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Lee Pitts and Steve Ingle Win 2019 Alabama Bass Trail Neely Henry Lake by Dan O’Sullivan

Lee Pitts and Steve Ingle Win 2019 Alabama Bass Trail Neely Henry Lake
Nolen Spencer and Jonathon Reese Claim Northern Division Anglers of the Year Title
by Dan O’Sullivan

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June 8, 2019 – Gadsden, Ala. – Lee Pitts, the noted “Crappie King of Weiss Lake,” has had a couple of months to forget in 2019.  Beginning with the flooding of Weiss Lake that damaged much of he and his wife Laura’s property at their home, then followed with a fire at his storage facility that caused the loss of his boat and more than 90-percent of his tackle collected over the past 40 years as an angler.

Today, Pitts and his partner Steve Ingle managed to insert a great memory into this season of difficulty when they won the final stop on the 2019 Alabama Bass Trail Northern Division’s schedule at Neely Henry Lake.  The pair brought 22.02 pounds of Neely Henry Lake largemouth to the scales at Coosa landing and earned the victory and the $10,000 prize.  It is their second ABT victory, having won previously at Neely Henry Lake in 2016.

They said they were thrilled with the result.  “This is the first time all year that we got to just be able to stop thinking and concentrate on the fish,” they said.  “With everything that’s been going on – coupled with the crappie guiding season – there has been one distraction after another.  Today we locked into the fish, and the conditions and had a great day.”

The pair reported catching more than 30 fish in the mid-lake area between Gadsden and the Southside Bridge.  They reported targeting isolated grassbeds that had wood mixed in them with 3/8-ounce Mama Bream colored Talon Fishing Unlimited Billy Mac Flippin’ Jigs matched with green pumpkin Gene Larew Lures Biffle Bugs as trailers on 7’4” Lew’s Super Grip Rods and 7.3:1 Tournament Pro reels.  “It helped if there was a little wind blowing into the grass; that’s when the biggest bites happened,” they reported.  “We caught fish up to about 1:30 this afternoon, culling up to our final limit then; this was a really fun day, and we’re so happy with the result.”

The team of Phillip and Bailey Dukes put a scare into the winners when their 21.82-pound limit hit the scales two thirds of the way into the weigh-in.  The father / son pair also targeted grass in the mid lake area, and reported finding a specific pattern that they were able to run. “Our best grass was in flat areas in shallow water, and once we figured it out we were able to move quickly and catch the right fish,” they reported.  “We caught them on everything we threw, but our best fish came flipping creature baits and throwing a frog.  We would have loved to pull it out, but we’re good with the day, and happy for Lee and Steve at the same time.”  The team earned $5,000 for their efforts.

The team of Joshua Moore and Harry Peyton claimed the $500 Mountain Dew Big Bass award for the event.  Their 8.06-pound largemouth anchored their 17.38-pound limit, and earned them a 14th place finish.

The Top 10 Standings are below, for complete standings, visit: https://www.alabamabasstrail.org/tournament-series/nhl-results/

Place Team Weight Big Fish Winnings
1 Lee Pitts / Steve Ingle 22.02 5.62 $10,000
2 Phillip Dukes / Bailey Dukes 21.82 5.65 $5,000
3 Chad Hall / Ryan Hall 20.80 4.72 $4,000
4 Gary Thacker / Carter Woodall 20.29 5.05 $3,000
5 Justin Buckles / Chadd Jones 19.93 6.52 $2,000
6 Adam Bain / Kris Colley 19.75 $1,500
7 Wyatt Burkhalter / Dax Massey 19.29 5.32 $1,100
8 Hank Hayes / Tanner Hayes 19.17 5.76 $1,100
9 Jeremy Hopper / Ryan Anaya 19.12 6.27 $1,100
10 Mark McCaig / Tim Hurst 19.03 5.60 $1,100

 

In the season long points race, The team of Nolen Spencer and Jonathon Reese came into the final event with a 10 point lead for the title.  The pair produced 15.40 pounds at Neely Henry, and finished the day in 32nd place, securing them the division’s Anglers of the Year Title with 1030 points, 26 points ahead of second place finishers Grant Hopson and Wes Ward.
The top 10 in standings is published below, for complete 2019 Points, visit here: https://www.alabamabasstrail.org/tournament-series/north-division-standings/

Place Team Points
1 Nolen Spencer/Jonathon Reese 1030
2 Grant Hopson/Wes Ward 1004
3 Eric Morris/Ben Williamson 999
4 Adam Bain/Kris Colley 996
5 Damien Willis/Tyler Kiker 991
6 Blake Hall/Triston Crowder 967
7 Benjie Seaborn/Johnathan Seaborn 964
8 Josh Butler/Randy Tolbert Jr. 963
9 Mitch Mitchell/Candler Mccollum 929

The sponsors of the 2019 Alabama Bass Trail include; Phoenix Bass Boats, Bill Penney Toyota, Garmin, Academy Sports & Outdoors, America’s First Federal Credit Union, Sweet Home Alabama, Alabama Tourism Department, Alabama Mountain Lakes Tourist Association, T-H Marine Supplies, Wedowee Marine, Buffalo Rock, Mountain Dew, Jack’s, Fish Neely Henry Lake.com, Alabama Power Company, Lew’s Fishing, AFTCO, YETI, Power Pole, Big Bite Bait Company and E3 Apparel.

For information about Alabama Bass Trail and for complete tournament standings visit www.alabamabasstrail.org.

AJ Lucadamo and Bo Grovesnor Win HillCity Bassmasters Lake Anna June 8th 2019

First Place and Biggest Fish was won by AJ Lucadamo and Bo Grovesnor with 14 lbs 2 oz and 3 lbs 12 oz!

Second Place was won today by Josh Ashley with 6 lbs 12 oz!

Kevin Fitzgerald and Bert Fitzgerald came in Third Place today with 5 lbs and 14 oz!

 

Mark Cooper & Steve Roberts Win Angler’s Choice Kerr Lake June 8,2019

What a way to end the 2019 Angler’s Choice T.T.on Kerr lake. With 115 boats competing for their chance to take home $3,000. Congratulations to Steve Roberts & Mark Cooper on their five fish weighing 17.93 lbs. Check out photos & an interview with the winner’s bellow.

CLICK HERE TO SEE FULL RESULTS

We hope to Have Standings posted soon

Bass Edge – THE EDGE Episode 302 Joseph Webster

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Bass Edge Radio interviews FLW Tour Pro Joseph Webster as the featured angler on the latest podcast presented by Megaware KeelGuard.  Show hosts Aaron Martin and Kurt Dove discuss with Joseph his fishing roots, his secrets to success on the FLW Tour and how you can follow in his footsteps!

Unmasking the “Unnamed Bladed Jig”

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Unmasking the “Unnamed Bladed Jig”

In bass circles, it’s become a something of running wise-crack. You might think of it along the lines of that secret spot your buddies call Lake X—so hot for big fish you simply can’t let the cat out of the bag. Except, this one’s a lure, not a lake.

Conspicuous by the absence of an actual brand name, something called an unnamed bladed jig has recently racked up mega bucks on the FLW, BASS and Major League Fishing tours. In a pastime rife with pseudo-hype and over-exaggerations, this one stands apart as the real deal—a lure that’s lived up to the propaganda, even exceeded it.

Consider the following intel from recent tournament coverage:

Referring to the bait cast by the 2019 Bassmaster Classic champion, tournament coverage included the following excerpt: “A key lure on Championship Sunday was a 3/8-ounce unnamed bladed jig, chartreuse white, with an unnamed pearl white, fluke-style trailer.”

In the days following the Classic, press and fan commentary had all arrived at the same conclusion: the unnamed bladed jig was a Z-Man ChatterBait JackHammer. One article focused specifically on the “mystery lure” and the far-from-uncommon phenomenon of anglers glossing over certain successful, non-sponsor lures, while on stage.

In tournament circles, the Z-Man ChatterBait JackHammer has become known as the “unnamed bladed jig.”

At the 2018 Classic, a rare candid moment unfolded when Gerald Swindle announced: “I caught every bass this week on a half-ounce ChatterBait, the JackHammer. I’m not sponsored by ‘em; I paid fifteen-ninety-nine a piece for ‘em, just like y’all do. I got about eleven-hundred dollar’s worth of them; I won’t lie to you.” Swindle wasn’t alone, as numerous other Classic contenders wielded what had become the hottest unidentified bait in bass fishing circles.

And in February 2019, Stage One winner of the MLF Bass Pro Tour at Lake Kissimmee, FL used an unnamed “bladed jig.” Once again, fans and fishing pundits speculated the lure to be a ChatterBait JackHammer.

“A Different Way to Make a Lure Wiggle”

It all started when Ron Davis, a creative lure designer from Rock Hill, South Carolina, added high-level action and vibration to a larger-profile, weighted jig. Davis drew his inspiration from the Walker Special, a vibrating lure resembling the pull-top on an old aluminum can, circa 1960. His original, admirable intent was to create “a different way to make a lure wiggle.”

Finally, in 1998, Davis engineered a unique way to attach a hex-shaped blade directly to a jig. Things began to click. Davis and his son Ron Davis Jr. sold 5,000 of their new “ChatterBaits” under the Rad Lures brand. After winning tournaments in 2005 and 2006, Bryan Thrift divulged his secret, chosen baits for the first time. ChatterBait sales skyrocketed to 25,000 lures, and when orders eclipsed six figures and projections exceeded 2 million, the Davises decided to sell its designs to Z-Man Fishing in 2008.

Perhaps it was inevitable that ChatterBait reproductions arrived, slowly at first, then en masse, as numerous tackle companies attempted to cash in on the success of a truly original and stunningly effective design.

Major League Fishing pro Luke Clausen details subtle differences between bladed bass jigs.

The Critical Connection

Recognizing the lure’s exceptional engineering early on, Davis successfully attained patent protection for his ChatterBait—a patent that has been preserved by Z-Man Fishing to this day. The key to the lure’s action, vibration, sound and ultimately, its efficacy, points directly to the blade-to-jig connection. According to the Davises, the lure’s driving force remains a thin, hex-shaped, bent blade, attached to a weighted hook in such a way as to restrict the blade’s oscillation.

“I’ve been throwing ChatterBaits since 2004,” says Thrift, a talented touring pro with ten FLW tournament wins and over $2.5-million in career earnings. “When I won at Okeechobee in 2006, the fish had never seen (the ChatterBait) before; it was just unimaginable the big fish I caught with the bait down there.”

Thrift and others believe the key to the ChatterBait’s big bass allure points directly to Davis’ design. “The direct connection between the blade and the jig restricts the blade’s movement and provides a side-to-side stopping point,” notes Thrift.

“I think most anglers know, by now, that if you put a split ring between the blade and the hook, it’s going to change the action dramatically, and drastically reduce the bait’s vibration,” believes Daniel Nussbaum, president of Z-Man Fishing. “In essence, a lure with a split ring isn’t a ChatterBait.

“A ChatterBait simply generates a totally different sound and vibration that you feel up and down the rod,” says Thrift. “Bass respond to it like no other vibrating bait you’ll fish.

“The other key thing that happens is the sound the lure makes as the blade repeatedly collides with the head. After a while, you get a unique paint wear pattern and the sound changes to a lower frequency, duller thud. Each ChatterBait version, from the original to the Project Z to the JackHammer all give off slightly different action and frequency vibration.”

The JackHammer, for example, is built with a flat-bottom, low-center-of-gravity head with a specialized channel groove for blade protection. “The JackHammer and the Project Z ChatterBait are both super-tuned lures that start vibrating and pulsing with the very first turn of the reel handle,” says Thrift.

The direct blade-to-jig connection is key to the success of the ChatterBait bladed jig.

Project Z

Interestingly, while the JackHammer continues to garner “unnamed” headlines and tournament wins, both Thrift and Major League Fishing Tour angler Luke Clausen rely on an alternative Z-Man bait, the Project Z.

“People see the price tags of the two lures and think the JackHammer must be better, which isn’t necessarily the case,” believes Thrift.

“The Project Z is maybe the first perfect ChatterBait ever made,” he asserts. “It’s got a high-level Mustad UltraPoint hook, and an awesome skirt and keeper. Also allows me to quickly and easily change the skirt if I need to. I can even mix and match blade colors so I can fish white/chartreuse with a gold blade in dirty water or green pumpkin with a gold blade in other conditions.

“What separates the lure from other ChatterBaits is that I can slow roll it past cover and then burn it back. It moves with a darting, hunting action, back-and-forth. I also use it a lot on offshore structure or ledges. Let it go to bottom and then rip it with the rod and let it flutter back. I’ve caught lots of bass on the Project Z bait down to 25 feet of water.”

Meanwhile, Clausen prefers the larger profile of the Project Z ChatterBait, and the fact he can fish it faster, burning it across shallow cover. “In clear or cold water, I’ll sometimes remove the skirt and replace it with a Jerk ShadZ for a realistic baitfish profile.

“The blade swings wide and wobbles a little more slowly, producing a nice deep, low frequency vibration. The blade doesn’t contact the jighead, but doesn’t have to, because the lure thumps so much. The Project Z bait is sort of a hidden gem among Z-Man’s ChatterBait line. It’s my favorite ChatterBait, hands-down— versatile enough to mimic a bluegill, shad or a crayfish.”

Big bass magic. Money winner. Unnamed bladed jig. Whatever you choose to call it, there can be but one original ChatterBait.

lan Fletcher & Donald Hinson Win Lake Wateree, SC June 1, 2019

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Next Wateree CATT is Saturday June 8 at Clearwater Cove Marina!

Allen Fletcher & Donald Hinson brought in 17.91 lbs and win $860.00!

Wesley & Bubba Jackson took 2nd with 16.89 lbs!

Mike King & Mike Traynum was 3rd!

Scott Floyd with the BF at 5.36 lbs!

Scott with his Academy Gift Card!

Wateree June 1, 2019
Summer Qualifier #2
Big Total Total
17 Teams Fish Weight Winnings Points
Allen Fletcher – Donald Hinson 4.48 17.91 $860.00 110
Bubba Jackson – Wesley Jackson 4.32 16.89 $210.00 109
Mike King – Mike Traynum 4.35 16.83 $90.00 108
Scott Floyd – Bob Weaver 5.72 16.49 $112.00 107
Bobby Purvis – Matt Ross 4.89 16.14 106
Chad Gainey – Mack Kitchens 3.90 15.81 105
Jason Quinn – John Paul George 4.80 15.33 104
Lee Morris – Robert Ross 4.05 14.96 $48.00 103
Chad Rabon – Walt Almond 3.99 14.52 102
Max Price – Butch Williams 3.39 13.08 101
Jimmy McFarlnad – Calvin Griggs 5.36 13.06 100
Toby Robson – Randy Robson 3.45 12.22 99
Greg Sigmon 3.15 11.55 98
Paul Wells- Donald Wells 0.00 9.25 97
Jason Bateman – Steve Phillips 3.44 7.85 96
David Canupp & David Canupp 0.00 0.00 95
Michael Ard – Seth Ard 0.00 0.00 95
Total Entrys $1,360.00
BONUS $ $375.00
Total Paid At Ramp $1,320.00
Wateree 2019 Summer Final Fund $380.00
2020 CATT Championship $35.00
2019 Wateree Summer Final Fund Total $620.00
2019 CATT Championship Fund Total $1,180.00

MURRAY STATE UNIVERSITY WINS YETI FLW COLLEGE FISHING NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP ON POTOMAC RIVER PRESENTED BY LOWRANCE

MURRAY STATE UNIVERSITY WINS YETI FLW COLLEGE FISHING NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP ON POTOMAC RIVER PRESENTED BY LOWRANCE

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CHARLES COUNTY, Md. (June 6, 2019) – The Murray State University duo of Adam Puckett and Blake Albertson, both of Bloomington, Indiana, weighed a five-bass limit Thursday totaling 15 pounds, 8 ounces, to win the 2019 YETI FLW College Fishing National Championship on the Potomac River presented by Lowrance. The win earned the team a $50,000 prize package, including a new Ranger Z175 boat with a 115-horsepower Evinrude or Mercury outboard and automatic entry into the 2019 FLW Cup, the world championship of bass fishing.

The Racer duo’s three-day total of 15 bass weighing 51-3 gave them the win by a slim 3-ounce margin – the smallest margin of victory in FLW College Fishing history. Tristan McCormick and Dakota Pierce from Tennessee’s Bethel University finished second with 15 bass weighing 51-0.

“I’m absolutely speechless right now,” said Albertson, a junior majoring in business administration. “This whole week could not have gone any better. It’s been unbelievable. We knew nothing about tidal water fisheries coming into this event. We came up here and really made it up as we went in practice, and everything just fell into place. This is just insane.”

“We landed everything, and everything went right this week,” added Puckett, a junior majoring in agricultural science technology. “We knew it was going to come down to ounces today, but that was way too close. I knew we were going to enjoy this tournament, but I had no idea that we were going to win.”

The duo spent the entire three-day tournament fishing in the same creek, a 200-yard stretch that they described as very shallow and having the “right” type of grass. They averaged around 20 keepers each day on Z-Man EverGreen Jack Hammer ChatterBaits – ½ ounce with a silver Gene Larew Sweet Swimmer for Albertson and a 3/8 ounce with a green-pumpkin-colored Lake Fork Live Magic Shad swimbait for Puckett. They also added a few keepers on a Yamamoto Senko (watermelon) and a Reaction Innovations Spicy Beaver (black and blue with purple).

“I probably could have got away with only having two poles with me all week,” said Albertson. “They just kept reloading.”

“For us, the key for fishing on the shore was high tide – the 30-minute window before and the 30-minutes after,” Puckett said. “There had to be water moving in order for us to get bit.”

Now the duo set their sights on the biggest tournament of their young careers – competing against the best anglers in the world this August at the FLW Cup on Lake Hamilton in Hot Springs, Arkansas.

“I was nervous coming into this tournament, I can’t imagine – heck, I’m already nervous thinking about that tournament,” Albertson went on to say. “I’m going to get on the phone as soon as we leave here and start doing some research tonight. I can’t wait.”

The top 10 teams on the Potomac River finished:

1st:  Murray State University – Adam Puckett and Blake Albertson, both of Bloomington, Ind., 15 bass, 51-3, $50,000 prize package
2nd:  Bethel University – Tristan McCormick, Burns, Tenn., and Dakota Pierce, Ava,  Mo., 15 bass, 51-0, $5,000
3rd:  Adrian College – Jarrett Martin, Gallipolis, Ohio, and Nickolas Marsh, Walled Lake, Mich., 15 bass, 49-7, $4,000
4th:  University of Montevallo – J.T. Russell, McCalla, Ala., 15 bass, 49-5, $3,000
5th:  Bethel University – Brian Pahl, Eureka, Mo., and John Coble Garrett, Union City, Tenn., 15 bass, 46-7, 2,000
6th:  Clemson University – Brady Waits, Abbeville, S.C., and Liam West, Greenville, S.C., 15 bass, 45-10
7th:  Auburn University – Julian Suero, Winter Park, Fla., and Anthony Vintson, Auburn, Ala., 15 bass, 45-4
8th:  Auburn University – Sean Murphy, Lutz, Fla., and William Phillips, Auburn, Ala., 15 bass, 43-12
9th:  West Virginia University – Nolan Minor, Charlottesville, Va., and Thomas Raines, Oxon Hill, Md., 15 bass, 41-7
10th:  Sam Houston State University – Dillon Harrell, New Caney, Texas, and Taylor Harp, Porter, Texas, 15 bass, 40-6

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

Overall there were 50 bass weighing 150 pounds, 7 ounces caught by the final 10 college teams Thursday. All 10 teams brought a five-bass limit to the scale.

The 2019 YETI FLW College Fishing National Championship on the Potomac River presented by Lowrance was hosted by the Charles County Board of Commissioners and Department of Recreation, Parks and Tourism and featured 148 of the top college bass-fishing teams from across the country competing in the internationally-televised no-entry fee tournament for a top prize of up to $50,000, including a new Ranger Z175 boat with a 115-horsepower Evinrude or Mercury outboard and automatic entry into the 2019 FLW Cup, the world championship of bass fishing, held August 9-11 on Lake Hamilton in Hot Springs, Arkansas.

Television coverage of the YETI FLW College Fishing National Championship will premiere in the fall of 2019. The Emmy-nominated “FLW” television show airs each Saturday night at 7 p.m. EST and is broadcast to more than 63 million cable, satellite and telecommunications households in the U.S., Canada and the Caribbean on the World Fishing Network (WFN), the leading entertainment destination and digital resource for anglers throughout North America. FLW television is also distributed internationally to FLW partner countries, including Canada, China, Italy, Korea, Mexico, Namibia, Portugal, South Africa, Spain and Zimbabwe.

YETI FLW College Fishing teams compete in three regular-season qualifying tournaments in one of five conferences – Central, Northern, Southern, Southeastern and Western. All participants must be registered, full-time students at a college, university or community college and members of a college fishing club that is recognized by their school. The top 10 teams from each division’s three regular-season tournaments and the top 20 teams from the annual FLW College Fishing Open advance to the FLW College Fishing National Championship. Additional teams will qualify for the National Championship if the field size in regular-season events exceeds 100 boats.

For complete details and updated information visit FLWFishing.com. For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow YETI FLW College Fishing on FLW’s social media outlets at FacebookTwitterInstagram and YouTube.

Wheeler Rolls to First Bass Pro Tour Win on Table Rock,Takes Home Bad Boy Mowers Stage Seven Presented by Covercraft Trophy

MLF pro Jacob Wheeler was able to run away with the Bad Boy Mowers Stage Seven Presented by Covercraft trophy
after capturing 56 Table Rock bass for a total of 84 pounds. It was his first MLF Bass Pro Tour victory.
Wheeler Rolls to First Bass Pro Tour Win on Table Rock,
Takes Home Bad Boy Mowers Stage Seven Presented by Covercraft Trophy

BRANSON, Mo. (June 5, 2019) – Jacob Wheeler has been in contention at several events this year, but one thing had eluded him: a Major League Fishing® (MLF) Bass Pro Tour win.
 
Until Wednesday.

Wheeler owned the Bass Pro Tour Bad Boy Mowers Stage Seven Presented by Covercraft. He was the story after the Shotgun Round with his record-setting pace, then after leading the Elimination Round, and again when he survived a midday boat swap to still finish eighth in Tuesday’s Knockout Round.

He remained in contention every day, and was able to run away with the win Wednesday after capturing 56 Table Rock bass for a total of 84 pounds, easily outdistancing Brandon Palaniuk’s 69-2.

Another Big Day for Wheeler

When time expired, Wheeler was visibly emotional after the realization that he won had set in. He finished second to Jacob Powroznik at Stage Three, and stated on MLF NOW! that he told himself if he was ever in the same situation, he would not let up. And he didn’t.
“The fishing was crazy good the first day (88 fish for 129-14), but I knew the pressure would get to them, so I had to change it up,” Wheeler said after his win.

Having to change boats during the Knockout Round was understandably stressful, but he overcame it.
Wheeler mixed it up with a variety of baits during the MLF Bass Pro Tour Championship Round to record the Stage Seven win on Table Rock.
“Today, it was great to be back in my boat and familiar with everything,” he recalled.
Several baits accounted for Wheeler’s fish this week. He fished a 3- and 4-inch white Storm Largo Shad swimbait, a Googan Baits Slim Shake Worm in Blue Baby on a shaky head, a morning dawn hand-poured worm on a drop-shot, and a Neko-rigged Googan Baits Lunker Log.

Palaniuk, Meyer, and Connell Fall Short

The top four anglers remained the same from late in Period 1 until time ran out. They swapped places several times, but it was mainly a chase for Wheeler throughout the day.
Brandon Palaniuk fished three lures to finish in second place: a Zoom Z-Swim swimbait, Zoom Trick Worm on a drop-shot, and a Storm Arashi topwater.

“Today when I caught a fish, the whole school would follow, and it took too long for them to get back and reset,” said the Idaho pro.

Meyer briefly held the lead today and then started to fall back in the standings before finally settling in 3rd with 67-06. “I just ran out of fish. My schools disappeared and the places I had left only had one or two fish on them,” he said.

Meyer did the majority of his damage this week with a Strike King Sexy Dawg topwater and 3.25″ Strike King Rage Swimmer swimbait.

Connell had a similar situation and ran out of fish.

“I didn’t have enough schools of fish and could only fish what I had been catching them on,” he said.

A Googan Baits Drag n Drop on a drop-shot, and a prototype Googan Baits swimbait were his one-two punch this week.

Ott Rallies Late

Late in the day, the standings from the previous day were nearly reversed as the top 3 from yesterday: VanDam, DeFoe, and Wiggins held onto 8th, 9th, and 10th.

DeFoe found himself in 9th but slowly made his way to 6th place and the additional money that came with it. He landed 30 bass for 54-5 on the day.

VanDam Falters

Along with Wheeler, VanDam was a significant player in Stage Seven after leading his group into the Elimination Round, and then as the second-highest finisher yesterday. He finished with 14 bass for 23-2, easily his lowest total of the week.

When asked what changed, VanDam said it simply came down to the conditions.

“Having no wind and no clouds hurt my bite,” he said.

Table Rock Was Great Again

The fishing was different this week with more fish relating to offshore cover, but it still kicked out plenty of bass. More records were set as Wheeler totaled 213 bass for 315-9 en route to his victory.

Daily Winners

Knockout Round daily awards were:
  • The Berkley Big Bass of the day was Ott DeFoe’s 4-6 largemouth
  • Wheeler won the Berkley Catch Count  award with 56 bass on the day
  • Wheeler’s 84-0 also won him the Phoenix Boats Daily Leader award
Championship Final Results

To see Championship final standings and to review all Stage Seven competition results, visit MajorLeagueFishing.com and click ” Results.”

MURRAY STATE TAKES CONTROL ON DAY TWO OF YETI FLW COLLEGE FISHING NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP ON POTOMAC RIVER PRESENTED BY LOWRANCE

MURRAY STATE TAKES CONTROL ON DAY TWO OF YETI FLW COLLEGE FISHING NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP ON POTOMAC RIVER PRESENTED BY LOWRANCE

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CHARLES COUNTY, Md. (June 5, 2019) – The Murray State University duo of Adam Puckett and Blake Albertson, both of Bloomington, Indiana, brought a five-bass limit to the stage Wednesday weighing 18 pounds, 14 ounces, to jump to the top of the leaderboard – after starting the day in seventh place – and now bring a 1-pound, 2-ounce, lead into the final day of the 2019 YETI FLW College Fishing National Championship on the Potomac River presented by Lowrance. The Racers’ two-day total of 10 bass weighing 35-11 has paced the 148-team field thus far, with Tennessee’s Bethel University right behind them in second place with 10 bass weighing 34-9.

The field is now cut to just the final 10 teams at the three-day event, hosted by the Charles County Board of Commissioners and Department of Recreation, Parks and Tourism, that featured the top college bass-fishing teams from across the nation competing in the internationally-televised no-entry fee tournament for a top prize of up to $50,000, including a new Ranger Z175 boat with a 115-horsepower Evinrude or Mercury outboard and automatic entry into the 2019 FLW Cup, the world championship of bass fishing, held August 9-11 on Lake Hamilton in Hot Springs, Arkansas.

“We fished the same spot today that we did on day one,” said Puckett, a junior majoring in agricultural science technology. “We only weighed in two fish on a ChatterBait yesterday, but today pretty much every one of them came on a ChatterBait in the grass.”

“It was a good day,” added Albertson, a junior majoring in business administration. “We caught around 15 keepers throughout the day. We had a limit pretty quick and were culling by 8:30 (a.m.)”

The duo described the main area that they were fishing as a flat creek with the “right” grass. They described the creek as being very susceptible to the tide.

“When it’s low tide, you can’t even get a boat in there,” said Puckett. “The fish have to come out and then reload every night. They did last night, so I’m hoping tomorrow that it reloads again.”

“There were three pretty good bags caught out of there today, but I believe that we should have the area to ourselves tomorrow,” said Albertson.

“It was one of those days were nothing went wrong and everything was going our way,” Puckett went on to say. “I made a cast out into the grass, had a backlash, and started pulling it out. It was really tangled, and when I finally got it pulled out and reeled in there was a 4½-pounder on it.”

The top 10 teams on the Potomac River that will advance to the final day of competition are:

1st:  Murray State University – Adam Puckett and Blake Albertson, both of Bloomington, Ind., 10 bass, 35-11
2nd:  Bethel University – Tristan McCormick, Burns, Tenn., and Dakota Pierce, Ava,  Mo., 10 bass, 34-9
3rd:  Bethel University – Brian Pahl, Eureka, Mo., and John Coble Garrett, Union City, Tenn., 10 bass, 32-2
4th:  Adrian College – Jarrett Martin, Gallipolis, Ohio, and Nickolas Marsh, Walled Lake, Mich., 10 bass, 31-15
5th:  University of Montevallo – J.T. Russell, McCalla, Ala., 10 bass, 31-9
6th:  Auburn University – Julian Suero, Winter Park, Fla., and Anthony Vintson, Auburn, Ala., 10 bass, 30-3
7th:  Clemson University – Brady Waits, Abbeville, S.C., and Liam West, Greenville, S.C., 10 bass, 29-14
8th:  West Virginia University – Nolan Minor, Charlottesville, Va., and Thomas Raines, Oxon Hill, Md., 10 bass, 29-7
9th:  Sam Houston State University – Dillon Harrell, New Caney, Texas, and Taylor Harp, Porter, Texas, 10 bass, 29-0
10th:  Auburn University – Sean Murphy, Lutz, Fla., and William Phillips, Auburn, Ala., 10 bass, 29-0

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

The State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry (SUNY-ESF) team of Patrick Durand and Benjamin Schultes was assessed a 2-pound penalty Wednesday for violation of FLW College Fishing rule No. 8 regarding personal flotation devices. The SUNY-ESF team finished the tournament with six bass totaling 17-11 and finished in 98th place.

Overall there were 568 bass weighing 1,454 pounds, 12 ounces caught by 136 college teams Wednesday. The catch included 87 five-bass limits.

The final 10 teams will take off from Smallwood State Park, located at 2750 Sweden Point Road in Marbury, at 7 a.m. EDT Thursday. Thursday’s championship weigh-in will be held at the State Park, beginning at 3 p.m. Takeoffs and weigh-ins are free and open to the public.

Television coverage of the YETI FLW College Fishing National Championship will premiere in the fall of 2019. The Emmy-nominated “FLW” television show airs each Saturday night at 7 p.m. EST and is broadcast to more than 63 million cable, satellite and telecommunications households in the U.S., Canada and the Caribbean on the World Fishing Network (WFN), the leading entertainment destination and digital resource for anglers throughout North America. FLW television is also distributed internationally to FLW partner countries, including Canada, China, Italy, Korea, Mexico, Namibia, Portugal, South Africa, Spain and Zimbabwe.

The popular FLW Live on-the-water program will air on Thursday, June 6, for the College Fishing National Championship. FLW Live features live action from the boats of the tournament’s top anglers each day. Host Travis Moran will be joined by FLW Tour pro Miles Burghoff and FLW emcee Chris Jones to break down the extended action from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. On-the-water broadcasts will be live streamed on FLWFishing.com, the FLW YouTube channel and the FLW Facebook page.

YETI FLW College Fishing teams compete in three regular-season qualifying tournaments in one of five conferences – Central, Northern, Southern, Southeastern and Western. All participants must be registered, full-time students at a college, university or community college and members of a college fishing club that is recognized by their school. The top 10 teams from each division’s three regular-season tournaments and the top 20 teams from the annual FLW College Fishing Open advance to the FLW College Fishing National Championship. Additional teams will qualify for the National Championship if the field size in regular-season events exceeds 100 boats.

For complete details and updated information visit FLWFishing.com. For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow YETI FLW College Fishing on FLW’s social media outlets at FacebookTwitterInstagram and YouTube.

ST. CROIX PROFILE: FLW Pro/STC Pro Staffer, Cody Hahner

 

ST. CROIX PROFILE:

 FLW Pro/STC Pro Staffer, Cody Hahner

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Park Falls, WI (June 4, 2019) – Cody Hahner, age 26, is one of the youngest St. Croix pro-staffers. An electrical worker from Wausau, Wisconsin with a penchant for muskies, Hahner is also an up-and-coming bass pro who broke onto the on the FLW Tour last year with a rousing rookie season. He cashed a few checks and qualified for the prestigious 2018 Forest Wood Cup.

 

Hahner came late to bass fishing, growing up – as many Midwesterners do – with a love of walleyes and a serious musky obsession. “It wasn’t until I learned that colleges had bass fishing clubs that I made the switch,” he recalls. “Once I realized I could fish and travel while still in school, I chose to attend the University of Wisconsin at Stevens Point, because they had a reputable team. Everything just snowballed from there.”

After graduating college and joining the FLW, Hahner got off to a fast start during his inaugural season. The sophomore jinx has him off to a slower beginning this year. Even so, Hahner remains determined to excel on the circuit.

“Nothing a little hard work can’t fix,” he says without hesitation. “I’ll probably head home at some point and fish for bass and musky on my home waters. Once I start figuring out those fish, I’ll be back fishing the trail with renewed confidence. I absolutely love the competition in bass fishing, but taking an occasional breather to simply focus on the fun of fishing is one trick I use to refresh and get back in the groove.”

That’s some wise thinking. Even at a relatively young age, Hahner is displaying some of the traits most successful veteran pros seem to have in common, including a passion for hard work and a willingness to adjust and try new approaches. He’s also really serious about choosing his fishing rods.

“These are your main tools,” he says pointedly, “so you need high quality, durability and sensitivity and a fair price,” he explains. “That’s one reason I like St. Croix Rods. They have the right tools for so many specific tasks, and yet many can also cross over from one technique to another. That gives me the flexibility and versatility to really stay in the game.”

Take largemouth bass, for example. Hahner points to a 7’ 4” medium-heavy moderate Mojo Bass Glass casting rod as his all-around favorite. “It’s a crankbait rod that can also be used for chatterbaits,” he notes. “It’s comfortable to hold, super accurate, has significant backbone and loads with a slight delay, which is perfect for lures that require the fish to really get a good hold before the hook is set.”

For bronzebacks, Hahner prefers a 7’ 6, medium-light, extra-fast Legend Elite series rod, noting it’s super-sensitive and perfect for throwing spy baits and hair jigs. “Even with the spy baits, which have tiny treble hooks, when I stick a fish on that rod it stays buttoned,” he says.

As for those muskies, Hahner is dialed in on two preferred choices. He likes a 9’ Premier extra-heavy rod for tossing large rubber baits like Lake X Tullibees and Lake X Toads. For working slow-moving big plastics and blade baits, however, his choice is an 8’6” extra-heavy fast Mojo Musky series rod.

For other millennial anglers hoping to join the pro fishing trail, St. Croix’s young pro-staffer offers three simple tips:

“First, don’t fret too much about the business end of things, that will mostly take care of itself as you get established. Second, be genuine to those you meet. Doing so will help you go a lot further in this sport than you otherwise might. Lastly, get on the water as much as you can to continue gaining experience and learning from your mistakes. That’s how the best pros get ahead and stay there.”

 

That’s sage advice from a budding professional who’s already wiser than his years.