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Bishop Hartley High School Wins FLW High School Fishing presented by Favorite Fishing Lake Erie Open

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SANDUSKY, Ohio (Aug. 3, 2020) – Ohio’s Bishop Hartley High School duo of Braden McNamara and Mike Abbott brought five bass to the scale Saturday weighing 15 pounds, 15 ounces to win the FLW High School Fishing presented by Favorite Fishing Lake Erie Open.

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

The top two teams that qualified for the 2021 High School Fishing National Championship are:

1st:    Bishop Hartley High School, Columbus, Ohio – Braden McNamara and Mike Abbott, five bass, 15-15

2nd:   A1 Angler Development Club – Derek Rodriguez of Okemos, Mich., and Cougar Fagan of Albion, Mich., five bass, 15-2

Rounding out the top 10 were:

3rd:    Wheelersburg High School, Wheelersburg, Ohio – Matthew Strickland and Pete Newman, five bass, 14-1

4th:    Bag 5 Bassin’ – Brock Sauder of Carlock, Ill., and Brayden Blunier of Roanoke, Ill., five bass, 13-14

5th:    St. Francis Desales High School, Columbus, Ohio – Nicholas Seitz and Brock Vogel, five bass, 13-2

6th:    Renegades Bass Club – Rance Eddleblute of Stockport, Ohio, and Levi Jarvis of McConnelsville, Ohio, five bass, 12-1

7th:    Renegades Bass Club – Brant Moore and Eli Ponchak, both of McConnelsville, Ohio, five bass, 12-5

8th:    Shelby High School, Shelby, Ohio – Brayden Hoehn and Joel Berelsman, five bass, 11-5

9th:    Howell High School, Howell, Mich. – Owen Januszewski and Mathias Dahline, four bass, 10-10

10th:  Chambersburg High School, Chambersburg, Pa. – Dylan Barefoot and Carson Forrester, five bass, 10-0

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

The event launched from the Shelby St. Public Boat Launch in Sandusky, Ohio, and was hosted by the City of Sandusky.

The FLW High School Fishing presented by Favorite Fishing Lake Erie Open 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.

Making the Best Rods on Earth®: Heritage Only Goes So Far 

Making the Best Rods on Earth®: Heritage Only Goes So Far 

St. Croix Rod leads through materials and technology

PARK FALLS, Wisc. (August 4,2020) – Pick up any St. Croix fishing rod and you’ll quickly realize it’s something special. Lightweight and balanced, perfectly aligned and beautifully finished, these rods just feel right in the hands. From the second you lay the grip across your palm and feel the insignificant weight balance across your fingertips – before you even cast them – they seem full of potential and uniquely crafted to provide advantages on the water.

Then you cast them. You see the accuracy; feel the lure transmit feedback to your hand throughout the retrieve; experience the intense immediacy of the strike; sense the smooth delivery of power during the hookset and the satisfying state of control throughout the fight. That’s when the advantages of a St. Croix rod become real.

But what is it that actually sets St. Croix rods apart from the competition? Some might point out the company has been handcrafting fishing rods in Park Falls, Wisconsin, USA for 72 years. Others may identify with ownership by the same family for the past 43 years. Long-time St. Croix anglers would undoubtedly also bring up the company’s passion for taking care of its customers. Most, however, would simply tell you it’s the rods themselves, noting their consistently great performance, super sensitivity, exceptional action, power and durability.

“When you get down to it, these rods really are special,” says Jason Brunner, Director of Operations at the St. Croix manufacturing facility in Park Falls, WI. “Sure, they look good and feel great, but there’s also a tremendous amount of science and pride built into every one. From selecting the finest materials and components, to special design considerations that allow each blank to shine at a specific task, and applying novel manufacturing technologies to further enhance performance, we’ll stop at nothing to build the sticks our customers, field reps and elite team of field testers tell us they need. It really is an involved process, but we’ve gained a lot of experience at it over the years, which is yet another reason our rods have such reliably high levels of performance.”

According to Brunner, St. Croix’s rod-building process begins with a commitment to seek out and use the most advanced materials on the planet to bring out the best qualities in every distinct model. It’s here that St. Croix flexes its engineering muscle by operating the most advanced R&D department in the industry. “Investing in emerging composite materials and innovating the latest manufacturing processes, we have created many of the industry’s biggest performance breakthroughs and continue to explore new ways to make fishing better,” Brunner says. “Lighter, stronger and more responsive rods all begin with these advancements.”

Consider the carbon that serves as the primary building block for their rod blanks. St. Croix currently has six from which to choose, and all are exclusive to the St. Croix label. The company’s SC carbon materials (SC stands for St. Croix), levels II through VI, each feature an increasing modulus (stiffness of the graphite fibers) and variable strain rate (how far carbon fibers stretch before failing), allowing St. Croix to fine-tune each rod to fully match exacting design specifications and pricing considerations.

St. Croix’s SCII Premium carbon material features mid-modulus graphite fiber with a higher strain rate than fibers commonly used by other rod manufacturers. An outstanding choice for anglers who appreciate high performance without the high cost, you’ll find these materials in the Triumph, Premier, Bass X, Eyecon, Panfish and Trout series, as well as some Mojo series rods.

SCIII Advanced carbon material features high-modulus, high-strain carbon fibers and is designed for serious anglers who demand performance and value. It’s used to produce sensitive, lightweight rods with great durability like those found in the Mojo Bass, Mojo Musky, Avid, and Avid X rod series.

SCIV Exceptional carbon material steps up the St. Croix performance even more and is ideal for anglers who insist on fishing only with top-grade rods. This high-modulus, high-strain carbon material is used to craft Legend Surf and Legend Tournament Series Bass, Walleye, Musky and Inshore rods.

For the most performance-minded angler, SCV Extraordinary carbon is St. Croix’s finest blank material, producing the lightest, most sensitive and strongest rods in the St. Croix stable. SCV features high-modulus and high-strain carbon fibers with additional carbon-matte scrim. The material is employed in the Legend Elite and Legend X rod series, as well as the all-new Legend Xtreme and Legend Xtreme Inshore series. St, Croix’s final carbon material – SCVI Exotic – is too stiff to be used as a primary rod-building material, but the super-high modulus, high-strain carbon fiber is employed to complement other carbon materials – usually in a rod’s lower section – to provide additional power with minimal weight.

In addition to St. Croix’s carbon blank materials, the company also employs super-premium 100% linear S-glass in rods that require moderate actions or forgiving tips, such as those used in crankbait or trolling applications. This material is stronger and lighter than ordinary E-glass, and delivers the full benefits of linear fiberglass such as strength and forgiveness, plus elevated feedback, increased strength, action, reduced weight and heightened manufacturing quality as compared to other glass rods. This material is exemplified in Legend Glass, one of St. Croix’s most popular and innovative rod series, as well as Mojo Bass Glass, and blended with SCII carbon in Eyecon Trolling and Mojo Musky Trolling rods.

“All of our primary rod building materials are exclusive to St. Croix,” notes Brunner. “We work strategically with our suppliers and tell them exactly what we want. There may be some rod manufacturers out there using certain aspects of the same materials, but no one has them in the same combinations or configurations.”

Choosing materials with focus and using only the best is a great start, but St. Croix then refines them further using proprietary technologies developed through its suppliers, design team and manufacturing experts over the years. These technological breakthroughs increase performance and quantifiable factors like sensitivity, durability and strength across the company’s entire lineup.

“We have several high-tech technologies and manufacturing processes we can use or combine to bring out the best qualities in any rod blank we manufacture,” continues Brunner. “In fact, through the years, we’ve developed a program that can factor in many of our variables and give us a solid indication of how any rod we plan to design will perform over a variety of qualities before we even build it. We’ve learned and charted over the years exactly what it takes to make anything from an ultra-light to a medium or extra-heavy rod power. We can assign rod action specifics from extra-fast to slow, determine the exact weight of the rod, factor in the effects of specific individual components, increase the durability and adjust the price point appropriately, all before building our first samples. All this information is provided to the manufacturing team to take the guesswork out of the rod-building process. The result is that, from the very first protype of any new design, we are generally close enough to the desired performance that many projects only require a few small modifications to reach perfection.” The cutting-edge technologies employed at St. Croix are mostly know by their abbreviations, but each spent years in research and development before coming to fruition.  Among the most important are IPC®, ART, FRS, and TET.

Developed exclusively by St. Croix, Integrated Poly Curve® (IPC®) tooling is used to eliminate all transitional points in the rod blank, resulting in smoother actions, increased strength and greater sensitivity in a rod that bends from tip to butt with a parabolic curve.

Advanced Reinforcing Technology™ (ART™) uses an exotic carbon fiber material that adds a magnitude (10X) of strength with virtually no increase in blank diameter or weight. It significantly improves the hoop strength of the blank by preventing it from deforming or “ovaling” under severe loads, such as a those experienced during a powerful hook set or when lifting a heavy fish. ART is also a critical part of St. Croix’s slim-profile ferrule design.

St. Croix’s FRS (Fortified Resin System) combines a fortified super resin with new computer-operated curing ovens that provide improved temperature and time management through all stages of the critical curing cycle. FRS prevents micro-buckling by keeping the carbon fibers in proper alignment. Blanks manufactured using this advanced manufacturing protocol consistently test 33% stronger than those built with standard resins and curing methods.

Taper Enhancement Technology (TET) is a process perfected by St. Croix that begins with precision-cut, curved blank patterns made possible by a state-of-the-art computerized pattern cutting machine. When combined with IPC-mandrels, these unique patterns create blanks with better actions and improved sensitivity. This pattern design and cutting technology is a dramatic departure from traditional straight-line patterns cut by hand.

St. Croix’s key to producing the ultimate fishing rod lies in combining its proprietary materials with its exclusive technologies. For example, teaming high-modulus high-strain SCIII carbon with IPC® technology creates a rod with exceptional strength, smooth power and increased sensitivity, such as those exceptional performers in the popular Avid Surf, Avid, Avid X and Mojo Bass series. Comparably, using SCIV in combination with IPC, ART and FRS elevates Legend Tournament series rods to a level of performance on par with their name.

Simply put, St. Croix sets itself apart from the competition with an R&D Department and manufacturing facilities that are the most advanced in the business. But in the end, everything still must be put together exactly right. For that, St. Croix relies on the prowess and dedication of its skilled and passionate manufacturing team… and a lot of lasers.

“We use lasers in almost every aspect of the manufacturing process these days to ensure all blanks are cut to the exact size and that our components are perfectly placed, spaced and aligned,” explains Brunner. “We even have lasers we use strictly for placing our labels. Adding them into the process is just another step that makes sense when you need your product to come out perfectly every single time.”

As you can see by now, there’s some serious science that goes into building the ideal fishing rod – at least those wearing the St. Croix name. Still, for all the great materials, components, manufacturing breakthroughs and technological wizardry, in the end nothing works unless the entire team is on board.

“We work hard to educate, inform and give our employees everything they need to succeed on a daily basis,” Brunner reports. “We’re all incredibly proud of the work we do, here, the superior product we turn out, and the way we go about our jobs every day. It’s the spirit and dedication of the entire St. Croix crew that, in the end, really separates our rods from all the others. It takes great materials, cutting edge technology and dedicated, happy people to make the Best Rods on Earth® for our passionate anglers, and we wouldn’t have it any other way.”

And that’s what truly sets St. Croix apart.

August 2020 Smith Mountain Lake Fishing Report By Captain Dale Wilson

SMITH MOUNTAIN LAKE FISHING REPORT
August 2020
DALE WILSON’S
SML GUIDE SERVICE
PHONE NO: 540-297-5650 / 540-874-4950
www.captaindalewilson.us

Caught 7/30/20 & released. One of several!

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Fishing has been better the last few days and should improve during the coming months. Water temperature has been extremely high. It will be in the 80s to near 90 degrees.
Night fishing for bass has been good the past several weeks. All species of fish are in their summer patterns. Look for striper fishing to continue to improve.

Largemouth Bass

Fishing will be good at night this month. Best lures will be Neko rigs, drop shot rigs, crank baits, shaky heads, Carolina rigs and large plastic worms. Most largemouth bass will be caught on points, ledges rock piles, brush piles and deep docks. Best depths will be from 5 to 30 feet. Largemouth bass will feed mainly at night. Points, rocks, stumps and brush are key factors to finding bass. Remember to release them quickly during hot months.

Smallmouth Bass

Fishing should be fair. Best areas will be rocks, ledges and main channel points. Best lures will be Ned rigs, jigs, drop shot rigs and Carolina rigs. Best areas will be in the mid- to the lower sections of the lake. Most smallmouth bass will be suspended around schools of shad. Cloudy days are good times to try. Light line will increase chances of catching them. Night fishing will be fair.

Striped Bass

Fishing will continue to improve. Stripers will be caught in the lower to mid-sections of the lake and in the larger creeks. Best lures will be swim baits, jigging spoons and Zoom flukes fished on 1/2- to 3/4-ounce lead heads. The best depths will be from 20 to 80 feet. Vertical jigging is one of the better methods to catch stripers during the hot months. Try to find areas with the largest concentrations of baitfish. Fishing at night will be poor this month. Live bait fished on planer boards and down lines are also good methods.

Crappie

Fishing for crappie will be poor. Best areas will be in the main creeks around deep docks, fallen trees and brush piles in the mid- to upper parts of the lake in depths from 15 to 30 feet. 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.

Tips of the month
Hot water temperatures will cause the fish to slow their metabolism. Fishing during the early morning and night are usually the best times to fish. Try to avoid the heavy boat traffic by fishing at night and early in the morning. Wear a life jacket and never fish alone at night. Make sure running lights are on after dark. Remember to practice catch and release and take a kid fishing.

David Eichorn & Bo Russell Win CATT Yadkin Tuckertown Lake, NC July 25, 2020

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Next up on the Yakdin CATT Trail is High Rock Lake August 16 launching from Tamarac Marina!

David Eichorn & Bo Russell weighed  a fat bag of Tuckertown bass at 22.287 lbs to take 1st Place! They also weighed in the 1st BF at 6.01 lbs collecting $1,100.00!

Matt Stanley & Cameron Andrews 2nd with 17.98 lbs and took home $460.00!

3rd went to Roy & April Barrow with 15.63 lbs!

Brandon Shaver & Chad Cook 4th 14.83 lbs!

Chris & Vince Murphy took home the $50 cash prize sponsored by Wackyriggers.com

Bobbie Cline with some nice uns!

20 Teams BF Weight Winnings Points
David Eichorn – Bo Russell 6.01 22.28 $1,100.00 110
Cameron Andrews – Matt Stanley 5.84 17.98 $460.00 109
Roy Barrow – April Barrow 5.48 15.63 $125.00 108
Brandon Shaver & Chad Cook 0.00 14.83 $100.00 107
Chris Murphy & Vince Murphy 0.00 13.28 106
Brian Robbins – Dean Talbert 0.00 12.20 105
Ron Wolfarth – Shawn Knight 0.00 11.82 104
John Kistler & Rusty Melton 0.00 9.23 103
Duke Denison – Bobby Cline 5.14 8.56 102
Tony Vernon – Scott Quinn 0.00 8.01 101
Robin Collins – Ronnie White 0.00 7.34 100
Scott Henley – Nick House 0.00 7.30 99
Bobby Bowers – John Wagers 0.00 3.33 98
Alan Griffin – Kevin Chandler 0.00 0.00 97
Corey Gibson & Brandon Gibson 0.00 0.00 97
Derrick Crumbley – Darryl Crumbley 0.00 0.00 97
Curtis Dillon – Zach McLean 0.00 0.00 97
Scott Horwood – Hunter Horwood 0.00 0.00 97
Manny Lenau 0.00 0.00 97
Mike Ray – Mike Smith 0.00 0.00 97
Total Entrys $1,600.00
BONUS $ $425.00
Total Paid At Ramp $1,785.00
Yadkin Spring 2020 Final Fund $200.00
2020 CATT Championship Fund $0.00
2020 Yadkin Spring Final Fund Total $540.00
2020 CATT Championship Fund Total $4,160.00

Michael Craven Wins CATT Cooper River, SC Spring Final August 1, 2020

all Cooper River Schedule will be coming soon!

Michael Craven took home the Cooper River Final 1st Place Plaques with 5 bass weighing 11.39 lbs! Michael also weighed in the 1st BF at 5.26 lbs and took home $1,075.00!

2nd Place went to Winkey Watford with 10.45 lbs! He took home $500.00!

Travis Gatlin & Grant Powell took home the 2nd BF money with a 3.29 lb bass!

We also handed out some Strike King Products!

10 Teams BF Weight Winnings
Michael Craven 5.26 11.39 $1,075.00
Winkey Watford 0.00 10.45 $500.00
John Campbell Kyle Welch 0.00 9.98
Travis Gatlin Grant Powell 3.29 8.79 $25.00
Jonathan Brindle Justin Harvey 0.00 8.38
Matt Baker Andrew Baker 0.00 8.23
Terry Silliman Aaron Toups 0.00 7.97
Griffin Craine Tom Siwarski 0.00 6.98
Jimmy Mccants Kevin Lambert 0.00 5.85
Edward Punchak Michael DiBello 0.00 4.79

Bowling Green State University Wins Abu Garcia College Fishing presented by YETI Tournament on Lake Erie

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SANDUSKY, Ohio (Aug. 3, 2020) – The Bowling Green State University team of Jamesen Simion of Saline, Michigan, and Cameron Wilt of Alvada, Ohio, won the Abu Garcia College Fishing presented by YETI at Lake Erie event Friday with a five-bass limit weighing 16 pounds, 1 ounce. The victory earned the Bowling Green bass club $2,000 and qualified them to compete in the 2021 College Fishing National Championship.

The Falcons duo won by a thin 2-ounce margin over the second-place team of Blake Johnson and Zachary Graham from Adrian College, who weighed in five bass totaling 15 pounds, 15 ounces. The tournament launched from the Shelby Street Boat Launch in Sandusky, Ohio.

The top 10 teams that advanced to the 2021 College Fishing National Championship are:

1st:       Bowling Green State University – Jamesen Simion, Saline, Mich., and Cameron Wilt, Alvada, Ohio, five bass, 16-1, $2,000

2nd:      Adrian College – Blake Johnson, Mooresville, Ind., and Zachary Graham, Gallipolis, Ohio, five bass, 15-15, $1,000

3rd:       Adrian College – Alex Henderson, Adrian, Mich., and Griffin Fernandes, McCordsville, Ind., five bass, 15-10, $500

4th:       Adrian College – Tyler VanBrandt, Morenci, Mich., and Jarrod Layton, Maybee, Mich., five bass, 15-2, $500

5th:       Kent State University – Tanner Ward, Coshocton, Ohio, five bass, 14-13, $500

6th:       Adrian College – Shane Nelson, Wadsworth, Ohio, and Sean Mercier, Brighton, Mich., five bass, 14-10

7th:       Adrian College – Hunter Schneider, Milin, Ind., and Brayden Federer, Deerfield, Mich., five bass, 14-7

8th:       Adrian College – Cody Batterson, Pleasant Hill, Iowa, and Matthew Davis, Coloma, Mich., five bass, 14-1

9th:       University of Rio Grande – Eli Daniels, Portsmouth, Ohio, and Evan Bowman, Gallipolis, Ohio, five bass, 14-1

10th:     Ramapo College – Alex Johnson, Milltown, N.J., and Zachary Potter, Haddon Township, N.J., five bass, 13-13

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

The Abu Garcia College Fishing presented by YETI event on Lake Erie was hosted by the City of Sandusky. It was the second of three regular-season qualifying tournaments for Northern Conference anglers. The next events for College Fishing anglers will be on Aug. 21 – the Abu Garcia College Fishing presented by YETI at the Mississippi River in La Crosse, Wisconsin, and the Abu Garcia College Fishing presented by YETI at the California Delta in Oakley, California.

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.

About FLW
FLW is the world’s largest tournament-fishing organization, providing anglers of all skill levels the opportunity to compete for millions in prize money across five tournament circuits. Headquartered in Benton, Kentucky, FLW and its partners conduct more than 290 bass-fishing tournaments annually around the world, including the United States, Canada, China, Italy, South Korea, Mexico, Namibia, Portugal, South Africa, Spain, and Zimbabwe.

FLW tournament fishing can be seen on the Emmy-nominated “FLW” television show while Bass Fishing magazine delivers cutting-edge tips from top pros. Acquired by Major League Fishing in late 2019, FLW is expanding its programming in 2020 to the Outdoor Channel and the Sportsman Channel as well as on-demand at MyOutdoorTV (MOTV).

Lawton’s Mallory Claims Title at Phoenix Bass Fishing League Event on Lake St. Clair

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Lawton’s Mallory Claims Title at Phoenix Bass Fishing League Event on Lake St. Clair

Indiana’s Bauer Wins Co-angler Division

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HARRISON TOWNSHIP, Mich. (Aug. 3, 2020) – Boater Buck Mallory of Lawton, Michigan, brought a five-bass limit to the scale Saturday weighing 25 pounds, 5 ounces to win the Phoenix Bass Fishing League presented by T-H Marine event at Lake St. Clair in Harrison Township, Michigan. For his victory, Mallory earned a total of $4,652.

The tournament was the second of five events in the Michigan Division presented by A.R.E. Truck Caps.

“I was fishing in the main lake on St. Clair,” said Mallory, who earned the first victory of his career. “The key was sticking around and grinding it out. I didn’t leave a 100-yard stretch the whole day.  I just did circles and circles and circles until I couldn’t do them anymore. And then I did it five more times and caught one more good one that got me the win.”

Mallory said that his key bait was a drop-shot rig with a Strike King ElazTech Z Too soft jerkbait with an Eco Pro Tungsten Full Contact drop-shot weight.

“I didn’t realize that I would be so emotional when I finally got a win,” Mallory went on to say. “I was so due. I’m really excited.”

The top 10 boaters finished the tournament as follows:

1st:       Buck Mallory of Lawton, Mich., five bass, 25-5, $4,652

2nd:      Mike Raber of Wolcottville, Ind., five bass, 24-10, $2,326

3rd:       Heath Wagner of Angola, Ind., five bass, 23-3, $1,318

4th:       Beau Bickford of Findlay, Ohio, five bass, 23-3, $1,318

5th:       Hugh Cosculluela of The Woodlands, Texas., five bass, 22-12, $894

6th:       Wyatt Walker of Parma, Mich., five bass, 22-9, $820

7th:       Robert Lefere of Jackson, Mich, five bass, 22-1, $708

7th:       Wayne Macklin of Linden, Mich., five bass, 21-10, $708

9th:       Chris Stanford of Omaha, Neb., five bass, 21-6, $596

10th:     Andrew Smith of Chesterfield Township, Mich., five bass, 21-3, $496

10th:     Chase Morgan of Danville, Ind., five bass, 21-3, $496

Complete results can be found at FLWFishing.com.

Smith earned the day’s Boater Big Bass Award of $685 after bringing a 5-pound, 11-ounce bass to the scale.

Cosculluela was also the highest-finishing FLW PHOENIX BONUS member and took home an extra $500. Boaters are eligible to win up to an extra $7,000 per event in each Phoenix Bass Fishing League presented by T-H Marine tournament if all requirements are met. More information on the FLW PHOENIX BONUS contingency program can be found at PhoenixBassBoats.com.

Tom Bauer of Martinsville, Indiana, won the Co-angler Division and $2,326 Saturday after catching five bass weighing 23 pounds, 10 ounces.

The top 10 co-anglers finished as follows:

1st:       Tom Bauer of Martinsville, Ind., five bass, 23-10, $2,326

2nd:      Austin Freed of Wolcottville, Ind., five bass, 22-14, $1,163

3rd:       Kenneth Lesner of Westland, Mich., five bass, 22-4, $777

4th:       Davis Stutzman of Shipshewana, Ind., five bass, 21-12, $543

5th:       Daniel Hechler of Franklin, Ohio, five bass, 21-4, $465

6th:       Marvin Washington of Canton, Mich., five bass, 21-3, $426

6th:       Aaron Stahley of Batavia, Ohio, five bass, 20-12, $388

8th:       Matthew Kime of Holland, Ohio, five bass, 19-14, $349

9th:       Scott Sims of Morgantown, Ind., five bass, 19-13, $310

10th:     Bill Miller of Metamora, Mich., five bass, 19-12, $613

Miller caught the largest bass in the Co-angler Division, weighing in at 6 pounds, 5 ounces. The catch added to his winnings as he earned the day’s Co-angler Big Bass award of $342.

The top 45 boaters and co-anglers in the Michigan Division presented by A.R.E. Truck Caps based on point standings, along with the five winners of each qualifying event, will be entered in the Oct. 15-17 Phoenix Bass Fishing League Regional Championship on the Mississippi River in La Crosse, Wisconsin, hosted by Explore La Crosse. Boaters will compete for a $60,000 prize package, including a new Phoenix 819 Pro bass boat with a 200-horsepower Mercury outboard and $10,000, while co-anglers will fish for a new 18-foot Phoenix bass boat with a 200-horsepower outboard.

The 2020 Phoenix Bass Fishing League presented by T-H Marine is a 24-division circuit devoted to weekend anglers, with 128 tournaments throughout the season, five qualifying events in each division. The top 45 boaters and co-anglers from each division, along with the five winners of the qualifying events, will advance to one of six regional tournaments where they are competing to finish in the top six, which then qualifies them for one of the longest-running championships in all of competitive bass fishing – the Phoenix Bass Fishing League All-American.

The 2020 Phoenix Bass Fishing League All-American will be held Nov. 11-13 at Lake Hartwell in Anderson, South Carolina and is hosted by Visit Anderson. The top 45 boaters and co-anglers plus tournament winners from each Phoenix Bass Fishing League division earn priority entry into the FLW Series, the pathway to the FLW Pro Circuit and ultimately the MLF Bass Pro Tour, where top pros compete with no entry fees.

For complete details and updated information visit FLWFishing.com. For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow the Phoenix Bass Fishing League presented by T-H Marine on FLW’s social media outlets at FacebookTwitterInstagram, and YouTube.

Seth Rabon and Keaton Capps Win CATT Phantom Outdoors Invitational Waccamaw River, SC July 25, 2020

WOW! What a tournament! 70 Teams entered the 2nd Waccamaw River Phantom Invitational July 25, 2020 with over $20,000.00 on the line! We will hold the Waccamaw River Phantom Invitational July 24, 2021! Help spread the word and lets’s have another increase in numbers! 

Check out the Phantom Outdoors Gear line! CATT is proud to be associated with Phantom Outdoors! Click on the Phantom logo to view their great products and don’t forget to use PHANTOMCATT15 at checkout and earn 15% off your order!

Seth Rabon and Keaton Capps brought in a great bag of bass topping the 70 boat field and collected $5,700.00 in Cash & Prizes! They weighed in 5 bass at 17.53 lbs and weighed the 1st Lews BF at 6.78 lbs! IN cash they took home $5,500.00 plus a Lews Baitcast reel valued at $200.00!

2nd Place went to Kaleb & Mike Gerald with another limit weighing 15.09 lbs worth $3,500.00 smackers!

Tim Gamble & Mike Phipps weighed in a limit at 14.70 lbs good enough for 3rd and a pile of Side Pot $$! They earned $4,400.00!

John & Ashley Proctor brought in the 2nd BF at 4.75 lbs and took home $800.00!

Check out the rest of the money winners!

70 Teams BF Weight Winnings
Keton Capps – Seth Rabon 6.78 17.53 $5,700.00
Kaleb Gerald – Mike Gerald 4.45 15.09 $3,500.00
Tim Gamble – Mike Phipps 4.63 14.70 $4,400.00
Hayes Hudson – Brent Long 4.61 13.51 $2,275.00
Mark Johnson 4.73 13.45 $1,100.00
Timmy Squires – River Squires 3.65 13.29 $500.00
John Proctor – Ashley Proctor 4.75 13.17 $650.00
Ed Owens – Chris Jones 4.21 13.11 $400.00
Winston & Neal Martin 2.93 12.92 $325.00
Elvis Black – Brian Crosby 4.24 12.45 $225.00
Andrew Vereen – Jordan Weaver 3.39 12.24 $200.00
Charles Proctor – Stacey Proctor 3.84 12.21
Jimmy Walters – Westly Williamson 3.91 11.96
Reid McDowell – Danny Allen 3.24 11.89
Anthony Amerson – Gabriel Lambert 3.88 11.89
Mike Granburg – Tom Tanner 3.21 11.89
Jamie Ethridge – Scott McCleland 2.83 11.45
Winkey Watford – Scottie Mixon 2.60 11.33
Joey McLean – Danny McLean 3.55 11.29
Avery Williams – Wilson Springs 4.23 10.99
Gregg Fogner – Anthony Fogner 2.70 10.75
Britt Brown – Danny Martin 3.75 10.75
Andy Howell – Tucker Howell 4.08 10.67
Chad Williams – Jeremy Hewitt 3.61 10.55
Logan Benton – Shawn Benton 3.71 10.50
Jason Owens – Anthony Lee 3.11 10.49
Dylan McConnell – Dave McConnell 3.31 10.33
Ben Cox – Chase Marshall 2.07 10.23
Robby Byrum – Ed Magill 2.45 10.14
Cody Squires – Dillon Thompkins 2.58 10.03
David Quandt – Timmy Williamson 2.55 9.98
JD Farrand – Casey Stamey 0.00 9.69
Bennett Lawshe – Dalton Hewitt 2.76 9.53
Patrick Tindal – Jeremiah Jensen 2.24 9.51
Wade Cook – Brian Howard 2.37 9.43
Chad Pennell – Casey Warren 2.20 9.28
Mark Curry – Jr Milligan 2.25 9.17
Donald McLaud – Ray Inman 2.50 8.96
Kyle Johnson – Ron Cannon 2.55 8.92
Will Prosser – Josh Jones 2.36 8.52
Gary Pope – Kevin Alford 2.14 8.48
Marshall Sasser – Kel Owens 2.41 8.46
Bill Moore – Matthew Moore 2.19 8.29
TJ Hardee – Rodney Hardee 2.26 8.26
Englis Glover – Tony Carter 2.14 8.17
Charles Freyer – Darren Williamson 2.26 8.12
Noah Jones – Kevin Heniford 2.17 7.88
Shawn Todd – Brad Rabon 2.21 7.74
Andrew Young – Corey Singleton 1.91 7.46
Ron Terwilliger – Kevin Owens 1.71 7.31
Wayne Marsh – Ryan Marsh 1.72 7.31
Rick Corn – Sam Patterson 1.57 7.28
Alex Cribb 0.00 7.11
John Eagen – Amamda Eagen 2.43 7.08
Timmy Anderson – Ross Brazier 2.06 6.98
Chad Cook – Tony Cook 1.92 6.60
James Roy Robison – William Gregory 1.39 6.12
Trey Cribb – Kaleb Bryant 0.00 6.04
Chris Alston – Wendell McCray 0.00 4.48
Jaman Carroll – Freddy Mincey 0.00 2.79
Michael Dennis Jr 0.00 0.00
Ryan Thompson – Robbie Boyd 0.00 0.00
Caleb Cox – Dylan Gasque 0.00 0.00
Nick Gant – Van Turbeville 0.00 0.00
Carlton Thompkins – Joel Barfield 0.00 0.00
Brad Suggs – Lee Kershner 0.00 0.00
Patrick Cook – Mack Cook 0.00 0.00
James Forebush – Amber Forebush 0.00 0.00
Kyle Chestnut – Kristen Chestnut 0.00 0.00
Wesley Howell – Branson Howell 0.00 0.00

Robert Clements Win’s The Bass Cast Kayak Series Small Mouth July Online Tournament

With the COVID-19 pandemic we had to cancel our James River tournament. So we had a month long Smallmouth only tournament on Tourneyx. 27 anglers set out for cash prizes to the top 4 and valuable points in our Angler Of the Year race. 182 fish were caught with 6 anglers over 90 inches on 5 Smallmouth Bass.

CLICK THE LINK TO SEE THE REST OF THE RESULTS

CLICK THE LINK TO SEE CURRENT STANDINGS

     Robert Clements focused on the James River getting out to an early lead and never looked back. He put up 97 inches of Smallmouth including 2 citations. (Trophy fish awards from VDGIF for Smallmouth over 20 inches). With his win he put $259.20 in his pocket and valuable points bringing him into 7th in AOY points.
    Jonathan Graham also put his focus on the James River which rewarded him with 96.75 inches of Smallmouth. Good enough for 2nd place, $151.20, and enough points to put him in a 2 way tie for 1st in the AOY points race. Jonathan also was able to Catch a Citation aswell.
   James Stanley made a late jump to 3rd place with 92 inches of Smallmouth on the James River. James was awarded $97.20 for his efforts and points putting him 6th in AOY points race.
  Matthew Hamlette finished in 4th place with 91.50 inches earning him $32.40. Matthew focused his efforts on the Staunton River.
   We would like to thank all of our anglers for an awesome action packed tournament. Also a huge thank you to our sponsors Journey Outdoors, Bixpy, RBT Custom Baits, K9 Fishing, YakGadget, YakAttack, and Thompson’s Custom Lures.

Palaniuk Comes From Behind To Win Bassmaster Elite Event At Lake Champlain

Brandon Palaniuk, of Rathdrum, Idaho, has won the 2020 Bassmaster Elite at Lake Champlain with a four-day total of 80 pounds, 1 ounce. 

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

August 2, 2020

Palaniuk Comes From Behind To Win Bassmaster Elite Event At Lake Champlain

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PLATTSBURGH, N.Y. — Turning in his best performance of the week, Brandon Palaniuk leveraged a blistering afternoon bite to sack up 21 pounds, 6 ounces and win the Bassmaster Elite at Lake Champlain with a four-day total of 80-1.

This is the fourth B.A.S.S. win for the 2017 Angler of the Year from Rathdrum, Idaho. He earned a first-place prize of $100,000.

After a strong start yielded a pair of 4-pound-class fish by 8:30 a.m., Palaniuk continued catching quality smallmouth throughout the day. A key move and a heads-up response led him to the gold mine that produced a 4-4, a 4-6 and a 4-8 between 12:10 and 1:56 p.m.

“I had one boulder and I shut down before I got to it and as I came off pad, I see a dot on my (Humminbird) Down Imaging and I’m like, ‘Holy cow, that looks like a giant smallmouth,’” Palaniuk said. “I grabbed my rod, threw my bait back before I even dropped my trolling motor.

“The boat’s drifting away, I drop my trolling motor, I pick up and my line’s swimming off. I set the hook and a 4 1/2-pounder goes airborne — way back there. After I caught that fish, I rolled up to the boulder and they were stacked on top of it. Then, every single boulder on that flat in 28 to 32 feet of water had a 4-plus-pounder on it.”

Sticking with what produced the majority of his bites this week, Palaniuk caught his final-round fish on a drop shot with a green pumpkin/blue fleck X Zone Finesse Slammer. He used a No. 2 drop-shot hook and a 3/8-ounce VMC tungsten teardrop weight.

After three days of mostly calm conditions, Championship Sunday brought strong winds, clouds and occasional showers. Noting that the wind likely moved schools of baitfish into the areas he fished, Palaniuk said his game plan came together as well as he’d hoped

Keeping himself within striking distance all week, Palaniuk placed eighth on Day 1 with 19-12, slipped to 11th on Day 2 with a limit of 18-10 and made the final Top 10 cut on Day 3 by rising to fifth with 20-5.

“It was just one of those days where everything worked out,” he said. “All week long, I said, ‘Just give me a shot,’ because I looked at the weather and I knew we were going to get that windy weather we got in practice.

“I had a really good practice and I felt like I could literally drive around, look at my (Humminbird) LakeMaster charts, pull up on a spot and catch big ones. I think the wind this morning helped push those baitfish up and it moved a lot of those fish up. Those fish aren’t resident fish; they chase schools of bait.”

Spending his day targeting flats with scattered rock and boulders within the Inland Sea (Champlain’s northeast section), Palaniuk said his pattern was so reliable he actually moved with the bait schools. He started on a likely spot and drifted with the wind until he no longer spotted fish on his Humminbird 360.

“When I started not seeing them, I’d jump to the next place and catch another big one,” Palaniuk said. “I hit one magical school this afternoon and every single boulder I could see on with Mega 360 (Imaging) had a big one on it.

“I literally started laughing while I was fighting them, because it was that good.”

Seth Feider of New Market, Minn., finished second with 78-14. After mixing it up with largemouth and smallmouth for three days, he focused on the latter Sunday and caught a limit of 19-14 to go with his previous bags that went 20-1, 21-7 and 17-8.

Feider caught his bass on a flat with a grassline point in 12 feet. He used a medium-diving crankbait and a Carolina-rigged Zoom Speed Craw.

“It’s where I’d been starting every day and then leaving and going largemouth fishing (around marina docks),” Feider said. “I knew with the cloudy skies my largemouth bite was out today, so I leaned on it as hard as I could.

“I got really lucky and caught two great big ones that gave me a chance. It just wasn’t enough.”

Jamie Hartman of Russellville, Ark., finished third with 78-5. Hartman took the lead on Day 1 with 22-1 — the event’s biggest bag — and held the top spot for two more days with bags of 20-3 and 17-8. He added 18-9 Sunday.

Focusing on a rocky point with grass, Hartman caught his fish on a Carolina rig with a craw bait and a 3/8-ounce peanut butter and jelly color Riot Baits Lil’ Creeper jig with a twin-tail trailer. Today’s dim weather seemed to stifle the hot morning bite he had experienced the previous three days.

“The bites were slow; very spaced out — it took me until 11 before I had a decent weight,” Hartman said. “The mornings had been slow, but when the sun would come up, it was like a light switch and they started eating good. We didn’t get that today.”

Feider won the Phoenix Boats Big Bass honors with a 6-6 largemouth he caught on Day 2, earning an additional $1,000.

Hartman took home $3,000 for being the highest-placing entrant in the Toyota Bonus Bucks program, and Jason Williamson earned $2,000 for being the second-highest placing entrant.

The tournament was hosted by the Adirondack Coast Visitors Bureau, City of Plattsburgh and Clinton County with support from the Office of the Governor of the State of New York.

2020 Bassmaster Elite at Lake Champlain 7/30-8/2
Lake Champlain, Plattsburgh  NY.
(PROFESSIONAL) Standings Day 4

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

1.  Brandon Palaniuk       Rathdrum, ID            20  80-01  100 $100,000.00
Day 1: 5   19-12     Day 2: 5   18-10     Day 3: 5   20-05     Day 4: 5   21-06
2.  Seth Feider            New Market, MN          20  78-14   99  $28,000.00
Day 1: 5   20-01     Day 2: 5   21-07     Day 3: 5   17-08     Day 4: 5   19-14
3.  Jamie Hartman          Newport, NY             20  78-05   98  $20,000.00
Day 1: 5   22-01     Day 2: 5   20-03     Day 3: 5   17-08     Day 4: 5   18-09
4.  David Mullins          Mt Carmel, TN           20  77-13   97  $15,000.00
Day 1: 5   19-13     Day 2: 5   19-04     Day 3: 5   20-10     Day 4: 5   18-02
5.  Jason Williamson       Wagener, SC             20  76-11   96  $15,000.00
Day 1: 5   18-04     Day 2: 5   19-07     Day 3: 5   19-09     Day 4: 5   19-07
6.  Ed Loughran III        Richmond, VA            20  76-01   95  $15,000.00
Day 1: 5   19-04     Day 2: 5   19-13     Day 3: 5   17-15     Day 4: 5   19-01
7.  Koby Kreiger           Alva, FL                20  75-04   94  $15,000.00
Day 1: 5   18-01     Day 2: 5   22-00     Day 3: 5   19-01     Day 4: 5   16-02
8.  Brock Mosley           Collinsville, MS        20  74-02   93  $15,000.00
Day 1: 5   19-13     Day 2: 5   19-02     Day 3: 5   18-09     Day 4: 5   16-10
9.  Cory Johnston          Cavan CANADA            20  73-13   92  $15,000.00
Day 1: 5   17-03     Day 2: 5   21-08     Day 3: 5   18-11     Day 4: 5   16-07
10. Taku Ito               Chiba JAPAN             20  73-10   91  $15,000.00
Day 1: 5   18-08     Day 2: 5   19-06     Day 3: 5   19-07     Day 4: 5   16-05
———————————————————————–

PHOENIX BOATS BIG BASS
Day
1   Bryan Schmitt            Deale, MD           06-02      $1,000.00
2   Seth Feider              New Market, MN      06-06      $1,000.00
3   Shane LeHew              Catawba, NC         05-05      $1,000.00
4   Seth Feider              New Market, MN      05-01      $1,000.00

———————————————————————–
PHOENIX BOATS BIG BASS
Seth Feider              New Market, MN      06-06      $1,000.00
———————————————————————–
Totals
Day   #Limits    #Fish      Weight
1        85       425      1425-04
2        83       423      1417-02
3        39       197       663-08
4        10        50       181-15
———————————-
217      1095      3687-13