum have been eating top waters under certain conditions and a gold bladed Spinnerbait. I expect the bite to continue steady throughout the month of July and August. Come on down and give it try!

KAYAK ANGLERS OUTMUSCLE WIND AND WAVES ON DICEY LAKE CHAMPLAIN

 

KAYAK ANGLERS OUTMUSCLE WIND AND WAVES ON DICEY LAKE CHAMPLAIN

Competitors dig in against Mother Nature to post solid scores of chunky bass in Hobie B.O.S. Anchored by Power-Pole® Northeast Event..

OCEANSIDE, Calif. (July 1, 2021) – There was never any doubt that an elite fleet of kayak anglers would pull their weight at the Hobie Bass Open Series (B.O.S.) Anchored By Power-Pole® Lake Champlain event last weekend. After all, the big lake is a bassin’ haven sporting 587 miles of shoreline and 435 sq. miles of surface water, a solid population of largemouth bass, and one of the top smallmouth fisheries in the entire USA. As the first and only Northeast stop on the B.O.S. trail this year, anglers couldn’t wait to go on the attack.

But then the wind started to blow, gusting between 15 and 20 knots at times and pushing up waves that crested over four feet high in some open water areas. “It certainly did get a little dicey out there,” chuckled Travis Von Neumann, 29, of Columbus, OH, “but we all went out and did what we needed to do. That’s kayak bass fishing. Some days, you’ve got to battle the elements as much as the fish, so you just dig in and get the job done.”

That’s exactly what most of the 73 anglers did, submitting 620 fish in the two-day, catch, photograph and release (CPR) event while racking up 13 90-inch limits on day one and eight more on day two.

“These guys and gals just did an amazing job out there,” said tournament director A.J. McWhorter. “They battled Mother Nature and came out on top recording a mix of quality largemouths and smallmouths in tough conditions. But that’s what we’ve come to expect from competitors in the Hobie Bass Open Series (B.O.S.) Anchored By Power-Pole®. The competition is tough but fun, the anglers are sharp and supportive, and the results usually end up speaking for themselves.”

It was Von Neumann, with the words “Smallies Rule” stenciled on his forearm, who led the charge. Fishing mostly in rough, open water, he powered his way to the win with 97.25 inches of bronzebacks on day one and 98.75 inches on day two, for a two-day limit of 196 inches worth $4,350. Hobie B.O.S. regular, and reigning FarWide Angler of The Year (A.O.Y.), Drew Gregory, of Kent, Ohio, took the $2,450 second slot check with 93.75 inches each day for a 187.5-inch total. Finishing third was Katherine Field of Ivins, UT, with her first tournament top-three finish. Katherine recorded 91.75 inches on day one and 94 inches on day two for 185.75 total inches and a $1,750 check.

Von Neumann also took home the Bassin’ Big Bass $400 prize for a 21.25-inch tank of a smallmouth caught on day two while Alan Bender of Sewell, NJ. jumped from 58th place on day one to 43rd on day two to claim the Dakota Lithium Power Move award and take home a Dakota Power Box with a 10-amp lithium battery. Each of the first three finishers also punched their tickets to the 50-angler Hobie Tournament of Champions (T.O.C.) at Lake Eufaula, Alabama, November 12 – 14.

To be sure, Von Neumann didn’t take the easy path to victory. Working a surface pattern in shallow but wide-open water, he was fishing from a kayak designed for river action. With no foot pedals or electronics, he battled four-foot waves, flipping once each day, to persevere. “I was pretty lucky, overall,” he admitted. “I didn’t lose any gear when I flipped, and I only broke one rod. I had caught a couple nice bass early the first day using a Molix Nano Jig in green pumpkin, but then I spotted seagulls diving further off the beach. With no fish-finder, I keyed on the birds and realized that big smallies were blowing up on baitfish in the swells between the waves. At that point I switched to a Berkley Bucktoothed Choppo Beaver in brown and the move really paid off. I stayed on those fish, working the nastiest, most chaotic water I could find, almost to the end of the second day before the wind began to die and the bite finally faded.”

Von Neumann, who entered the tournament without sponsorship, said the tourney was the roughest water in which he had fished from a kayak. “Still, I had a lot of confidence coming into this event since I had fished here during a college competition and had an area I liked. I was born in Plattsburgh, NY, so this also felt a little like a homecoming for me. Despite the wind I was in a good place mentally all tournament long.”

Second place finisher, Drew Gregory, was as consistent as can be – especially given the conditions and this being his first visit to Lake Champlain. Tallying 93.75 inches each day, he relied heavily on his years of bass fishing experience across the nation to figure out and stitch together several patterns that allowed him to get the most out of small areas holding limited numbers of fish.

“I enjoy river bassing,” says Gregory, “so I looked for that first but my options were limited because the tourney boundaries were restricted to the New York side of the lake and most of the major rivers drop in from the Vermont side. Still, poking around on the small river stretches I could find, I noticed some fresh beds and managed to spot a couple of fish holding on scattered cover. I fished these areas like they were buffets in the sense that I knew I had to manage my fish. I kind of sampled the bass on Day 1, grabbing a few bites here and a few more there, and then went back to fill my plate on Day 2 leaving nothing on the table. I picked an 18-inch smallie off a bed, saw some bait getting busted and pulled two more good ones on a Whopper Plopper, and had an 18-incher spit my popper on a jump only to have it immediately swallowed by another good fish the second the lure hit the water. I guess you could say I got a few good breaks, but I really think it was the experience that put me in the right spots with the right offerings this time around.”

Gregory was also pleased with the supportive Ticonderoga area community and the great family atmosphere in the Lake Champlain area. “This is the first tournament I’ve been able to bring my family to, and we really enjoyed being together here. The fishery is terrific, the tournament is well run, and the area is perfect for family fun. We really had a wonderful time.”

As for third-place finisher, Katherine Field, a top 10 finish – and coming in ahead of undisputed bassing all-pro Mike Iaconelli (5th place) – were the primary goals.

“I didn’t really have a spot as much as two patterns,” explained Field. “I was targeting big largemouths with plastic worms in deep, offshore weed beds and looking for smallmouths around wind-blown bridge abutments with fast currents. The fishing was tough but really good, and I had my two best days of tournament bass fishing ever. The smallies in this lake are giant, chunky, trophy-class fish. I would have loved to have actually weighed my limits in addition to having measured them. I loved the competition here, the support from other anglers and how welcome the Ticonderoga area communities made us feel. What a fantastic fishery, and what a great place.”

Field, a Hobie Team member, noted that her PA14 360 played a big part in her success over the weekend. “That boat let me hold my position around the bridge abutments when the wind was really whipping. I was casting in rollers, standing up and working big bronzebacks away from zebra mussels around the bridges, and my Hobie kept me stable, protected and right on top of where I needed to be. It’s just an amazing boat. I’ve had back-to-back Hobie B.O.S. top-20 finishes but this is the first check I’ve earned on a national tourney trail – and the first piece of hardware I’ve taken home from competition. I couldn’t be any happier.”

And that’s exactly the point of the Hobie Bass Open Series, reminds McWhorter. It never hurts to be a pro, but everyone has a fair shot as long as they enter. “You just never know who’s going to show up in the top ten at these events,” he says. “You don’t necessarily need to have a fish-finder, the ultimate kayak, years of experience or even time to pre-fish. It’s all good.”

Indeed, you can even take a dunking – or two – and still come out on top. Just ask Travis Von Neumann. We’re sure he’d agree.

Next up on the Hobie trail is the Susquehanna River in Harrisburg, PA, July 31 – August 1. This location offers super smallmouth action in a mostly shallow-water environment. Set the hook here and you’re in for plenty of fun.

Bassmaster Elite Series Swings North For Crucial Event At New York’s Lake Champlain

Plattsburgh, N.Y., will host the 2021 Guaranteed Rate Bassmaster Elite at Lake Champlain July 8-11. 

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

July 1, 2021

Bassmaster Elite Series Swings North For Crucial Event At New York’s Lake Champlain

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PLATTSBURGH, N.Y. — Since the Bassmaster Elite Series season began back in February, Seth Feider has been tightening his stranglehold on the all-important Angler of the Year standings.

Now the season is heading down its homestretch, and Feider will have a chance to etch his name into pro fishing history as the schedule swings North for the Guaranteed Rate Bassmaster Elite at Lake Champlain.

Competition days will be July 8-11, with daily takeoffs from Plattsburgh City Marina at 7 a.m. ET and weigh-ins back at the marina each day at 3 p.m.

It’s a lake — and a region of the country — the Minnesota pro knows well.

“I understand there have probably been a lot of people thinking I would tank while the schedule was still down South — I was expecting that myself,” said Feider, who currently holds a 48-point AOY lead over Oklahoma pro Jason Christie. “Looking at that schedule, seeing the St. Johns River and the Sabine River, I thought those would be the two that sank me. But they ended up being two of my best tournaments.

“The position I’m in with AOY, I’m probably never going to see again. So, I don’t want to have good tournaments all year and mess up one of the ones I’ve been looking forward to the most.”

During B.A.S.S.’s most recent visit to Champlain — in August of 2020 — Feider finished second by targeting a mixture of largemouth and smallmouth the first three days. He was forced to switch solely to smallmouth on the final day when his largemouth bite dried up, but he still caught 19 pounds, 14 ounces and finished a little more than a pound back of winner Brandon Palaniuk.

Feider says relying on the knowledge he acquired during last year’s event won’t be an option.

“The places I caught them last year, I’m not even gonna practice those places,” he said. “Because I had such a good finish, all of those places aren’t secret anymore. They got hammered, and they can’t survive that.

“You may as well just erase those places from your brain.”

One thing he does expect to resemble last year is his strategy for targeting mixed bags of smallmouth and largemouth.

“My game plan every time I’ve been there has been to catch 15, 16, 17, 18 pounds of smallies and then go catch two big bucketheads to fill out a big bag,” he said. “I’ll spend most of my practice looking for largemouth just because I think it’s harder to find the big ones.

“Most of the places that have smallmouth have 3- to 3 1/2-pounders. But with the largemouth, it seems like there’s a million 2- to 2 1/2-pounders and just a couple of places that have those 4-plus-pound fish.”

He said the one exception to the “mixed bag” scenario could be if the Ticonderoga region of Lake Champlain is still on fire. It’s a portion of the lake that is known for producing primarily largemouth, but it’s sometimes only good during the early part of the summer.

“I think they spawn earlier down there and then move offshore onto some really obvious stuff, and they get beat up,” he said. “The last two times we’ve been to Champlain it was August and late July, and it really wasn’t happening down there.

“If it happens to still be on fire when we get there, you could catch all largemouth and win it. You could see somebody catch 22 or 23 pounds of largemouth a day, at least for the first two or three days.”

Among the techniques he expects to play well for the week are topwater for both species (walking baits for smallmouth and frogs for largemouth), flipping soft plastics and jigs for largemouth, hair jigs and drop shots for smallmouth and maybe even Carolina-rigged plastics for both species.

“We’re hitting Champlain at a good time — and I really don’t think there’s a bad time to hit it,” Feider said. “I’m assuming most stuff is going to be done spawning. If there are a few left, they’ll be smallmouth.

“But it’ll be a typical Champlain tournament where you can catch them any way you want.”

An Elite Series field that began the year with 101 anglers is now down to 95 after three pros dropped out earlier in the season and three more — Rick Morris, Brett Preuett and Clent Davis — exited due to various issues since the last regular-season event on Lake Guntersville in May.

The full field will fish Days 1 and 2 with the Top 45 advancing to the semifinal round on Saturday. Only the Top 10 will advance to Championship Sunday with a chance to win the $100,000 first-place prize and the coveted blue trophy awarded to each Elite Series champion.

Live coverage for all four days of the event can be streamed on Bassmaster.com and the FOX Sports digital platforms. FS1 will also broadcast live with the tournament leaders beginning at 8 a.m. ET on Saturday and Sunday.

The Guaranteed Rate Bassmaster Elite at Lake Champlain is being hosted by the City of Plattsburgh and Adirondack Coast Visitors Bureau.

Jacob Wheeler Wins Major League Fishing Bass Pro Tour General Tire Stage Five at St. Lawrence River Presented by Berkle

Harrison, Tennessee Pro Smashes Multiple Bass Pro Tour Weight Records to Earn Record-Setting Fourth Career Bass Pro Tour Victory and $100,000 Top Prize

MASSENA, N.Y. (June 30, 2021) – After breaking nearly every major weight record on the Bass Pro Tour this week, Academy Sports + Outdoors pro Jacob Wheeler of Harrison, Tennessee, added another accolade to his resume Wednesday. Wheeler caught 35 scorable bass weighing 129 pounds even to earn his fourth career Bass Pro Tour victory – the most all-time – and the top prize of $100,000 at the Major League Fishing (MLF) Bass Pro Tour General Tire Stage Five at the St. Lawrence River Presented by Berkley in Massena, New York.

Link to Photo of Stage Five Winner Jacob Wheeler
Link to Photo Gallery of Wheeler’s Championship Day

Link to Video of Live Stream from Day 6, Championship Round

Among the Bass Pro Tour records that Wheeler set this week was the single-day heaviest weight – 165 pounds, 1 ounce, that he weighed on Day 1 – the heaviest two-day qualifying round weight – 222 pounds, 1 ounce – and the most weight ever weighed in a Championship Round – 129 pounds even – that he set Wednesday. With his latest victory, the 30-year-old pro pushed his career earnings to more than $2.6 million.

“I was fortunate to have a solid practice for this event. I didn’t know what I could catch, and I didn’t know what it would take to win, because it was so crazy out here on the St. Lawrence River,” Wheeler said. “To officially be the champion… I don’t think I’ve ever won on smallmouth on a natural river system, so this feels unbelievable.”

While the final tally on SCORETRACKER® may seem as though it was an easy win for Wheeler, the Tennessee pro found himself in seventh place after a slow start Period 1 with only five smallmouth for 21-8. As he prepared to start his afternoon, Wheeler made the decision to run to an area he found while practicing during his final Qualifying Round.

Thanks to a more than 30-pound cushion in that round, Wheeler was able to scout new areas and find fish for the Championship Round. They were also fish that he knew he could count on because of the area they were located.

“I was looking for fish in the places that had the most wind, because I knew that those areas wouldn’t be fished as much,” Wheeler explained. “I knew that if I was going to have two days off the water that I was going to need to find fish that would be there when I got back in the Championship Round, so I found a spot that was getting beat on by the wind out of the southwest a ton. I knew other guys wouldn’t want to mess with that area because if it was windy like it was, the waves wouldn’t be fun to deal with for flogging and sight fishing.

“I’ve been in a handful of situations like this one right here, and there is nothing like a plan coming together perfectly,” Wheeler went on to say. “I cherish every single win, every single top-10. It’s something that you’re never guaranteed so you have to make sure to take a step back and appreciate these moments. This one right here was special. I cannot wait to celebrate with my wife and my little one.”

Toro pro Jeff Sprague of Point, Texas, matched his career-best finish on the Bass Pro Tour with his second-place showing at the event.

“Finished in second, so close once again,” Sprague said in his post-game interview. “One of these days we’re going to figure out how to win one of these events. But I’m still super excited about my finish this week. We fished extremely hard today, I even ran around this morning and fished new water and tried to make something happen. It was a crazy, amazing week here in New York and I’m thrilled to bank another top-10 finish.”

The top 10 pros at the Bass Pro Tour General Tire Stage Five at the St. Lawrence River finished:

1st:        Jacob Wheeler, Harrison, Tenn., 35 bass, 129-0, $100,000
2nd:       Jeff Sprague, Point, Texas, 26 bass, 100-6, $45,000
3rd:       Skeet Reese, Auburn, Calif., 31 bass, 91-1, $38,000
4th:       Adrian Avena, Vineland, N.J., 28 bass, 86-15, $32,000
5th:       Brent Ehrler, Redlands, Calif., 27 bass, 86-15, $30,000
6th:       Justin Lucas, Guntersville, Ala., 25 bass, 84-1, $26,000
7th:       Alton Jones Jr., Waco, Texas, 24 bass, 83-2, $23,000
8th:       Gerald Spohrer, Gonzales, La., 17 bass, 73-14, $21,000
9th:       Bradley Roy, Lancaster, Ky., 13 bass, 46-2, $19,000
10th:     John Cox, DeBary, Fla., 12 bass, 38-3, $16,000

A complete list of results can be found at MajorLeagueFishing.com.

Overall, there were 238 bass weighing 819 pounds, 11 ounces caught by the final 10 pros on Wednesday.

Wheeler also won Wednesday’s $1,000 Berkley Big Bass Award, weighing a 6-pound, 6-ounce smallmouth on a drop-shot rig in Period 1 to earn the prize. Lucas earned the $3,000 Berkley Big Bass award for the largest bass of the event with his 6-pound, 13-ounce smallmouth that he weighed on Day 1 of competition.

Pro Ott DeFoe of Blaine, Tennessee, finished the event in 12th place and did not qualify for Wednesday’s Championship Round, but his finish was strong enough to maintain his lead in the MLF Bass Pro Tour Angler of the Year standings. With two events remaining in the season, DeFoe currently sits with 352 points and owns a 10-point lead over the second-place pro, California’s Brent Ehrler (342). Wheeler remains in third with 338, followed by Florida’s Bobby Lane in fourth place with 311 and Alabama’s Justin Lucas in fifth place with 309. Full AOY standings for the entire Bass Pro Tour field can be found at MajorLeagueFishing.com.

The General Tire Stage Five at the St. Lawrence River Presented by Berkley featured anglers competing with a 2-pound minimum weight requirement, meaning each bass caught must weigh at least 2 pounds for it to be deemed scorable. Minimum weights are determined individually for each competition waters that the Bass Pro Tour visits, based on the productivity, bass population and anticipated average size of fish in each fishery.

The MLF Bass Pro Tour General Tire Stage Five at the St. Lawrence River Presented by Berkley was hosted by the Town of Massena and Fish Massena. The six-day tournament featured 80 of the top professional anglers from around the world competing for a purse of $805,000, including a top cash prize of $100,000 to the winner.

Television coverage of the General Tire Stage Five Presented by Berkley at the St. Lawrence River will be showcased across two two-hour episodes, premiering at 7 a.m. ET, Oct. 23 on the Discovery Channel. New MLF episodes premiere each Saturday morning on the Discovery Channel, with additional re-airings on the Outdoor Channel and the Sportsman Channel. Each two-hour long reality-based episode goes in-depth to break down each day of competition.

The Bass Pro Tour features a field of 76 of the top professional anglers in the world – joined at each event by 4 pros that qualify from the Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit – competing across seven regular-season tournaments around the country, competing for millions of dollars and valuable points to qualify for the annual Heavy Hitters all-star event and the REDCREST 2022 championship. The next event for Bass Pro Tour anglers will be the Bass Pro Tour Stage Six at Lake Champlain, Aug. 5-10 in Plattsburgh, New York.

For complete details and updated information on the Bass Pro Tour, visit MajorLeagueFishing.com. For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow MLF’s social media outlets at Facebook, TwitterInstagram, and YouTube.

Jacob & Jeff Norris Wins CATT Lake Wateree, SC June 26, 2021

Next and Last Wateree Summer CATT is July 10 at Clearwater Cove Marina!

Jacob & Jeff Norris earned 1st place with 5 bass weighing 17.02 lbs! They took home $820.00!

2nd went to Tim & Dalton Haven with 16.24 lbs!

3rd David Ethridge & Butch Williams with 15.10 lbs!

Team BF Weight Winnings Points
Jeff Norris & Jacob Norris 4.47 17.02 $820.00 110
Dalton Haven & Tim Haven 4.07 16.24 $200.00 109
Butch Williams & David Ethridge 4.99 15.10 $185.00 108
Chad Rabon & Walt Almond 3.07 13.13 107
Mike King 2.94 12.99 106
Mark Healon & Ella Healon 2.34 11.28 105
Shane Cantley & Chris Joyner 3.11 10.93 104
Chad Gainey & Mack Kitchens 2.81 10.90 103
Jess Williams & Claire Williams 2.03 8.25 102
Robert Weaver & Patty Weaver 2.43 7.29 101
Jason Ries & Roger McKee 1.56 7.23 100
Dean Heasley & Tyler Heasley 0.00 1.56 99
Steve Phillips 0.00 0.00 89
Josh McGregor – Jackson McGregor 0.00 0.00 89
Will Allen & Roy Lowe 0.00 0.00 89
Total Entrys $1,200.00
BONUS $ $325.00
Total Paid At Ramp $1,205.00
2021 Wateree Summer Final Fund $240.00
2021 CATT Championship/Phantom Fund $0.00
2021 Wateree Summer Fund Total $1,395.00
2021 CATT Championship/Phantom Fund Total $0.00