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Chuck Murray & Randy Groves Win CATT Lake Gaston, NC Sept 6, 2020

Next up is the Gaston Final Oct 17 & 18th!

Chuck Murray & Randy Groves win the Gaston Points and will earn free entry to all 2021 Gaston Qualifiers!

Allan Michell & Dennis Bradley Claim 1st Place with 14.71 lbs!

Paul & Melissa Watson weigh in a 5 pounder!

18 Teams BF Weight Winnings Points
Allan Mitchell – Dennis Bradley 6.90 14.71 $994.00 110
Ivan & Janet Morris 0.00 12.78 $825.00 109
Scott Griffin- Jay Allen 0.00 11.66 $395.00 108
Michael Garner – John Edwards 0.00 11.30 $120.00 107
Shane Doughtie – Evan White 0.00 10.58 106
Michael Hobbs – Jarrett Yarboro 0.00 10.37 105
Jerry Cullum – Ricky Todd 0.00 9.60 104
Wesley Bennet – Chris Bishop 0.00 9.54 103
Chuck Murray – Randy Groves 0.00 8.83 102
Greg Kropp – Dave Fowler 0.00 8.54 101
Adam & Gene Richardson 0.00 8.03 100
Mikey Anderson & Cody Backus 0.00 7.33 99
Paul Watson & Melissa 5.22 5.22 $51.00 98
Bobby Peadin – TJ Myrick 0.00 0.00 97
Jim Sampson- Richard Kramer 0.00 0.00 97
Eric Schell – Todd Smith 0.00 0.00 97
Kent Pearson – Kenny Reynolds 0.00 0.00 97
Tyler Dix – 0.00 0.00 97
Total Entrys $2,040.00
BONUS $ $740.00
Total Paid At Ramp $2,395.00
Gaston 2020 Final Fund $320.00
2020 CATT Championship Fund $50.00
2020 Gaston Final Fund Total $975.00
2020 CATT Championships Fund Total $4,670.00

Alabama Rookie Grabs Lead At Bassmaster Elite Series Event On Lake Guntersville

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Kyle Welcher, of Opelika, Ala., is leading after Day 1 of the 2020 NOCO Bassmaster Elite at Lake Guntersville with 19 pounds, 5 ounces. 

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

September 30, 2020

Alabama Rookie Grabs Lead At Bassmaster Elite Series Event On Lake Guntersville

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SCOTTSBORO, Ala. — Kyle Welcher is technically an “in-state angler” during this week’s NOCO Bassmaster Elite at Lake Guntersville.

But since the rookie from Opelika, Ala., lives four hours away from the famed Tennessee River fishery, he had very little experience on Lake Guntersville before the official practice period began Sunday — and he thinks that might have been a good thing.

With no preconceived notions, Welcher took a fresh approach to the 69,000-acre lake and put together a five-bass limit that weighed 19 pounds, 5 ounces to take the opening-round lead.

“I’ve fished here almost none, and the times I had been here I was fishing from the back of the boat,” Welcher said. “It’s probably good I’m not from here, because if I had all the history of catching 25 pounds a day on roadbeds down south, I would have probably been doing that.”

Welcher’s experience lies mostly on Chattahoochee River fisheries like West Point Lake, Lake Eufaula and Bartlett’s Ferry. But for what he did Wednesday, he said a river is river, no matter the location.

He didn’t give specific details of the pattern he’s fishing. But he said it’s basically the same one that worked for him earlier this year on Florida’s St. Johns River — and one that will work most places across the country when conditions are right.

“I’m really just running a certain unique deal that the river does,” he said. “So, every time I see it on the map, I’ll just stop and fish whatever cover is there — whether it’s a dock or grass or whatever.”

The type of cover that’s present is helping him decide which bait to use.

“Of the five I weighed in, I caught them on three different baits,” he said. “I’ve got probably 11 or 12 rods on the deck, and I threw every single one of them today. If I need to skip under something, I’ll pick up a jig. If I need to flip into something, I’ll punch.

“It really is not about baits or the cover. It’s about what the current is doing, or at least it is for me.”

Welcher’s bag was anchored by one of Guntersville’s trademark big largemouth that weighed almost 7 pounds. He said he can’t count on catching a bass like that every day, but he has confidence in the pattern he’s running.

“This worked for me in practice, but that’s about all I had working,” he said. “This is something I feel is a pretty high-percentage technique.”

Welcher’s catch gave him a slim lead over Texas pro Randy Sullivan who placed second with 18-8.

Unlike Welcher, who seemed to have a good plan dialed in from the start of practice, Sullivan said he didn’t figure anything out until Tuesday afternoon. But he milked his one pattern for all it was worth Wednesday and was actually able to spend some time looking around during the latter part of the day after catching a good limit early.

“I was panicking on the last day of practice because I didn’t know exactly what I needed to do,” Sullivan said. “But I figured out something a little bit special, and it worked today.”

Sullivan said the cooler weather that moved into the region Monday night — with lows in the high 40s — worked in his favor. With that weather expected to endure, he said he could be in a good position for the remainder of the week.

“I think the cooler weather is the ticket to everything I’m doing,” he said. “I think my stuff is just gonna reload and get better. I laid off of them pretty early today and actually found some more areas that I think could be really good.”

Missouri pro Chad Morgenthaler placed third with 17-10, and he wasn’t the least bit shy about discussing the type of cover he’s throwing.

“Sunshine, bass and grass make Chad a happy boy,” he said, laughing.

The type of grass and what makes each patch good was a little more complicated, however.

“It’s a whole mix, and that’s the key,” he said. “There’s everything here right now. You’ve got a lot of hydrilla, coontail, eelgrass and some other stuff that I don’t even know what the heck it is.

“About the time I think they’re only in one or a mix of two, they throw me a curveball. But it’s all good.”

On a day when keepers were hard to come by for much of the field, Morgenthaler said he caught probably 15 bass and lost three or four more. He believed the bright sunshine was key.

“If it gets cloudy on me, I might be in trouble,” he said. “But for right now, I’m fishing like I would in Florida and feeling right at home.”

Several big bass were brought to the scales, but Texas pro Chris Zaldain took the lead in the race for Phoenix Boats Big Bass of the week with an 8-6 largemouth.

The tournament resumes Thursday with takeoff at 6:30 a.m. CT from Goose Pond Colony Resort Marina and weigh-in back at Goose Pond at 2:30 p.m. After Thursday’s round, only the Top 40 remaining anglers will advance to Friday’s semifinals.

Live coverage of the event will be available starting at 7 a.m. on Bassmaster LIVE at Bassmaster.com and ESPN3.

2020 2020 Bassmaster Elite at Lake Guntersville 9/30-10/3
Lake Guntersville, Scottsboro  AL.
(PROFESSIONAL) Standings Day 1

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

1.  Kyle Welcher           Opelika, AL              5  19-05  100
Day 1: 5   19-05
2.  Randy Sullivan         Breckenridge, TX         5  18-08   99
Day 1: 5   18-08
3.  Chad Morgenthaler      Reeds Spring, MO         5  17-10   98
Day 1: 5   17-10
4.  John Cox               Debary, FL               4  17-03   97
Day 1: 4   17-03
5.  David Mullins          Mt Carmel, TN            5  17-01   96
Day 1: 5   17-01
6.  Brandon Cobb           Greenwood, SC            5  17-00   95
Day 1: 5   17-00
7.  Austin Felix           Eden Prairie, MN         5  16-06   94
Day 1: 5   16-06
8.  Scott Canterbury       Odenville, AL            5  16-00   93
Day 1: 5   16-00
8.  Seth Feider            New Market, MN           5  16-00   93
Day 1: 5   16-00
10. Garrett Paquette       Canton, MI               5  15-13   91
Day 1: 5   15-13
11. Luke Palmer            Coalgate, OK             5  15-11   90
Day 1: 5   15-11
12. Bob Downey             Hudson, WI               5  15-04   89
Day 1: 5   15-04
13. Brandon Card           Salisbury, NC            5  14-15   88
Day 1: 5   14-15
14. Hank Cherry Jr         Lincolnton, NC           5  14-12   87
Day 1: 5   14-12
15. Chris Zaldain          Fort Worth, TX           4  14-10   86   $1,000.00
Day 1: 4   14-10
16. Chris Groh             Spring Grove, IL         5  14-09   85
Day 1: 5   14-09
16. Kyle Monti             Okeechobee, FL           5  14-09   85
Day 1: 5   14-09
18. Carl Jocumsen          Queensland TN AUSTRALIA  5  14-06   83
Day 1: 5   14-06
18. Patrick Walters        Summerville, SC          5  14-06   83
Day 1: 5   14-06
20. Cory Johnston          Cavan CANADA             5  14-05   81
Day 1: 5   14-05
21. Wes Logan              Springville, AL          5  14-04   80
Day 1: 5   14-04
22. Frank Talley           Temple, TX               5  14-03   79
Day 1: 5   14-03
23. Stetson Blaylock       Benton, AR               5  14-00   78
Day 1: 5   14-00
23. Drew Cook              Cairo, GA                5  14-00   78
Day 1: 5   14-00
25. Jeff Gustafson         Keewatin Ontario CANADA  5  13-15   76
Day 1: 5   13-15
25. Brock Mosley           Collinsville, MS         5  13-15   76
Day 1: 5   13-15
27. Skylar Hamilton        Dandridge, TN            5  13-09   74
Day 1: 5   13-09
28. Hunter Shryock         Newcomerstown, OH        5  12-15   73
Day 1: 5   12-15
29. Destin DeMarion        Grove City, PA           5  12-14   72
Day 1: 5   12-14
29. Mike Huff              Corbin, KY               5  12-14   72
Day 1: 5   12-14
31. Todd Auten             Lake Wylie, SC           5  12-11   70
Day 1: 5   12-11
31. Lee Livesay            Longview, TX             5  12-11   70
Day 1: 5   12-11
33. Cody Hollen            Beaverton, OR            3  12-09   68
Day 1: 3   12-09
34. Jay Yelas              Lincoln City, OR         5  12-07   67
Day 1: 5   12-07
35. Clent Davis            Montevallo, AL           5  12-06   66
Day 1: 5   12-06
36. Brian Snowden          Reeds Spring, MO         5  12-05   65
Day 1: 5   12-05
37. Chris Johnston         Peterborough Ontario CA  5  12-04   64
Day 1: 5   12-04
38. Bill Weidler           Helena, AL               5  11-15   63
Day 1: 5   11-15
39. Micah Frazier          Newnan, GA               5  11-09   62
Day 1: 5   11-09
40. Ed Loughran III        Richmond, VA             3  11-09   61
Day 1: 3   11-09
41. Tyler Rivet            Raceland, LA             5  11-07   60
Day 1: 5   11-07
42. Clark Wendlandt        Leander, TX              5  11-06   59
Day 1: 5   11-06
43. Steve Kennedy          Auburn, AL               3  11-05   58
Day 1: 3   11-05
44. Taku Ito               Chiba JAPAN              5  11-04   57
Day 1: 5   11-04
45. Brett Preuett          Monroe, LA               5  11-03   56
Day 1: 5   11-03
46. Caleb Kuphall          Mukwonago, WI            5  10-14   55
Day 1: 5   10-14
47. Matt Arey              Shelby, NC               4  10-14   54
Day 1: 4   10-14
48. Buddy Gross            Chickamauga, GA          5  10-13   53
Day 1: 5   10-13
48. Bryan Schmitt          Deale, MD                5  10-13   53
Day 1: 5   10-13
50. Koby Kreiger           Alva, FL                 4  10-07   51
Day 1: 4   10-07
51. Rick Clunn             Ava, MO                  5  10-03   50
Day 1: 5   10-03
52. Bernie Schultz         Gainesville, FL          5  10-02   49
Day 1: 5   10-02
53. Cliff Prince           Palatka, FL              4  10-02   48
Day 1: 4   10-02
54. Dale Hightower         Mannford, OK             5  10-01   47
Day 1: 5   10-01
55. Gary Clouse            Winchester, TN           3  09-14   46
Day 1: 3   09-14
56. Rick Morris            Lake Gaston, VA          4  09-11   45
Day 1: 4   09-11
57. Jason Williamson       Wagener, SC              2  09-06   44
Day 1: 2   09-06
58. Shane Lineberger       Lincolnton, NC           4  09-01   43
Day 1: 4   09-01
58. Caleb Sumrall          New Iberia, LA           4  09-01   43
Day 1: 4   09-01
60. David Fritts           Lexington, NC            4  09-00   41
Day 1: 4   09-00
60. Shane LeHew            Catawba, NC              4  09-00   41
Day 1: 4   09-00
62. Jamie Hartman          Newport, NY              4  08-10   39
Day 1: 4   08-10
62. Brad Whatley           Bivins, TX               4  08-10   39
Day 1: 4   08-10
64. Randy Pierson          Oakdale, CA              3  08-09   37
Day 1: 3   08-09
65. Brandon Palaniuk       Rathdrum, ID             4  08-07   36
Day 1: 4   08-07
65. Clifford Pirch         Payson, AZ               4  08-07   36
Day 1: 4   08-07
67. Jesse Tacoronte        Kissimmee, FL            3  08-07   34
Day 1: 3   08-07
68. Matt Herren            Ashville, AL             4  08-06   33
Day 1: 4   08-06
69. Derek Hudnall          Denham Springs, LA       4  08-02   32
Day 1: 4   08-02
70. Gerald Swindle         Guntersville, AL         4  08-00   31
Day 1: 4   08-00
71. Paul Mueller           Naugatuck, CT            3  07-15   30
Day 1: 3   07-15
72. Rob Digh               Denver, NC               2  07-08   29
Day 1: 2   07-08
73. Jake Whitaker          Fairview, NC             4  07-06   28
Day 1: 4   07-06
74. Robbie Latuso          Gonzales, LA             2  06-00   27
Day 1: 2   06-00
75. Brandon Lester         Fayetteville, TN         3  05-15   26
Day 1: 3   05-15
76. Ray Hanselman Jr       Del Rio, TX              3  05-14   25
Day 1: 3   05-14
77. Harvey Horne           Bella Vista, AR          2  04-12   24
Day 1: 2   04-12
78. Keith Combs            Huntington, TX           2  04-08   23
Day 1: 2   04-08
79. Quentin Cappo          Prairieville, LA         2  03-03   22
Day 1: 2   03-03
80. Greg DiPalma           Millville, NJ            1  03-03   21
Day 1: 1   03-03
81. Bill Lowen             Brookville, IN           1  03-00   20
Day 1: 1   03-00
82. John Crews Jr          Salem, VA                1  02-08   19
Day 1: 1   02-08
83. Tyler Carriere         Youngsville, LA          1  02-05   18
Day 1: 1   02-05
84. Drew Benton            Blakely, GA              1  01-15   17
Day 1: 1   01-15
85. Chad Pipkens           Dewitt, MI               0  00-00    0
Day 1: 0   00-00
———————————————————————–

PHOENIX BOATS BIG BASS
Day
1   Chris Zaldain            Fort Worth, TX      08-06      $1,000.00

———————————————————————–
Totals
Day   #Limits    #Fish      Weight
1        46       346       934-13
———————————-
46       346       934-13

Simpson University Earns Win at Abu Garcia College Fishing presented by YETI Tournament on Clear Lake

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Simpson University Earns Win at Abu Garcia College Fishing presented by YETI Tournament on Clear Lake

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CLEARLAKE, Calif. (Sept. 29, 2020) – The Simpson

University team of Luke Blanchard of Vancouver, Washington, and Nathan Phillips of Kelseyville, California, won the Abu Garcia College Fishing presented by YETI at Clear Lake event Saturday with a five-bass limit weighing 16 pounds, 13 ounces. The victory advanced the Simpson bass club to the 2021 College Fishing National Championship.

The Red Hawks duo won by a 4-pound margin over the second-place team of Ryan Beaty and Taj White, also from Simpson University, who weighed in five bass totaling 12 pounds, 13 ounces. The tournament launched from Redbud Park in Clearlake, California.

The top eight teams Saturday at Clear Lake finished:

1st: Simpson University – Luke Blanchard, Vancouver, Wash., and Nathan Phillips, Kelseyville, Calif., five bass, 16-13

2nd: Simpson University – Ryan Beaty, Martinez, Calif., and Taj White, Glendale, Ariz., five bass, 12-13

3rd: University of California-Merced – Kalib Caples, Sebastopol, Calif., and Herbie LeBlanc, Gilroy, Calif., five bass, 12-9

4th: New Mexico State University – Marquez Perez and Wyatt Sandoval, both of Las Cruces, N.M., five bass, 12-0

5th: New Mexico State University – Daylon Smith, Frazier Park, Calif., and Bradley Jones of Las Cruces, N.M., five bass, 8-13

6th: New Mexico State University – Logan Cooper and Clay Stearns, both of Las Cruces, N.M., five bass, 8-3

7th: Simpson University – Austin Rojas, Lake Havasu City, Ariz., and Sheldon Reese, Witter Springs, Calif., two bass, 7-3

8th: Sonoma State University – Brook Spencer, Salinas, Calif., and Dawson Stroud, Modesto, Calif., zero bass

Complete results for the entire field can be found at FLWFishing.com.

The Abu Garcia College Fishing presented by YETI event on Clear Lake was the third and final regular-season qualifying tournament for Western Conference anglers. The next event for College Fishing anglers will be this week, Oct. 2 – the Abu Garcia College Fishing presented by YETI Ouachita River Open in Monroe, Louisiana.

Abu Garcia College Fishing presented by YETI teams compete in regular-season qualifying tournaments in one of five conferences – Central, Northern, Southern, Southeastern and Western. The top ten teams from each division’s three regular-season tournaments and the top 20 teams from the annual Abu Garcia College Fishing Open advance to the following year’s Abu Garcia College Fishing presented by YETI National Championship.

For complete details and updated information visit FLWFishing.com. For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow the Abu Garcia College Fishing presented by YETI on FLW’s social media outlets at Facebook, TwitterInstagram, and YouTube.

Bassmaster Elite At Santee Cooper May Present Interesting Seasonal Challenges 

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The Bassmaster Elite at Santee Cooper Lakes will be held in Clarendon County, S.C., Oct. 8-11, 2020.

Photo by B.A.S.S.

September 30, 2020

Bassmaster Elite At Santee Cooper May Present Interesting Seasonal Challenges 

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CLARENDON COUNTY, S.C. — They’re often called South Carolina’s “Great Lakes,” and the Bassmaster Elite Series field will certainly find plenty of Palmetto State potential.

However, seasonal conditions will put the nation’s top bass pros to the test during the Bassmaster Elite at Santee Cooper Lakes, Oct. 8-11. Takeoffs will be at 7:05 a.m. ET each day from John C. Land III Sport Fishing Facility in Summerton, and daily weigh-ins will be held back at the facility at 3:20 p.m.

About a week ago, Lake Marion stood within 1 1/2 feet of full pool, while Lake Moultrie was less than a foot low. Noting that these levels are higher than seasonal norms, South Carolina Elite pro Todd Auten says the situation has pros and cons.

“There’s a lot of shallow wood, especially in the upper lake, so the higher water will make it easier to get around,” Auten said. “But I think the high water will hurt more than it will help because it spreads the fish out.”

Auten said he has experienced tremendous fall bites on Santee Cooper, but the tournament will probably arrive a little ahead of prime time.

Shorter days trigger fall feeding instincts, but Auten said these lakes really need a shot of cooler weather to ignite the bite. With the tournament week’s forecast showing daytime highs holding steady in the mid- to upper 70s, it’s looking more like an early fall grind.

“I don’t think it’s at pure fall patterns yet,” Auten said. I think a lot of these fish havent moved (shallow) yet.”

With its upper end receiving the major inflow, Marion is most likely to retain some of the turbidity from the late-summer rains, while Moultrie typically holds cleaner water. Common habitat features include docks, lily pads, stumps, flooded trees and swamps (upper lake) and offshore brushpiles (lower lake).

“Brushpiles could play, especially if the water comes down a bit,” Auten said. “But if the water stays up, they’re usually not good. When they’re pulling down the water, some fish may move out to the brush.”

Auten expects jigs, Texas-rigged plastics, spinnerbaits, ChatterBaits, topwaters and buzzbaits to see a lot of shallow water action. With the week’s warm outlook, he believes frogging the duckweed and pads will also come into play. The offshore game will likely comprise drop shots, swimbaits, shaky heads and Texas-rigged worms.

“With the water being up, it’s going to make the shallow water bite maybe a little better,” Auten said. “When the fish are scattered, it’s harder to catch numbers. But Santee has such good fish, you might catch two or three and still have 15 pounds.”

Indeed, with stocked Florida-strain largemouth mingling with native bass, a double-digit kicker could make an appearance at any time. The challenge, Auten said, will be establishing consistency.

“A guy who’s flipping cypress trees might get into the right area and bust a big bag,” he said. “I’m sure you’re going to see a 25-pound bag, but I’ve seen it where you do that one day and go back the next day and struggle to catch a limit.”

Time management always matters, but with two lakes available, anglers will need to carefully weigh the urge to relocate. As Auten notes, the diversion canal includes idle zones that can chew up the clock.

“I think it’s feasible to fish both lakes, but I wouldn’t do it more than once a day,” Auten said. “One thing to consider is that there are rocks along the edges of that canal that will hold fish.”

Looking at the tournament’s potential productivity, Auten points to local team events that are won with 20 to 22 pounds. The Elite field will likely produce several such limits, but doing so across a four-day event is a tall order.

Auten’s looking for 15 to 16 pounds a day to reach the final round and 17 to 18 a day for the win, but he’s also optimistic about the kicker factor.

“If you’re fishing that swamp (in Marion), one flip and you could catch a 10-pounder,” he said. “That’s the thing about this lake; it has so many big fish in it. If you catch two good fish, you’re in pretty good shape sometimes.”

That being said, Auten acknowledges Santee Cooper’s humbling ways: “This lake will hand it to you. You’ll go in there and slay them one day and the next day, it’s pretty stingy to you.”

Live coverage of the event will be available daily on Bassmaster.com and ESPN3.

 

One-two Chatterbait® and ElaZtech® punch wins big at Hobie Bass Open Series Tourney

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Drew Gregory’s combination of topwater baits, Z-Man ChatterBaits and ElaZtech baits earned him a 1st place paycheck.

Z-Man® Baits Dominate Pro Kayak Event . . . Again

One-two Chatterbait® and ElaZtech® punch wins big at Hobie Bass Open Series Tourney

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Ladson, SC (September 30, 2020) – On super-busy bass lakes, kayak anglers continue to prove the value of stealthy vessels and select Z-Man baits that simply get the job done. Again and again, the Z-Man centric bait choices of these resourceful, aerobic anglers continue garnering eye-raising attention, even from the big-boat bass world.

At the recent Hobie Bass Open Series (B.O.S.), held on Lake Dardanelle, Arkansas, September 12 and 13, an impressive field of 112 kayak anglers dodged and weaved among the lake’s abundant bass boat brigade. Following two days of trailering to different launch sites across the 34,300-acre Arkansas River impoundment, Z-Man pro Drew Gregory edged Eric Siddiqi by the slimmest of margins. Gregory, who cast surface baits, Z-Man ChatterBaits and ElaZtech plastics lipped, measured and released a total of 171-inches of largemouth bass. Third place finisher, Z-Man pro and ‘yak angler extraordinaire Jody Queen, logged just four inches less than the leaders, relying on a one-two punch of Z-Man lures.

Adding an intriguing wrinkle to the standard bass tourney practice of starting all anglers at a single boat ramp, Hobie BOS competitors can choose their own launch locations around the lake. If the ‘yak angler so chooses, they may even launch, load and re-launch at multiple access sties in a single day. Such was the gameplan of Gregory, who arrived at Dardanelle with a second, smaller ‘stealth’ kayak—a Crescent Kayaks 10-foot UltraLite—to drop into more remote locations.

“For kayak anglers, our truck serves as our outboard, quickly transporting us to different sites around the lake,” said Gregory, a full time touring kayak pro. “In prefishing, I threw a Z-Man SlingBladeZ™ Spinnerbait. It’s got a talent for attracting bigger fish and at Dardanelle, the bait really helped me locate some key big bass areas.

“When the tourney started, I’d launch at one site right away in the morning and set out to pop a quick limit with a Project Z™ ChatterBait—a really well-built and underrated bladed jig, in my book,“ noted Gregory, who also notched a 2nd place finish at the 2019 KBF Championship with the Project Z ChatterBait. “Especially when rigged with a 4-inch MinnowZ, this ChatterBait consistently calls up bigger bites, and I used it to fend off the smaller spotted bass and green sunfish that can really waste valuable time. The Project Z bait pushes so much water. And its tapered skirt gives it the exacting look of a preyfish in the water. I know it’s almost blasphemy to say, but I think the Project Z is even better than a JackHammer.”

While the Project Z ChatterBait produced good numbers of largemouths for Gregory, he boated some of his bigger bass on a skirtless buzzbait dressed with a Z-Man DieZel MinnowZ™. In other scenarios, when fish blew up and missed the topwater bait, he immediately followed up with a Z-Man StreakZ™ soft jerkbait, weedless rigged on a 3/0, 1/8-ounce ChinlockZ™ hook.

“One thing I love about ElaZtech baits like the StreakZ is that they’re heavy enough to cast, but their buoyancy counteracts the sink rate of the hook for an almost neutral-buoyant presentation. Gives bass a highly natural look compared to other baits. And for me, the StreakZ nailed down quite a few key bites. I kept the StreakZ rod in a rod holder all the time. When I missed a surface bite, I’d quickly reach back, pull it out of the holster and hook up.”

After logging fast morning limits on the Project Z ChatterBait, Gregory would load back up, drive to another little area that offered a wilder setting and drop in his UltraLite. “Bringing two kayaks to events like this really lets me sneak back into hard-to-reach areas and get baits into the best heavy cover where bass boats and even other kayaks can’t reach.”

Z-Man StreakZ with 4/0 ChinlockZ hook

The key for Gregory was covering water around abundant shallow water wood, with scattered rock and grass—mostly in 4-feet of water or less. He’d toss a topwater lure around the cover, which produced a key 21-incher late in the second day, helping to cement his total tally. Gregory’s big bass ultimately broke the tie between he and Siddiqi, whose big bass measured 19.75-inches. The difference was enough to earn Gregory his first big win.

“I do a lot of prefishing with Google Earth, sniffing out little micro ecosystems,” Gregory explained. “At Dardanelle, I drove around the whole lake before the tourney started, looking for the right habitat. Big female bass are a totally different animal, and especially in pressured water, they’ll often hunker down in areas that are the most difficult places for anglers to reach. That’s where I like to find ‘em, and where, again and again, Z-Man baits get bit.”

Finishing a very close third, West Virginia angler and artist Jody Queen wielded his two favorite Z-Man baits—a ChatterBait JackHammer and a Mag FattyZ™, a 7.25-inch magnum finesse worm. Not coincidentally, Queen also won the 2019 Hobie BOS Tournament of Champions with a JackHammer. “Last year alone, I won almost $40,000 on a JackHammer. You might say I have a lot of confidence in it.”

The Z-Man Mag FattyZ has become a go-to big bass tournament bait.

On day-1 at Lake Dardanelle, Queen threw a 3/8-ounce BHite Delight-pattern JackHammer dressed with a MinnowZ™ paddletail. “The area I fished held so many shad, and that smaller 3-inch trailer really mimicked the forage,” noted Queen. “But the MinnowZ also has a full sized paddletail that helped elevate the bait, so I could almost work it like a wakebait. The fish were up on top, but I still had to work the bait really slow to get a reaction. Fish were blowing up on shallow water over points where wind was making current.”

Queen also worked slightly deeper with the same ChatterBait, calling out the lure’s versatility down in 7 to 10 feet of water. “Even when you reel the JackHammer extra slow, the blade is still working, vibrating. For me, the ChatterBait has all but replaced my crankbaits.”

Though he wielded both the ChatterBait and the Mag FattyZ each day, Queen increasingly relied on the soft stickworm on day 2. “The Mag FattyZ is always moving, even when you’re not,” he observed. “The bait’s buoyancy keeps it shaking, vibrating, even in the slightest current. I like to flip the bait into heavy cover, leave it on the bottom and just barely shake the slack in my line, which makes the worm breathe and pulse.”

Queen’s ChatterBait combo of choice, the illustrious JackHammer with a MinnowZ paddletail.

For pitching into heavy woodcover, Queen rigged the Mag FattyZ on ¼-ounce tungsten bullet weight, pegged with a bobber stop. “I was flipping the bait into logs lying in just 1- to 1-1/2-feet of water. But I found bass were lying in these little holes beneath the wood. All the bigger boats couldn’t get to the inside of these trees. No doubt, these heavily pressured, big fish had responded by dropping way back away from the activity. But I could easily maneuver my Hobie Mirage ProAngler 14 into position and then visually identify and flip to the dark holes beneath the trees.”

A final Hobie Bass Open Series event is slated for the Coosa River in Alabama in early October before the 2020 BOS Tournament of Champions converges on the Tennessee River in Knoxville, Tennessee. The smart money’s on Z-Man, once again.

As anglers continue to discover, there’s something magic about the Z-Man / kayak connection.

Tommy Marrow & Dennis Reedy Win CATT Old North Kerr Lake , NC Sept 19, 2020

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We will have post the 2021 Old North Schedule and the 2021 CATT Academy Championship date this coming weekend!

Tommy Marrow & Dennis Reedy take 1st Place with 14.51 lbs! They took home $1,930.00!

2nd Place went to Eddie Glasscock & Billy Dunn with 14.43 lbs!

3rd Place Tony Woodard & Bo Grosvernaer with 14.00 lbs!

4th Place Cody Backus & Anthony Frances with 13.58 lbs!

Tommy Marrow / Dennis Reedy 3.66 14.51 $1,930.00 110
Eddie Glascock / Billy Dunn 3.67 14.43 $990.00 109
Tony Woodard / Bo Grosverner 4.82 14.00 $666.00 108
Cody Backus / Anthony Frances 3.90 13.58 $225.00 107
Anthony Latta / Lee Williams 4.75 13.43 $69.00 106
Gary Johnson / Scottie Smith(sub) 3.34 13.28 105
Tom Wilkinson / Dennis Gilbert 3.03 13.07 104
Jeff Hodges / Allen White(sub) 4.51 12.66 103
Vinson Nettles / Mike Cole 0.00 12.42 102
Todd Sumner / Mike Dinterman 3.71 12.30 101
Johnny Wilder / Michael Harris 0.00 11.06 100
Billy Bledsoe / Brian McDonald 0.00 10.97 99
Rick Dunstan / Josh Huff 2.97 9.24 98
Doug Stallings / Seth Ellis 0.00 8.84 97
Jonathan & Mike Rhew 0.00 8.83 96
Todd Staker / Scott Woodson FREE 0.00 7.81 95
Greg Creech / Chris McDuffie 0.00 7.76 94
David Bullock / Jimmy Henderson 0.00 7.32 93
Jordan & Mark Young 0.00 6.84 92
Kenneth McNeil / Thomas Sheffer 0.00 6.77 91
John McLeland / Eric Schell 0.00 0.00 90
Jeff Brown / Ron Johnson 0.00 0.00 90
Jay Fogleman 0.00 0.00 90
Matthew Little / Derek Bowden 0.00 0.00 90
Steve Michales / Terrence Cotton 0.00 0.00 90
Total Entrys $3,840.00
BONUS $ $950.00
Total Paid At Ramp $3,880.00
Old North 2020 Spring Final Fund $510.00
2020 CATT Championship Fund $0.00
2020 Old North Spring Final Fund Total $1,500.00
2020 CATT Championship Fund Total $4,670.00

Pennsylvania’s Mifflinburg High School Wins High School Fishing presented by Favorite Fishing Chesapeake Bay Open

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Pennsylvania’s Mifflinburg High School Wins High School Fishing presented by Favorite Fishing Chesapeake Bay Open

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EDGEWOOD, Md. (Sept. 29, 2020) – Pennsylvania’s Mifflinburg High School duo of Ty Stroup and Daniel Walter grinded out three fish Saturday weighing 6 pounds, 3 ounces to win a very tough FLW High School Fishing presented by Favorite Fishing Chesapeake Bay Open event in Edgewood, Maryland. The event was hosted by Visit Harford.

The Chesapeake Bay was extremely stingy for the High School anglers, as just four teams brought a keeper bass to the scale. The Mifflinburg duo targeted the grass and credited a green pumpkin-colored Z-Man ChatterBait with a blue Strike King Rage Tail Craw as their key bait.

For their win on the Chesapeake Bay, the team now advances to the 2021 High School Fishing National Championship.

The top seven teams on the Chesapeake Bay finished:

1st:    Mifflinburg High School, Mifflinburg, Pa. – Ty Stroup and Daniel Walter, three bass, 6-3

2nd:   Susquehanna Valley High School, Conklin, N.Y. – Dylan Edwards and Luke Rokavec, one bass, 3-13

3rd:    Lancaster Junior Hawg Hunters – Tucker Hastings, Lancaster, Pa., and Stephen Foor, East Earl, Pa., two bass, 2-14

4th:    Carroll Fish Hawks – Peter Sheggrud, Phoenix, Md., and Haden Sisk, Reisterstown, Md., one bass, 1-3

5th:    Capital City Jr. Bass Masters – Kyler Morris, Dauphin, Pa., and Jacob Vanscoik, Dauphin, Pa., zero bass

6th:    Lancaster Junior Hawg Hunters – Brendon Martin, Stevens, Pa., and Andrew Fields, Myerstown, Pa., zero bass

7th:    Panj Bass – Dylan Aulbach, Monroe Township, N.J., and Alex Walsberg, Chester Springs, Pa., zero bass

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

The FLW High School Fishing presented by Favorite Fishing Chesapeake Bay Open in Edgewood, Maryland, was a free, two-person (team) event for students in grades 7-12 and open to any FLW and Student Angler Federation-affiliated high school club. The top 10 percent of teams at each Open event along with the TBF High School Fishing state championships will advance to the 2021 High School Fishing National Championship. The High School Fishing national champions will each receive a $5,000 college scholarship to the school of their choice.

In addition to the High School Fishing National Championship, all High School Fishing anglers nationwide automatically qualify for the world’s largest open high school bass tournament, the 2021 High School Fishing World Finals, held in conjunction with the National Championship. More than $2.8 million in scholarships and prizes were offered at the 2020 World Finals.

Full schedules and the latest announcements are available at HighSchoolFishing.org and FLWFishing.com.

Major League Fishing and FLW Unify as One Brand

Major League Fishing and FLW Unify as One Brand

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TULSA, Okla. (Sept. 29, 2020) – To further elevate the sport of tournament bass fishing and align multiple circuits as one company, Major League Fishing (MLF) announced today its unification with Fishing League Worldwide (FLW) as one brand, transitioning all FLW brand assets to MLF.

The Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit, Toyota Series, Phoenix Bass Fishing League, Abu Garcia College Fishing and High School Fishing will all carry the MLF logo and continue the five-biggest-fish format. A new website that builds on the existing sites, streamlines tournament entry, provides cutting-edge gear and tactics advice, and better highlights participating anglers is set to be unveiled in early 2021.

“Merging the FLW brand under the Major League Fishing umbrella is the next logical step in our company’s evolution, which now includes a broader reach than any of us thought possible in our formative years,” MLF BIG5 Executive Vice President and General Manager Kathy Fennel said. “The key to our success lies not in a name, but in our unwavering focus on providing the best possible tournaments for anglers, fans, hosts and sponsors – our family. Uniting with MLF under a single brand makes the whole greater than the sum of the pieces. The letters may be different, but the people and the values will remain the same.”

The FLW organization now known as “Major League Fishing BIG5” began life as Operation Bass. Founded on the shores of Kentucky Lake in 1979 by Mike Whitaker, a teacher and football coach turned electronics salesman, Operation Bass grew from humble beginnings to become the world’s largest tournament-fishing organization with five circuits and more than 300 events in 11 countries offering $21 million in awards.

Operation Bass was purchased by Minneapolis businessman Irwin L. Jacobs in 1996 and renamed FLW Outdoors in 2001 to honor Forrest L. Wood and the principles he embodied. While those principles still guide the company, FLW became Fishing League Worldwide in 2014 to set the stage for international growth, which now includes bass tournaments in Canada, China, Italy, Mexico, Namibia, Korea, Portugal, South Africa, Spain and Zimbabwe.

Fishing League Worldwide was acquired by Major League Fishing in November 2019. The acquisition was the most significant brand merger in competitive bass fishing history, linking an innovative tour and original, award-winning programming featuring the top professional anglers in the world to the extensive grassroots organization that serves tens of thousands of competitive anglers from high school and college students to weekenders and tour pros.

“The unrivaled television audience paired with unmatched tournament activation, MLF Bass Fishing magazine, a combined social media following in excess of one million fans, the sport’s most comprehensive live on-the-water coverage, and two of the sport’s top websites united under a single brand was a natural progression as the two organizations combine,” said Don Rucks, MLF Executive Vice President and General Manager.

To delineate between the Major League Fishing format of catch-weigh-immediate release competition, the five-biggest-fish tournament circuits will operate as the Major League Fishing BIG5 and will capitalize on MLF’s incredible reach on Outdoor Channel, Sportsman Channel, World Fishing Network, Discovery, CBS and MyOutdoorTV (MOTV).

New logo art will be provided to business partners, sponsors and anglers. The company expects that the changeover to the new name, logo and website will be completed by Q1 of 2021.

About Major League Fishing
Founded in 2011, Major League Fishing (MLF) brings the high-intensity sport of competitive bass fishing into America’s living rooms on Outdoor Channel, Discovery, CBS, CBS Sports Network, World Fishing Network, Sportsman Channel, and on-demand on MyOutdoorTV (MOTV). According to Nielsen ratings, Major League Fishing remains the number one series on Outdoor Channel for five years and MLF premiered as the number one outdoor show in their time slot on Discovery in 2019.

In 2019 MLF acquired FLW, which expands their portfolio to include the world’s largest grassroots-fishing organization, including the strongest five-biggest-fish format professional bass fishing tour, the Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit, as well as the Toyota Series, Phoenix Bass Fishing League presented by T-H Marine, Abu Garcia College Fishing presented by YETI, and High School Fishing presented by Favorite Fishing.

Timmy Squires & Seth Rabon Win CATT Waccamaw River, SC Sept 26, 2020

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Timmy Squires & Seth Rabon brought in 5 bass weighing 13.14 lbs good enough for 1st Place! Add the 1st BF at 4.48 lbs plus the side pot they took home $1,228.00!

2nd Place with 12.62 lbs Adam Lewis & Jacob Barfield!

3rd was Kyle Johnson with 10.47 lbs!

4th Place went to Ricky Wood & Connor Cartrell 10.46 lbs!

29 Teams BF Weight Winnings Points
Timmy Squirers and Seth Rabon 4.48 13.14 $1,228.00 110
Adam Lewis & guest Jacob Barfield 3.50 12.62 $360.00 109
Kyle Johnson 2.54 10.47 $250.00 108
Rickey Wood & Connor Cartmell 3.96 10.46 $130.00 107
Robbie Boyd & Ryan Thompson 4.37 10.23 $187.00 106
Glenn Cribb & JR Barfield 4.00 9.36 105
Avery & Ritchie  Williams 3.62 9.21 104
Kevin Alford & Will Prosser 2.13 9.06 103
Andrew Vereen & Jordan Weaver 0.00 8.67 102
Charles Fryer & Danny Rabon 2.09 8.58 101
Brad Suggs & Chad Williams 2.42 8.46 100
Corey Singleton & Jesse Hopkins 0.00 8.30 99
Rickey & Karen Bellamy 1.85 7.68 98
Freddy Mincey & Jamon Carroll guest 2.44 7.63 97
Chris Jones & Ed Owens 0.00 7.63 96
Kevin Heniford & Jesse Long 2.19 7.49 95
Don McLaud & Shawn Tackett 1.72 7.19 94
Noah Jones & Logan Odom 0.00 6.93 93
Tommy & Thomas Collins 0.00 6.38 92
Robby Byrum & Eric Cox 2.82 6.00 91
James Wade & George Porter 0.00 5.48 90
William Kimbrell & Deam Wrobel 0.00 3.10 89
Kevin & Ashton Wade 0.00 2.09 88
Danny York 0.00 0.00 87
Darren Cook & Peter Horne 0.00 0.00 87
Johnny Johnson & Wesley Howell 0.00 0.00 87
Ron Terwilliger 0.00 0.00 87
Daniel Cosby & Kendall Utter 0.00 0.00 87
Casey Warren & Jim Parrot 0.00 0.00 87
Total Entrys $2,320.00
BONUS $ $425.00
Total Paid At Ramp $2,155.00
2020 Waccamaw River Fall Final Fund $490.00
2020 CATT Championship/Phantom Fund $50.00
2020 Waccamaw River Final Fund Total $850.00
2020 CATT Championship/Phantom Fund Total $4,750.00