Tuesday, December 16, 2025
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Brock Rouse & Jonathan Denton Win Anglers Choice Jordan lake with 48.11 lbs

Well, what a great weekend it was being back on the road covering the Anglers Choice Lake Jordan event. Also, if you have never fished Lake Jordan, you are missing out on some beautiful bass. This weekend’s event was mixed with some great-looking bass caught in many different ways. I was told junk fishing 101, but the chatter was the deadly jig & the white spinner bait got most of the damage done for a lot of the anglers. Congratulations to Brock & Jonathan as they held off a very strong field to take the win. We hope that you enjoy the photos & interview below.

CLICK TO SEE FINAL RESULTS





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May Smith Mountain Lake Fishing Report by Captain Chad Green

SMITH MOUNTAIN LAKE FISHING REPORT
By: Captain Chad Green
www.lastcastguideservicesml.com

                        May fishing report 

                         Visit https://missilebaits.store/and check out all they have to offer. 
     Special Thanks to Brian Carter at the https://thebasscast.com/

Check out Smith Mountain Boat and Tackle Penhook for your boating needs
https://www.smboats.com. Visit Indian Point Marina, as Captain Dewayne Lamb has moved locations. Go by and check his new place and their food truck that will be opening soon.
Check out Rod and Grill for some good food at Indian Point Marina as well.


PRACTICE CATCH AND RELEASE ON CITATION SIZE FISH

Largemouth Bass/Smallmouth Bass
The shad spawn will be in full swing this month, and the bass will be after them for sure. Look for them on rip rap banks and clay points in the early morning with topwater and swimbaits. Once the sun gets higher, you may have to fish similar areas a little deeper, 8-12 ft, to find the fish on small structure. Topwater can still produce bites, so look for Wolfpacks of large fish moving fast as they look for herring spawning. The pattern will be effective the whole month of May into June unless it gets really hot quick. Docks and flat points can produce some larger male fish guarding fry this month. Top water plugs will be the primary choice for this tactic. Nighttime topwater fishing will be great this month as well as the shad will be spawning well on warm, clear nights. Target rip rap banks with wake baits or walking baits.


Striped Bass
Stripers will be cruising the shallows early morning and late evenings. Look for them around the same places the shad are spawning as well, rocky banks, clay points, shoals etc. Live bait and surface plugs will be great producers in the early morning. Schools of stripers surface feeding will be seen at times but will mostly be smaller fish. Larger fish will be roaming by themselves in small groups. Large 8-10” glide baits or swim baits will produce these fish to show themselves. Large live bait will always produce, too.


Crappie
Crappie will be found around larger docks and deep laydowns as they move into their summer patterns. Try small jigs and minnows.


Tournaments
Tues night and Friday night tournaments at Indian Point Marina

Saturday night Tournaments at Foxport Marina

The Bass Cast Tourney Series May 31st, 7-3 SML State Park





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Wheeler dominates Knockout Round on Nickajack, moves closer to hometown win

Jacob Wheeler was the top angler during the Knockout Round with 63-5 on 20 scorable bass. Photo by Tyler Brinks. Angler: Jacob Wheeler.

May 3, 2025 • Mitchell Forde • Bass Pro Tour

CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. — Seeing Jacob Wheeler’s name atop SCORETRACKER® for virtually all of Saturday’s Knockout Round at O’Reilly Auto Parts Stage 4 Presented by OPTIMA Batteries probably didn’t surprise anyone. Wheeler, an eight-time winner on the Bass Pro Tour, lives in nearby Harrison, Tennessee, and he entered the event as a clear favorite.

But Wheeler himself didn’t expect such a strong showing after the field relocated from Lake Chickamauga for the first of two days on the smaller, more mysterious Nickajack Lake.

Fishing in the current beneath the Chickamauga Dam, Wheeler posted the first scorable bass of the day – a 2-pound, 11-ounce smallmouth – 4 minutes after lines in. From there, he led nearly wire-to-wire. He stacked up 10 smallmouth totaling 32-6 in the first hour, 35 minutes (which would have been enough to finish above the elimination line). Despite spending most of the final two periods scouting new water, he cruised to a 63-5 total on 20 bass, finishing 9-3 clear of Wesley Strader.

“It was an unbelievable day of fishing today,” Wheeler said. “I felt like I could have caught another 40 pounds if I wanted to.”

Wheeler and the rest of the top nine finishers will be joined by Qualifying Round winner Justin Lucas on Nickajack for Sunday’s Championship Round. Weights will zero overnight, then the angler who can rack up the most weight will take home the $150,000 top prize. Catch the action on MLFNOW! from 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. ET at MajorLeagueFishing.com, the MLF and MyOutdoorTV (MOTV) apps and the Major League Fishing channel on Rumble.

Full results can be found here.





Brock Rouse & Jonathan Denton Dominate Day 1 of Anglers Choice on Jordan Lake with 25.63 lbs

Lake Jordan showed off today with some great-looking 20+ pounds of bass & five of them to be exact & a lot of bags around the 19 lb mark. The weather is going to change things up for tomorrow & it’s still anyone’s tournament to win & take home 10 K. Will the team, Brock Rouse & Janathen Denton, find them again tomorrow? In less than twenty-four hours, we will know. We hope that you enjoy the photos & interview below.

CLICK TO SEE RESULTS





Justin Lucas Tops Qualifying Round at MLF Bass Pro Tour O’Reilly Auto Parts Stage 4

Alabama pro advances directly to Championship Sunday with two-day total of 44 bass weighing 127 pounds even, 2nd through 20th advance to Saturday’s Knockout Round on Nickajack Lake

CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (May 2, 2025) – Justin Lucas’ Day 1 lead at O’Reilly Auto Parts Stage 4 Presented by OPTIMA Batteries got a few early challenges, but for just about all of the first two periods Friday on Lake Chickamauga, the Alabama pro retained the top spot on SCORETRACKER®. When he added a 4-pound, 12-ounce largemouth to his total late in Period 2 to extend his lead to 19 pounds, the Qualifying Round win and automatic berth to the Championship Round that comes with it looked to be safely in his grasp.

Less than an hour of competition time later, Lucas found himself trailing Jake Lawrence. The Tennessee native had rocketed from 21st place at the start of the day – an even 33 pounds behind Lucas – all the way to the top of the leaderboard. He wound up stacking up 91-11 on 28 scorable bass, easily the best day of any angler during the event.

However, while Lawrence’s bite went dry late, Lucas stayed steady. He added seven scorable bass during the final frame to bring his Day 2 tally to 62-13, which pushed his total an even 127 pounds and edged Lawrence by 4-2 in one of the most dramatic Qualifying Rounds in recent memory.

Claiming the top spot will allow Lucas to sit out while the rest of the Top 20 heads one reservoir down the Tennessee River to Nickajack Lake for Saturday’s Knockout Round. He will join the top nine finishers there on Sunday for the Championship Round, where $150,000 will be on the line.

Link to Photo Gallery of Day 2 On-the-Water Highlights
Link to HD Video of Highlights from Day 2 Competition

Lucas stacked up most of his Day 1 weight by targeting schools of postspawn bass offshore. So, he figured his ability to win the Qualifying Round would depend on those fish regrouping overnight.

When he arrived at his most productive spot Friday morning, however, he caught just one non-scorable bass. So, he turned to Plan B, another offshore ledge where he’d plucked a few fish the day prior. He wound up recording an even better start, catching 11 bass for 37-1 during the opening period.

In addition to his spot switch, Lucas’ key adjustment was swapping from a Neko rig and deep-diving crankbait, his main tools on Day 1, for a jighead minnow, as the fish weren’t relating as closely to the bottom.

“I just think it was conditions,” he said. “It was calm, no wind. The fish were up in the water column chasing bait, and so anything on the bottom, they weren’t real interested. There’s no current, and when there’s no current, the fish are suspended. And that was the deal.”

After utilizing his forward-facing sonar in Period 1, Lucas went shallow in search of bass on beds, as he’d done a day prior. Once again, he found the fish less willing to cooperate – he only caught one bass during Period 2, the aforementioned 4-12. With Lawrence closing hard, he decided to return to his best offshore spots even though he wouldn’t have forward-facing sonar at his disposal.

The action wasn’t as fast and furious as it had been in the morning, but Lucas added six fish for 18-11, including a 5-1 that put him back in the lead. He then capped the afternoon with one last savvy decision, running back to the shallows and catching a 2-5 on a Berkley Bullet Pop in the final 10 minutes before lines out.

While it turned out Lucas didn’t need that last fish to win the round, it represented his favorite catch of the day. He designed the Bullet Pop, and while doing so, he used an early prototype to finish 11th at a BASS Open on Chickamauga in 2017.

“I first caught fish on that bait as a 3-D printed bait here in 2017, and I caught some really nice fish on it around laydowns just like I caught that one this evening,” Lucas said. “So, it was just kind of icing on the cake.”

Initially unsure about the strategy of skipping a day on Nickajack, Lucas couldn’t pass up an automatic Top 10, which will be his 15th in Bass Pro Tour competition. He spent a day scouting Nickajack more than a month ago, before it went off-limits, but never ventured there during official practice this week. His plan for the Championship Round is to “try and figure it out on the fly.”

After his Qualifying Round performance, he can at least take confidence from his decision making.

“It’s just a totally different lake, totally different body of water,” Lucas said. “So, I have no idea what to expect down there.”

Even though his Day 1 total of 31-3 had him just 5 ounces outside the elimination line, Lawrence emerged from Thursday frustrated. The former guide on Kentucky Lake and Pickwick should have been in his element targeting bass on offshore ledges, but he said a lack of current killed his bite.

“Yesterday was so frustrating – it was the only time on the TVA chain that I believe I have ever seen the current generation at 0,” Lawrence said. “Like 0 – not 2,000 (cubic feet per second), not 4,000. For a couple hours yesterday, it was at absolute 0. And that really just messed me up. A lot of schools broke apart, disappeared. The ones that were there wouldn’t act right.”

With a bit more current rolling through his prime stretches Friday, Lawrence showed why he’s earned a reputation as one of the best on the Tennessee River system. Rotating between about 10 different offshore schools, he racked up 30-10 in Period 1, then 30-14 in Period 2. He blistered 28-1 in the first 45 minutes of Period 3 to take the lead before a school of white bass moved in and hurt his bite.

“We made it count today,” he said. “We had just enough current to kind of keep those fish together and get them competitive. So, I had a blast.”

Lawrence turned his forward-facing sonar on during Period 3, but he never used it to target individual fish, just to better line up his casts. He did most of his damage on either a Bill Lewis MR-12 crankbait or a soft swimbait.

“The way that the wind blew was kind of opposite of where I wanted to set up, so I was really throwing over the back of the boat, over the Mercury, for the majority of the day,” Lawrence said.

While Lawrence fell short of winning the round, his huge day continued a banner rookie season on the Bass Pro Tour. Including REDCREST on Lake Guntersville last month, where he finished fifth, he’s logged three Top 10s in his first four events of 2025. He’ll have a chance to make it five-for-six this weekend.

The top 20 pros that now advance to competition on Nickajack Lake are:

1st:          Justin Lucas, Guntersville, Ala., 44 bass, 127-0
2nd:        Jake Lawrence, Paris, Tenn., 41 bass, 122-14
3rd:        Nick Hatfield, Greeneville, Tenn., 33 bass, 88-11
4th:         Drew Gill, Mount Carmel, Ill., 31 bass, 87-1
5th:         Cole Floyd, Leesburg, Ohio, 28 bass, 85-1
6th:         Ott DeFoe, Blaine, Tenn., 30 bass, 84-8
7th:         Andy Morgan, Dayton, Tenn., 26 bass, 80-6
8th:         Jeff Sprague, Wills Point, Texas, 25 bass, 77-15
9th:         Jacob Wheeler, Harrison, Tenn., 28 bass, 75-8
10th:      Matt Becker, Ten Mile, Tenn., 27 bass, 74-8
11th:      Alton Jones Jr., Waco, Texas, 25 bass, 73-15
12th:      Justin Cooper, Zwolle, La., 27 bass, 70-0
13th:      Spencer Shuffield, Hot Springs, Ark., 26 bass, 68-12
14th:      Brent Ehrler, Redlands, Calif., 22 bass, 68-8
15th:      Dean Rojas, Lake Havasu City, Ariz., 22 bass, 65-12
16th:      Jared Lintner, Covington, Ga., 22 bass, 62-5
17th:      Michael Neal, Dayton, Tenn., 19 bass, 61-11
18th:      Andy Montgomery, Blacksburg, S.C., 23 bass, 61-0
19th:      Wesley Strader, Spring City, Tenn., 23 bass, 60-8
20th:      Ron Nelson, Berrien Springs, Mich., 20 bass, 59-10

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

Nelson earned the Day 2 Berkley Big Bass Award Friday with a 8-pound, 8-ounce largemouth that he caught in Period 3. Berkley awards $1,000 to the angler who weighs the heaviest bass each day.

The full field of anglers competed in the two-day Qualifying Round on Lake Chickamauga Thursday and Friday. With the two-day Qualifying Round now complete, Lucas advances directly to Sunday’s Championship Round on Nickajack Lake. The anglers that finished 2nd through 20th advance to Saturday’s Knockout Round on Nickajack Lake. In the Knockout Round, weights are zeroed, and the top nine anglers will join Lucas in Sunday’s Championship Round. In the Championship Round, weights are zeroed, and the highest one-day total wins the top prize of $150,000.

On Saturday and Sunday, anglers will launch at 7:15 a.m. ET from the Tennessee Riverpark, located at 4301 Amnicola Highway in Chattanooga. The takeout Saturday and Sunday will be held at the same location, beginning at 3:45 p.m. Fans are welcome to attend all launch and takeout events and also encouraged to follow the event online throughout the day on the MLFNOW!® live stream and SCORETRACKER® coverage at  MajorLeagueFishing.com.

The MLFNOW!® broadcast team of Chad McKee and J.T. Kenney will break down the extended action live on all four days of competition from 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. ET. MLFNOW!®  will be live streamed on  MajorLeagueFishing.com, the MyOutdoorTV (MOTV) app and Rumble.

On Saturday and Sunday, May 3-4, from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. MLF welcomes fans of all ages to visit Ross’s Landing at 201 Riverfront Parkway for the MLF Fan Experience & Watch Party. Fans can watch the pros live on the MLFNOW!  big screen, enjoy free food, enter to win hourly giveaways, listen to live music and cheer on their favorite pros. The first 50 kids 14 and under will receive a free Abu Garcia rod and reel each day. The event also includes a meet and greet with Paw Patrol’s Skye and Marshall, a youth fishing derby presented by Hardee’s and a casting contest. The Bass Pro Tour anglers will be on hand both days to meet and greet fans, sign autographs and take selfies.

The O’Reilly Auto Parts Stage 4 at Lake Chickamauga and Nickajack Lake Presented by OPTIMA Batteries is hosted by Visit Chattanooga and Fish Tennessee and features anglers competing with a 2-pound minimum weight requirement for a bass to be deemed scorable. The MLF Fisheries Management Division determines minimum weights for each body of water that the Bass Pro Tour visits, based on the productivity, bass population and anticipated average size of fish in each fishery.

The 2025 Bass Pro Tour features a field of 66 of the top professional anglers in the world, competing across seven regular-season tournaments around the country, for millions of dollars and valuable points to qualify for the annual Heavy Hitters all-star event and the REDCREST 2026 championship.

Television coverage of the O’Reilly Auto Parts Stage 4 at Lake Chickamauga and Nickajack Lake Presented by OPTIMA Batteries will premiere as a two-hour episode starting at 7 a.m. ET, on Saturday, Oct. 11 on Discovery, with the Championship Round premiering on Saturday, Oct. 18. New MLF episodes premiere each Saturday morning on Discovery, with re-airings on Outdoor Channel.

Proud sponsors of the 2025 MLF Bass Pro Tour include: 7Brew Coffee, Abu Garcia, Athletic Brewing, Bass Force, B&W Trailer Hitches, Bass Pro Shops, Berkley, BUBBA, E3 Sports Apparel, Fishing Clash, Grizzly, Lowrance, Mercury, MillerTech, Mossy Oak Fishing, NITRO, O’Reilly Auto Parts, Power-Pole, Ranger Boats, Rapala, Star brite, Suzuki Marine and Toyota.





Texan River Lee Wins Weather-Shortened MLF Toyota Series Event at Oklahoma’s Lake Eufaula

EUFAULA, Okla. (May 2, 2025) – Drenching overnight rains sent the lake up even more than it already was, which turned the Toyota Series Presented by Phoenix Boats Southwestern Division event on Lake Eufaula into a one-day tournament. Earning the win, pro River Lee of Diboll, Texas, weighed 13-10 on five fish on Day 1 and edged Wesley Baxley by an ounce. For his win, Lee earned $29,024 and locked in qualification to the Toyota Series Championship this fall on Grand Lake.

In the Fishing Clash Angler of the Year race, Dakota Ebare held on to the top spot to earn an extra $5,000. The well-traveled pro managed two fish for 6-5 on Day 1, which put him in 16th and moved him 10 points ahead of runner-up Brody Campbell . Finishing third was Baxley, who put together three Top-25 finishes in an excellent season.

On Day 1 and only, Lee set out with a bit of a plan in mind, and as additional proof of his sound strategy, practice partner Cody Ross also finished in the Top 10. However, the unplanned part of the day turned out to be the key to his win.

“In practice, before the water came up crazy, I was fishing the old bank line, where the bank grass was, and I was catching them,” said Lee. “We were getting a lot of bites on a wacky. So, going into it, I thought with the water still coming up that I still could do that. It would just have more water on it.

“I picked this area, and I put the trolling motor down in the mouth of it. Well, I just fished everything in front of me – flipped, wacky rig and spinnerbait. If I wasn’t flipping, I was doing one of the other two. And my first bite, it came flipping in an isolated bush by a walkway of a dock.”

As Lee eased around his chosen area, he made the decision of the day. Recalling a pond he hadn’t been able to get into a few weeks ago in a BASS Nation event, the Texas pro gave it another go.

“I tried to get in there a few weeks ago, but (the water) wasn’t high enough,” said Lee. “So, I was fishing in that creek and got all the way to the back, and I could hear the water running. I pulled up my phone and I looked at my Google Earth, and I was like, ‘I think we can get back there.’ It just looks like a wall of bushes, and the gap that I went through was probably like 4-foot wide – I had to force my boat in there. But once I got through that first wall of bushes, it was a little easier at that point. I guess that helped to kind of disguise it from everybody else.”

Once in the pond, Lee fished around the newest part of Lake Eufaula and didn’t catch anything until he got to a little spillway in the back. There, he plucked his second keeper of the day.

Then, Lee headed back into the regular lake and caught his third fish on a grass line on a wacky rig before returning eventually to his little pond. There, he caught the bass that pushed him over the top.

“I never caught anything in the pond itself; I caught them all where that spillway was running out,” he explained. “It was so shallow, but there was a little hole washed out in there that had just enough water for them to be there. The second time I went in there, I made 15 casts at it before I had a bite – I was fixing to leave it. I made one last cast up there and caught that fourth keeper. And I poled back down, because I had already picked my poles up – I was fixing to leave. I poled back down and made another cast and caught one the next cast. I don’t know what happened, what triggered it or anything, but they just bit back-to-back.”

For baits, Lee used a Rapala CrushCity Bronco Bug, a Rapala CrushCity Pick Stick and a chartreuse and white, double-willow War Eagle spinnerbait.

The win is Lee’s first at a national level, though he’s been very successful in Texas, especially recently.

“I mean, it’s definitely not how I dreamed of winning my first big one,” he said. “But then again, I’ve also just got to be super thankful that I caught what I caught and just to be in that position, with how it went. So, I’m trying not to let it bother me that it turned into a one-day shootout, and I got the win that way. But I’m super thankful – I did not see it coming at all.”

The top 10 pros at the Toyota Series at Lake Eufaula finished:

1st:        River Lee, Diboll, Texas, five bass, 13-10, $29,024
2nd:       Wesley Baxley, Conroe, Texas, five bass, 13-9, $12,247 (includes $1,000 Phoenix Bonus)
3rd:       Levi Thibodaux, Thibodaux, La., five bass, 12-10, $8,957
4th:        Aaron Johnson, Shreveport, La., two bass, 10-11, $7,756
5th:        Matt Reed, Madisonville, Texas, five bass, 9-15, $6,530
6th:        Shonn Goodwin, Moore, Okla., five bass, 9-10, $5,805
7th:        Corey Calvert, Coldspring, Texas, four bass, 9-4, $5,079
8th:        Paul Browning, Monahans, Texas, three bass, 8-4, $4,354
9th:        Seth Kelm, Canyon Lake, Texas, three bass, 7-4, $3,628
10th:     Cody Ross, Livingston, Texas, three bass, 7-2, $2,902

Complete results can be found at MajorLeagueFishing.com.

Johnson earned the $500 Berkley Big Bass Award on Thursday with a bass weighing 5 pounds, 12 ounces.

Clayton Coppin of Muskogee, Oklahoma, won the co-angler division at Lake Eufaula with a total of two bass weighing 10 pounds, 1 ounce. Coppin earned the top co-angler prize package worth $33,500, including a new Phoenix 518 Pro bass boat with a 115-horsepower outboard motor.

The top 10 co-anglers at the Toyota Series at Lake Eufaula finished:

1st:        Clayton Coppin, Muskogee, Okla., two bass, 10-1, Phoenix 518 Pro boat w/115-hp Mercury outboard
2nd:       Ben Burk, Norman, Okla., three bass, 9-1, $3,721
3rd:       Michael Zachry, Fairfield, Texas, two bass, 8-1, $2,977
4th:        Stephen Vogel, Muenster, Texas, three bass, 6-15, $2,605
5th:        Justin Swayze, Gurdon, Ark., three bass, 6-11, $2,233
6th:        David Bozarth, Montgomery, Texas, two bass, 6-5, $1,861
7th:        Shawn Clark, Afton, Okla., two bass, 6-4, $1,488
8th:        Mark Sloan, Harrison, Ark., two bass, 5-1, $1,402
9th:        Jimmy Wells Jr., Collinsville, Ill., two bass, 4-15, $1,116
10th:     Mike Casanova, Frisco, Texas, one bass, 4-8, $930

Coppin also earned the Berkley Big Bass co-angler award with a largemouth weighing 7 pounds even to win the $150 prize.

The Toyota Series Presented by Phoenix Boats at Lake Eufaula was hosted by Vision Eufaula. It was the third and
final regular-season tournament for the Toyota Series Southwestern Division. The next event for Toyota Series Southwestern Division anglers will be the Toyota Series Championship, Nov. 6-8, at Grand Lake in Grove, Oklahoma. For a complete schedule of events, visit MajorLeagueFishing.com.

The 2025 Toyota Series Presented by Phoenix Boats consists of five divisions – Central, Northern, Plains, Southern and the Southwestern – each holding three regular-season events, along with the International and Wild Card divisions. Anglers who fish in any of the five divisions or the Wild Card division and finish in the top 25 will qualify for the no-entry-fee Toyota Series Championship for a shot at winning up to $235,000 and a qualification to REDCREST 2026. The winning co-angler at the championship earns a new Phoenix 518 Pro bass boat with a 115-horsepower outboard. The 2025 Toyota Series Championship will be held Nov. 6-8 on Grand Lake in Grove, Oklahoma, and is hosted by the City of Grove Convention & Tourism Bureau.





Catching Bass After it Rains!

After a rain, it’s essential to determine whether it was tied to a cold front. Cold fronts typically lead to tough fishing conditions, especially in the first two days, because bass become sluggish and less active. In these situations, slow, finesse presentations with soft plastics like insect larva or beetles in deeper water can be the key to getting bites. Deeper water stays more stable and is less impacted by sudden weather changes. Once a few days pass and conditions stabilize, bass behavior often improves, and they become easier to target. It’s important to approach these post-front periods with patience, as fish may only react to the most subtle presentations. Avoid loud or fast-moving baits, which often spook bass in these conditions. Focus on vertical structure, break lines, and ledges that offer cover and consistent temperature. Pay close attention to sonar or depth readings to locate suspended or bottom-hugging fish. Even one bite can clue you into the right depth and speed for the rest of the day. Sometimes, downsizing your line or even switching to a more natural-colored soft plastic can increase your chances of a bite. Every small detail matters when bass are in a negative or neutral mood following a front.Our Fresh HellaMite is designed to imitate a major aquatic food source, delivering a realistic profile of an insect larva that fish can’t resist. Each is scented for complete and total attraction underwater along with being made in the USA by real fishermen just like you. We’ve recently dropped a new HellaMite Pro Pack that is loaded with 60 total baits in all six proven colors, plus three Owner Block Head Ned Jigs and a handy storage bag. This kit has everything you need to stay rigged and ready year-round. Grab our newest Lil Bass, Hot Sauce, MidNight, Glow, 10w30 Synthetic, Slimer Green, and Barbie Pink HellaMite colors. We’ve also recently restocked our popular Ghost, Red Bug, Purple Rain, Brown Bug, Electric Chicken, and Goby Wan colors. The HellaMite’s solid body and hyperactive ribbed tail design produce a life-like quivering action with every twitch of the rod. Its unique flat underbelly detail enables this bait to be fished as a drop shot, Ned rig, neko rig, and even a small Carolina-rig, making it the ideal bait in any condition year-round. When the water is clear, the fish can see the bait and look like real food, causing strikes. Each cast becomes an opportunity for an exhilarating catch, thanks to its superior performance and versatility.
A light rain after a dry spell can stir up insect activity and wash natural forage into creeks, culverts, and lakes. This inflow attracts baitfish looking for an easy meal, which in turn brings in bass. Focusing on these areas can lead to an active bite, especially in the hours or day following the rainfall. These situations offer great opportunities to fish soft plastics like worms or lizards that imitate the forage being carried in. Moving from one inflow to the next can result in a productive day on the water. Bass often position themselves just outside the moving water, waiting for prey to be funneled toward them. Target the edges of current with slow retrieves to keep your bait in the strike zone longer. Overcast conditions following the rain can extend the feeding window into mid-morning or even midday. Be sure to pay attention to subtle water temperature changes, as cooler inflows can also help concentrate fish. Staying mobile and covering multiple feeder areas will increase your chances of capitalizing on these short feeding windows. Don’t overlook small trickles or runoff ditches, they may hold more fish than they appear. Even the tiniest flow can create just enough disturbance for strikes.We use our Fresh Scorpion because it closely imitates a crawfish. Our newest 10w30 Synthetic, Slimer Green, and Barbie Pink Scorpion colors work wonders. The Scorpion is a revolutionary new look to soft plastics. Its intricate detailing and texture mimic the nuances of a real crawfish, making it hard for bass to resist. Of course, water clarity always plays a role in color selection but in any season, you can’t miss using colors such as Green Pumpkin SeedBrown BarkMagneto. This bait not only appears natural to fish but gives them something to become curious about. The Scorpion paired with a stand-up jig is deadly because the jig actually sits the bait upright in a defensive stance. The subtle color variations across the bait further enhance its appeal, mimicking the natural color shifts found in live prey. Each Fresh Scorpion has a unique and exclusive 3-axis tail design that is engineered like no other soft plastic bait. Our Scorpions are made by anglers from high-grade non-salt plastic to provide superior life-like action-triggering strikes!
Heavy rain can lead to muddy inflows that create distinct mud lines where dirty water meets clearer lake water. Bass often position themselves inside the mud line and ambush prey as it moves past the edge. Fish these transitions just like you would a weed line, presenting your bait along the cleaner side of the edge. Soft plastics like beetles or cray-styled baits can be worked slowly and visibly to tempt fish out of the murk. The key is to understand where the clarity shift occurs and treat it as a target zone. Wind direction can help push muddy water into certain coves or pockets, further defining these zones. Focus on areas where the wind and current naturally stack debris and stain, as bass may use these spots for cover. Vary your casting angles to determine where the bass are holding along the transition. Sometimes fish sit deeper within the stained water, while others cruise right along the edge waiting to ambush. Maintaining a natural presentation in these zones is crucial to coaxing bites in reduced visibility. If visibility is extremely low, consider using slightly larger soft plastics to increase your profile. Even the smallest of movement can draw attention when fish are relying more on vibration and instinct rather than sight.The new FreshBaitz Lizards deliver a realistic profile that excels in both power and finesse techniques. Act fact, we just released new Hot Sauce, MidNight, Ghost, and 10w30 Syntheic Lizard designs! The unique forward-facing leg design creates drag that holds it in the strike zone longer or produces wild flapping action with every pull of the rod. Additionally, its slightly ribbed solid body and large head hold your hook in place and provide much better weedless performance making it the ideal bait to use in any condition. Water clarity always plays a super big role in color selection but in any season year-round, you can’t miss when using colors such as Watermelon Red, Black & Blue, or Green Pumpkin. Its flexible tail design ensures added movement, tempting even the most cautious fish. The superior 5.5-inch profile stretches to a whole 7 inches which is perfect for predatory fish including bass year round. Made from long-lasting durable high-grade non-salted plastic for total and maximum attention-grabbing action underwater.
Rising water often pushes bass shallow as they follow bait and insects into newly flooded areas. These fish can be surprisingly aggressive, even in stained water, and will strike soft plastics like lizards or worms worked in inches of water. On the flip side, falling water caused by dam releases or drainage forces bass to retreat quickly to deeper, safer zones. They instinctively avoid being trapped, so identifying whether water is rising or dropping is crucial. Always assess the trend before deciding where to start your approach. When fishing rising water, focus on fresh cover like submerged grass, bushes, or newly flooded timber that provides both shade and forage. In dropping conditions, key in on breaks, ledges, or the first major depth change near where fish had recently moved shallow. Bass often pause at these spots while adjusting to the new conditions. Don’t overlook isolated structure in mid-depth zones during falling water, as fish may temporarily stage there. Keeping an eye on shoreline watermarks can help confirm whether levels are rising or falling during your trip. Steep banks can be especially productive during falling water, as they offer quick access to multiple depths. Staying flexible and adapting your depth range throughout the day can help you stay on active fish.Our Fresh Beetle delivers ultimate versatility in a soft plastic bait. Its slim yet wide body design and four claws are engineered to naturally glide and wobble as it moves through the water. This design ensures they remain enticingly active longer than conventional baits. Its unique texture also provides a realistic feel, making bass hold on longer once they bite. Water clarity plays a big role in color selection but year-round you can’t miss when using go-to colors such as Chocolate MintOx Blood, or 10w30 Synthetic beetles. The hyper-active swimming claws are designed thin with long-lasting durable non-salt plastic to make them come alive with the slightest movement. The Fresh Beetle offers an enticing 4-inch profile and is scented for complete and total attraction! You can rig these Beetles as a Jig/ Chatter Trailer, Flippin/ Punching, Texas Rig, Swing Jig, and Carolina Rig. Making the beetle beyond perfect in any weather condition year-round!
Significant rainfall can introduce current even in lakes that normally don’t have much flow. Whether natural or manmade, this current can reposition bass around points, humps, and breaks where they ambush food. In these situations, bass often become more aggressive, capitalizing on food being pushed past their strike zones. Look for current seams or eddies and target those with slow-moving soft plastics like worms or insect larva for natural presentations. Adapting to current direction and speed can make a major difference in success. Bass typically set up facing into the current, so casting upstream and allowing your bait to drift naturally can increase your chances of a strike. Be mindful of changes in current strength, as stronger flow can concentrate bass tighter to structure. Areas near inflows, narrowed channels, or bridge pilings often create reliable current breaks. Keep your retrieve subtle and controlled to maintain realism in turbulent water. Watching surface disturbance and debris movement can help identify prime current zones quickly. In low-light or overcast conditions, current-driven feeding can last longer than usual. When timed right, these windows can offer some of the most aggressive bites.Using a stick-styled worm is the most tried and true ways to catch fish. We have a variety of 5-inch Worms to choose from but we just added new MidNight, Glow, and Ghost Worms! Our popular Watermelon Red Worms have been restocked as well. You can also experience our new wacky rigging kit while it’s ON SALE! The WACKY Pack offers our most popular colors and essential tools for wacky rigging. If you’re fast enough you might be able to grab the limited-release Pumpkin Spice Worm before it’s completely sold out along with some of our newest colors including the Brown WormElectric Chicken Worm, and Goby Wan Worm colors. The high-grade non-salt plastic they’re made from provides positive buoyancy and it even floats underwater! We also released new 6-inch Worms including Charmeleon, Rainbow TRT, Bone, Chocolate Mint, and Fire TGR — all available in 5 and 6-inch. We’ve also recently released new 8-count packs of worms available in Watermelon RedBlack & Blue, and Green Pumpkin. We also offer worms that have the unique ability to shift from one color to another. Scented for total attraction underwater.
Rain changes water temperature, and its effect depends on the season. In early spring, warm rain can heat up shallow zones, drawing bass in and boosting their activity levels. In fall, however, cold rain can cool the water abruptly, causing bass to slow down or even shut off. These temperature shifts influence where fish will go and how they respond to the presentations. Adjust your speed and depth accordingly, using subtle soft plastics when fish become hesitant due to a temperature drop. During warming trends, target sunlit shorelines and shallow flats where the temperature rise is most noticeable. Conversely, in cooling scenarios, deeper, more stable water may be your best bet for finding active fish. Watch your electronics for temperature gradients and bait movement, they often reveal where bass are staging. Pay attention to overnight temperatures too, as they can either reinforce or reverse the effects of rainfall. Being in tune with even a few degrees of change can make or break your fishing strategy. If you’re not getting bites, test both shallower and deeper zones to see where bass have repositioned. Subtle shifts in temperature can completely reset feeding patterns, especially during seasonal transitions.Our newest FreshBaitz Mandingo Trick Worm is the ultimate game-changer for anglers with a passion! Engineered for the angler who knows SIZE does matter, this lure is designed to attract only the BIGGEST bass with a penchant for the larger bait. The Mandingo Trick Worm boasts a solid 7-inch body enhanced with a hyperactive ribbed design, ensuring irresistible mouth-watering action for those trophy bass. Officially available in a vibrant array of 8 colors. Each worm is made from durable, high-grade Non-Salted plastic for lifelike action and unparalleled durability. Perfectly balanced for a variety of rigging options and scented for total and maximum attraction, the Mandingo Trick Worm promises year-round effectiveness in lakes, rivers, and streams. Whether you’re rigging it on a Shakey Head, Drop Shot, Texas Rig, or Carolina Rig, these worms are your ticket to landing the big ones. Proudly made in the USA by real anglers to help elevate your fishing experience and catch more bass year-round!
In the fall, cold rain can cause lakes to turn over, mixing the water column and pushing bottom debris to the surface. This process reduces oxygen levels in surface layers and makes bass much harder to catch. You can often identify turnover by the presence of floating debris and a sulfur-like smell from decaying organic material. If conditions are severe, it may be better to try another nearby lake that isn’t affected. When turnover happens, even the best bait choice might not overcome the disrupted environment. Fish may scatter or suspend unpredictably during turnover, making patterning difficult. If you choose to stay on the water, look for areas less impacted, such as wind-protected coves or zones near inflowing creeks where fresher water enters. These pockets can sometimes hold more oxygen and slightly more active fish. Keep presentations slow and natural, with soft plastics like worms or insect larva to match the bass’s reduced energy. Ultimately, remain flexible at all times and recognize turnover early can help you adjust or relocate before wasting valuable time. Use your senses and surroundings to assess the extent of turnover before launching into a full day of fishing. Saving time by identifying poor conditions early can help you make smarter location choices and stay productive.We have a wide variety of terminal tackle to choose from, but we’ve recently released new Nako Tungsten Tear Drop Shot Weights, crafted from 97% eco-friendly tungsten for stealth, durability, and vibration, with easy-to-read size stamps and a crimped swivel for quick changes. The new Haymaker EWG Worm Hooks are also now available, featuring an extra-wide gap for various soft plastics, a Z-lock shoulder bend for secure bait placement, and an angled-up super needle point for fast, powerful hooksets. For creature-styled baits, a more popular choice to use is the Stand-Up Jig because it sits the bait up-right in a defensive stance! Mosquito Hooks work for dropshotting and perfectly accommodates a wide range of soft plastics. The popular All Purpose Hooks are built with an extra-wide gap and are made to accommodate a wide range of soft plastics. The Block Head Jig is perfect for ned rigging the HellaMite with its mushroom-style head that seamlessly matches a wide variety of soft plastics. The Offset Block Head Jig, offers the same mushroom-style head with a unique offset hook, making it a go-to for weedless Ned Rig applications. The Shakey Ultrahead can permanently secure baits by inserting the pin in the center and screwing the twist lock coil spring for perfect rigging every time! The Ultrahead Wacky Jig features precise weight positioning and hook orientation for the ultimate wacky presentations. For fast Texas rigging, we use the Bullet-Type Rig which has an attached weight saving you pressure time when fishing cover. The 4x Jungle Flippin Hook is designed for big fish and the toughest conditions. The Range Roller Jig Head is crafted for precision with its high center axis design, perfect for hover-strolling and mid to bottom strolling with forward facing sonar, ensuring an enticing rolling action that triggers bites. We also just release New Keep’em Fresh Bait Bags! These bags are the ultimate solution for anglers who need their gear to perform. Built like a tank, this bag is 20x stronger than regular zip bags and offers 100% waterproof protection with a rock-solid double zipper seal. Whether it’s for soft plastics, snacks, or your smartphone, this reusable and versatile bag keeps everything safe from the water, mud, and grime. Lightweight yet spacious, it fits snugly in your tackle box or backpack, making it perfect for your next adventure.





Graham Price & Joe Bell Win CATT Lake Greenwood with 5 bass weighing 12.75 lbs!

Next up on Lake Greenwood is the Spring Final May 10th at Buzzards Roost! You only had to enter 1 Qualifier to be eligible to enter! We have 23 team eligible to enter!

Anthony Kiker & Truett Hill win the Greenwood points and will fish the Final Free!

Graham Price & Joe Bell take 1st Place at Lake Greenwood with 5 bass weighing 12.75 lbs!

TeamBFWeightWinningsPoints
Graham Price – Joe Bell3.9512.75$510.00110
Anthony Kiker – Truett Hill0.0010.90109
Chris Blackwell – Chad Barbare2.189.44108
Will Price – Anton Harris2.209.14107
Cade Blackwell1.967.96106
Travis Blackwood – Brett Blackwood2.457.59105
Total Entrys$540.00
BONUS $$150.00
Total Paid At Ramp$510.00
CATT$0.00
2025 Greenwood Spring Final Fund$120.00
2025 CATT Championship Fund$0.00
2025 Greenwood Spring Final Total$820.00





Jason & Rodney Thoms win Tuckertown with 5 bass weighing 26.11 lbs!

Next is this coming weekend end May 4 at High Rock! This is the makeup date for the cancelled Marh 16th Qualifier!

The 2025 Academy CATT  Championship will take place on Kerr Lake May 17-18, 2025 and we are guaranteeing $10,000.00 to 1st Place!

Nutbush Ramp Kerr Lake State Park – 115 Jack Wade Farm Road, Henderson, NC

How To Qualify

Must enter 2 CATT Events to be eligible! Enter 1 or more CATT event as a team – Entering solo or with a Sub also counts toward your teams Championship Qualification! The 2 events do not have to be in the same CATT Trail!  CATT Fall 2024 and CATT Spring 2025!

Entry Fees

$200 Per Team Entry – $210 At Ramp

Optional Platinum BONUS $100  – Paying Up to 3 Places

Optional Gold BONUS $50 – Paying Up to 3 Places

Optional Silver BONUS $25 –  Paying Up to 2 Places

Jason & Rodney Thoms win Tuckertown with 5 bass weighing 26.11 lbs!

Tom & Tate Coleman 2nd with 5 bass weighing 20.69 lbs!

Jarrett Freeze – Rodney Adams 3rfd with 19.66 lbs!

Jeff Lotierzo – Luke Bramhill claimed 4th with 19.33 lbs Plus weighed the BF at 7.09 lbs!

5th Place Auston Garland 18.45 lbs!

Michael Swaringen – CJ Johnson 6th 18.16 lbs!

TeamBFWeightWinningsPoints
Rodney Thomas – Jason Thomas6.4326.11$1,208.00110
Tom Coleman – Tate Coleman0.0020.69$617.00109
Jarrett Freeze – Rodney Adams0.0019.66$280.00108
Jeff Lotierzo – Luke Bramhill7.0919.33$505.00107
Austin Garland6.1518.45$115.00106
Michael Swaringen – CJ Johnson0.0018.16$100.00105
Zach Scelsi – Kris Scelsi5.2718.04104
Curtis Dillon6.3917.77103
Bud Ratliff – Dustin Horne0.0016.86102
Justin Hill0.0016.84101
Lee Williams – Gavin Williams0.0015.60100
Cole File – Nick Dixon0.0015.4599
Tanner Fletcher – Alan Fletcher0.0014.8598
Tommy Coleman – Chris Coleman0.0014.8297
Brain File – Brian Price5.1614.7396
Mike Kiser – Matt Stanley0.0014.6695
Chris Brown – Sam Cole0.0014.1594
Cal Dotson – Travis Dotson0.0013.6593
Jeremy Talbert – Brian Robbins0.0013.5492
Curt Lare – Devin Kennedy0.0013.2891
Keaton Hawks – Allan Hawks0.0012.0190
Charles Kingston – Steve Gardner0.0011.6489
Zac Ridenhour  –  Mark Ridenhour0.0010.6188
Mark Lowe – Jonathan Lowe0.009.6087
Brian Trivette0.006.2286
Donald Livengood – Susie  Manhollan0.005.9985
Kevin Stowell SR – Chris Hammonds0.005.0784
Mark Mohler – Graeme Bosch0.000.0074
Chase Cannon – Mark Cannon0.000.0074
Josh Presley – Gabe Kluttz0.000.0074
Tyler Currick – Daryl Curl0.000.0074
Bradon Mueller – Dustin Green0.000.0074
Brad Younts – Mike Smith0.000.0074
Total Entrys$2,640.00
BONUS $$725.00
Total Paid At Ramp$2,825.00
CATT$50.00
2025 Yadkin Spring Final Fund$440.00
2025 CATT Championship Fund$50.00
2025 Yadkin Spring Final Fund Total$2,465.00





Allen Mitchell & Dennis Bradley win CATT Lake Gaston with 5 bass weighing 18.76 lbs!

Next Lake Gaston CATT Qualifier is May 4th at Summit Landing! If you need 1 more CATT event to make the 2-day CATT Championship on Kerr, here’s your chance!

The 2025 Academy CATT  Championship will take place on Kerr Lake May 17-18, 2025 and we are guaranteeing $10,000.00 to 1st Place!

Nutbush Ramp Kerr Lake State Park – 115 Jack Wade Farm Road, Henderson, NC

How To Qualify

Must enter 2 CATT Events to be eligible! Enter 1 or more CATT event as a team – Entering solo or with a Sub also counts toward your teams Championship Qualification! The 2 events do not have to be in the same CATT Trail!  CATT Fall 2024 and CATT Spring 2025!

Entry Fees

$200 Per Team Entry – $210 At Ramp

Optional Platinum BONUS $100  – Paying Up to 3 Places

Optional Gold BONUS $50 – Paying Up to 3 Places

Optional Silver BONUS $25 –  Paying Up to 2 Places

Dennis Bradley & Allen Mitchell win Lake Gaston with 5 bass weighing 18.76 lbs!

TeamBFWeightWinningsPoints
Dennis Bradley Allen Mitchell4.9818.76$1,100.00110
Shane Doughtie Evan White5.5618.38$1,131.00109
Joey Scott Michael Bryant4.8216.68$699.00108
Randy Groves Chuck Murry4.5016.42$280.00107
Adam Richardson Bentley Richardson4.7015.92106
Benny Cannon4.4015.36105
Gene Richardson Blake Richardson4.2615.34104
Joshua Lanaville Timmy Davis0.0014.82103
James Joyner Ryan Harrell4.0414.70102
Jay Allen Scott Griffin0.0014.10101
Al Lancaster Robby House0.0012.50100
Kendall Morris Nate Lancaster0.0011.6499
Brandon Taylor David Lanaville0.0011.4498
Ben Dalton Dean Dalton0.0011.3897
Michael Hobbs Wesley Bennett0.0011.3296
Josh Beddingfield Eric Pittard0.0011.1195
Jim Sampson Jeff Brodecky0.009.5894
Kevin Dudney Brett Cox0.005.0293
Brooks Woodard0.003.9692
Phillip Gibson Walt Goff0.000.0082
Rick Morris Peter Hamiwka0.000.0082
Wesley Caswell0.000.0082
Steve Mele Kevin Sickenger0.000.0082
Land Weaver John Edwards Jr0.000.0082
Total Entries$2,760.00
BONUS $$900.00
Total Paid At Ramp$3,210.00
2025 Gaston Spring Final$350.00
CATT$50.00
2025 CATT Championship Fund$50.00
2025 Gaston Spring Final Total$1,340.00