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New Z-Man® SlingBladeZ™ spinnerbait engineered for exceptional sound and stability

Wired for Aquatic Acoustics

New Z-Man® SlingBladeZ™ spinnerbait engineered for exceptional sound and stability 

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LADSON, SC (July 9, 2018) – There’s nothing conventional about the way Bassmaster Elite Series pro Luke Clausen wields a spinnerbait. “I almost never just throw a spinnerbait out and wind it straight back to the boat,” says Clausen, one of only four anglers to win both an FLW Tour Championship and a Bassmaster Classic.

Clausen’s individualistic approach to his blade game goes far in explaining the radical new spinnerbait he spent the last year designing and perfecting, in concert with the luresmiths at Z-Man Fishing. “I actually won a lot of tournament money last season while testing and tweaking prototypes of the SlingBladeZ,” Clausen recalls. “It’s probably the coolest spinnerbait I’ve fished.”

Armed with a collection of subtle yet super-intelligent features, the Z-Man® SlingBladeZ™ spinnerbait boasts two primary talents: deep, palpable vibrations and exceptional lure balance across the full spectrum of retrieve speeds.

“First thing that will wow anglers about the SlingBladeZ is its intense vibration,” notes Clausen. “You’re going to feel that rhythmic thumping right up the line, through the reel and into your hands. Fished on fluorocarbon, you can almost hear it.”

Rather than going the easy route with cookie-cutter blades and off-the-shelf wire, Clausen and Z-Man approached the design process with a completely clean slate.

“We worked with expert metallurgists who guided us toward 17-7 stainless steel wire,” says Z-Man president Daniel Nussbaum. “Initially, everyone told us to use ‘piano wire’ because of its purported vibration transmission. Turns out, piano wire is not stainless, so it’s fairly useless in water, and it’s also quite brittle.

“We discovered the 17-7 wire delivers superior reverberation. It’s a high grade stainless steel wire with excellent strength and resiliency, as well. (Clausen caught over 30 big smallmouths on a single bait last year before the wire finally succumbed.) Also, our wire is intentionally not electroplated, giving it a muted, neutral finish that blends in rather than standing out.”

Riding on the SlingBladeZ’s low-vis LiveWire™ frame, double willow or tandem willow-Colorado blades are each stamped from custom dies and electroplated with a jeweler-quality finish. “Z-Man cuts the blades and stamps them with a lower pitch than conventional blades,” says Clausen. “I love these blades, because they swing nice and wide on the retrieve, vibrating harder and offering just enough water resistance to let you know they’re doing their job. I think they also flash a bit more than other blades I’ve used.”

Equally impressive, says Clausen, is the bait’s balance, moving through the water in an always-upright, keel-straight stature. “The bait’s head is fully customized. It’s the first spinnerbait I’ve seen with a grooved underbelly that eliminates the frustrating rolling-over habit of other baits.”

Z-Man’s StabilTrack™ head design channels water across the underside of the bait, playing along special side flanges and providing total stability, even when retrieved at higher speeds. “This bait even lets me do an extra-slow-roll retrieve in which the wide base of the head sits right on the bottom without snagging or rolling over. Try that with your standard spinnerbait.”

Closer dissection of the SlingBladeZ spinnerbait reveals more subtle refinements. Just forward of the StabilTrack head, the wire takes a decided though slight turn, entering the nose at a parallel angle.

“Seems insignificant, right? Actually, this little tweak gives the lure even more stability,” notes Clausen. “And it works to effectively push grass away from the hook and move the bait back to straight after contacting cover.”

Creating the perfect flare effect, the SlingBladeZ’s 100-percent silicone skirt adheres tightly to the head with hand-tied copper wire (unlike flimsy rubber bands, copper doesn’t break). Beneath its vigorous skirt, a wire trailer keeper pins soft ElaZtech baits and traditional plastics securely to the lure’s 5/0 VMC® O’Shaughnessy hook. Clausen says hook selection also occurred only after extensive testing.

“No doubt in my mind, a premium O’Shaughnessy hook tags and keeps more fish buttoned down that a standard round bend. It’s one detail that’s easy to overlook, but that will also yield more bass in the boat.”

Still, the question remains: if he rarely retrieves a spinnerbait straight and steady, how exactly does Clausen fish the SlingBladeZ? “I’m a big fan of dressing this spinnerbait with a Z-Man Swimmin’ TroutTrick. It’s a nice streamlined trailer with less bulk. Lets the skirt lay back and flare naturally, while the bait runs true. Love burning a ¾-ouncer for big smallmouths. But I always add in random stops and quick-starts, which can produce different vibrations. At the 2017 Bassmaster Elite on the St. Lawrence River, every big smallmouth I weighed absolutely stomped on this bait.”

Clausen adds that he prefers the tandem willow-Colorado blade configuration in dirty water, especially in spring and during shad spawns. Into the summer, as water warms, Clausen opts for the double willow blades and goes with dramatic boosts in retrieve speed.

Debuting at the 2018 ICAST show, the Z-Man SlingBladeZ Spinnerbait hits tackle stores in mid-October. Offered in double-willow leaf or tandem willow-Colorado blade versions, the SlingBladeZ debuts in three sizes — 3/8- and ½-ounce (MSPR $7.99) and ¾-ounce (MSRP $8.99), each available in eight dynamic color patterns. Visit www.zmanfishing.com for more information.

Western Swing, Three New Venues Highlight 2019 Bassmaster Elite Series Schedule

 

The 2019 Bassmaster Elite Series schedule features three, first-time destinations including the Columbia River out of Tri-Cities, Wash.

Photo courtesy of Kim Fetrow Photography

July 9, 2018

Western Swing, Three New Venues Highlight 2019 Bassmaster Elite Series Schedule

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BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Since the Bassmaster Elite Series made a two-week trip to the West Coast back in 2015, fans of the sport have been clamoring for the world’s premier bass fishing circuit to return to that region.

Now, they’re about to get their wish.

B.A.S.S. officials unveiled an action-packed 2019 Elite Series schedule today that includes a Western swing in mid-June with back-to-back trips to Sacramento, Calif., for an event on the California Delta and to Tri-Cities, Wash., for a tournament on the Columbia River.

The Columbia River will be one of three first-time destinations for the Elite Series, along with Lake Lanier in Georgia and Lake Hartwell in South Carolina.

“We couldn’t be happier with the schedule we’ve put together for 2019,” said B.A.S.S. CEO Bruce Akin. “This lineup of events will be exciting and challenging for our anglers — and for fans of the sport, it literally has something to offer from coast to coast.”

The slate will have a familiar kickoff venue, as the Elite Series returns Feb. 7-10 to the St. Johns River in Palatka, Fla. — the site of the 2016 season opener where Missouri superstar Rick Clunn recorded one of the more memorable victories in B.A.S.S. history. Just four months shy of his 70th birthday, Clunn brought 31 pounds, 7 ounces of bass to the scales during the semifinal round and eventually became the oldest angler to win an Elite Series event with a four-day total of 81-15.

The St. Johns River has been a regular destination for B.A.S.S., with the organization visiting 20 times for major events since 1973.

From Florida, the schedule will shift to Lake Lanier in Gwinnett, Ga., Feb. 14-17 — a venue that has hosted eight major B.A.S.S. tournaments since 1983, but never an Elite Series event. The 37,000-acre fishery on the Chattahoochee River has long been known for producing giant spotted bass.

Takeoffs and the first two daily weigh-ins will be at Lanier Park, one of Georgia’s famed Mega Ramps. The Bassmaster Expo, along with the semifinal and final weigh-ins will be held at Coolray Field in Lawrenceville, Ga., home of Gwinnett Stripers, the Triple-A affiliate of the Atlanta Braves.

After Lanier, the regular-season schedule will pause for the 2019 Bassmaster Classic presented by DICK’S Sporting Goods in Knoxville, Tenn., March 15-17. When the slate resumes April 4-7, it will move to another venue that is new for the Elite Series slate, but very familiar to many anglers on the circuit — Lake Hartwell in Anderson, S.C.

Located on the Georgia/South Carolina border, Hartwell has hosted five major B.A.S.S. events, including three Classics. This year’s Classic was held on the lake in mid-March and drew 143,323 fans — a record for the Super Bowl of Bass Fishing.

The circuit will remain in South Carolina, shifting to the coastal estuary of Winyah Bay in Georgetown, April 11-14. Winyah Bay, which is the confluence of the Waccamaw River, the Pee Dee River, the Black River and the Sampit River in Georgetown County, hosted an Elite Series event in 2016 — a tournament that drew one of the largest crowds in Elite Series history with 27,500 people taking in the action.

The move toward the West will begin May 2-5 with the annual Toyota Bassmaster Texas Fest benefiting Texas Parks & Wildlife Department. The fishery and host community for that event will be announced at a later date.

On May 16-19, the Elite Series returns to Fort Gibson Lake in Oklahoma. The 19,900-acre fishery has hosted three major B.A.S.S. tournaments, including a 2010 Elite Series event that was won by Oklahoma’s Tommy Biffle.

The Cherokee Casino Tahlequah will be the title sponsor and host of the tournament, and weigh-ins for days 3 and 4, along with the Bassmaster Expo, will be at the casino.

From there, it’ll be time to head for the West Coast, as the schedule shifts to Sacramento, Calif., and the California Delta on June 13-16. The takeoff site will be at Discovery Park in Sacramento, in the center of good bass fishing waters. But if history serves, most anglers will make the 90-minute run down the Sacramento River to the bass fishing paradise that is the California Delta.

In 2015, California native turned Alabama resident Justin Lucas recorded his first-ever Elite Series victory by making that same run.

The pros will then travel up the West Coast to another first-time Elite Series destination, the Columbia River in Tri-Cities, Wash., on June 20-23. The Columbia is one of the more diverse fisheries in the United States, with large annual runs of chinook and coho salmon, trophy-sized steelhead and excellent fishing for largemouth and smallmouth bass.

B.A.S.S. has visited the Columbia River for four Bass Pro Shops Bassmaster Opens in the past — but not since 2003 and never for an Elite Series event. Tournament Director Trip Weldon said the thought of making yet another new stop on the Elite Series is exciting.

“As we’ve seen this year with trips to Lake Travis in Texas and Lake Oahe in South Dakota, it’s a great thrill to hold a tournament on a lake that is basically unknown to most of the Elite anglers,” Weldon said. “An event like the one on the Columbia River will certainly be challenging for our anglers, but it’ll be exciting as well — and it will provide a very level playing field.”

The Toyota Bassmaster Angler of the Year race will be coming down the stretch when the Western swing is over, and the regular season will conclude at what has become one of the Elite Series’ signature settings — the St. Lawrence River in Waddington, N.Y.

The event, which is scheduled for Aug. 15-18, will mark the fifth time in seven years the Elite Series has visited the Village of Waddington — and the fans have never failed to turn out in big numbers. The tournament drew a B.A.S.S.-record 34,100 people in 2013, then 31,600 in 2015 and 32,800 in 2017.

“We’ve had a great relationship with the Village of Waddington, and the events we’ve held on the St. Lawrence River have been some of our most successful ever,” Akin said. “Every time we visit there, we’re greeted by huge crowds and excellent hospitality.”

The dates and locations for the Elite Series’ annual postseason events — the Toyota Bassmaster Angler of the Year tournament and the Bassmaster Classic Bracket Tournament — will be announced at a later date.

Date Event Fishery City, State
Feb. 7-10 Elite 1 St. Johns River Palatka, Fla.
Feb. 14-17 Elite 2 Lake Lanier Gwinnett, Ga.
March 15-17 Bassmaster Classic Tennessee River Knoxville, Tenn.
April 4-7 Elite 3 Lake Hartwell Anderson, S.C.
April 11-14 Elite 4 Winyah Bay Georgetown, S.C.
May 2-5 Toyota Texas Fest TBA TBA
May 16-19 Elite 6 Fort Gibson Lake Tahlequah, Okla.
June 13-16 Elite 7 California Delta Sacramento, Calif.
June 20-23 Elite 8 Columbia River Tri-Cities, Wash.
Aug. 15-18 Elite 9 St. Lawrence River Waddington, N.Y.
TBA AOY Championship TBA TBA
TBA Classic Bracket TBA TBA

 

Carolina Rig Retrieves: Breaking Downs Ways To Fish A Classic Rig

Carolina Rig Retrieves: Breaking Downs Ways To Fish A Classic Rig

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Knowing how to fish a Carolina rig maybe simple to some but it also can pay off to take a more tactical approach to this classic technique. in getting bit in this classic technique.  Dragging a Carolina rig along the bottom is one of the most productive methods for catching bass throughout the year. However this technique becomes even more effective if you vary your retrieve depending on the type of cover and bottom structure you are targeting. You have to experiment to see how the fish want your Carolina-rigged lure presented, so here are four retrieves to try based on the cover and structure you are fishing.

How To Fish A Carolina Rig: Steady Dragging

carolina rig fishing

When keying on barren red clay points or sand bars, just drag the rig along the bottom at a steady pace. Make a long cast, then steadily reel in the rig while keeping your rod tip low, which allows you to keep the rig’s sinker constantly bumping the bottom and stirring up sand and silt.

Since you are dragging through an area devoid of cover you can use a longer leader (3 feet) without having to worry about hanging up.

Sweep And Snap

For about three quarters of your retrieve, sweep your rod along at the 10 o’clock position to keep your rig in close contact with the bottom. When your rig gets close to the boat, snap your rod to about 12 o’clock to jerk a 3/4-ounce sinker and lure off the bottom. After letting the rig fall back to the bottom, hop it again and let it fall. If bass are following the lure crawling along the bottom, the fish will strike when it is hopped at the end of the  retrieve because the hopping action resembles a fleeing crawfish.

How To Fish A Carolina Rig: Pop Over Rocks

By using a short leader (14 inches to 2 feet), you can pop your rig over rocks to prevent it from snagging along rock bottoms. The erratic hopping action of this retrieve triggers strikes from bass clinging to the rocks.

Bang And Shake

How To Carolina Rig

When working a rig through standing timber, you can rely on about the same retrieve as popping the rocks, except switch to a 3-foot leader and add a little shake to your presentation. Cast past the timber and let the rig fall back towards the target. When the sinker touches a limb, tighten your line, bang the weight into the limb a couple of times and shake the lure for 10 to 15 seconds. Then jerk the sinker over the limb and let it fall to the next snag where you repeat the process

 The Carolina Rig in Two Minutes:

Ready To Catch Some Fish?

mystery-tackle-boxGear up and catch more fish! With a Mystery Tackle Box Subscription, you’ll get a box of baits hand delivered to your door each month. In addition to the best new baits you’ll have access to our expert tips, how-to videos, fishing decals, MTB exclusive baits, and more. With baits up to 40% off retail, this is one service every angler needs to try!

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Drop Shot Smallmouth Tips: Where, When & How

Drop Shot Smallmouth Tips: Where, When & How

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We’ve put together the best drop shot smallmouth tips to help you catch more fish this season. Since coming over from Japan in the early 2000’s, the drop shot has become a staple for anglers fishing deep water. It offers a completely different look than other bottom presentations, and can be effective when many other presentations fail. By moving the bait off the bottom and above the weight, the drop shot creates a much more subtle action that really appeals to finicky bass.

Smallmouth are particularly susceptible to the drop shot, as they spend a lot of time in deeper water where the drop shot is most effective. They can also be spooky at times, and it doesn’t get more finesse than the drop shot.

Here’s the when, where, and how for catching smallmouth on a drop shot.

Drop Shot Smallmouth: When

All year long. Really, the drop shot is one of the most effective presentations no matter when you’re fishing for smallmouth. It’s deadly in cold water, dynamite mid-summer when the fish are roaming deep structure, and it’s also a killer bed fishing presentation. The only time a drop shot may not be ideal is in a river system when the water is really dirty, or around thick vegetation.

Drop Shot Smallmouth: Where

Although you can use a drop shot effectively in shallow water (think bed fishing), the bread and butter for throwing a drop shot is on deep structure like humps, points, road beds, break lines, and over manmade cover like cribs or brush piles. If there is rocks or wood on any of these structures, even better. Look for baitfish on your electronics as well, because finding out what depth the bait is at will typically help you narrow a depth that the smallmouth are at.

Drop Shot Smallmouth: How

The drop shot is one of the most versatile presentations there is, and as long as it’s in the water you’re effectively fishing. If you’re covering water, make long casts and drag or hop it back to the boat. It’s also deadly when fished with a vertical presentation, like over the top of brush, isolated boulders, or for suspended bass. Adjust your leader length for the conditions. When casting/dragging, opt for a longer leader of up to two feet. When fishing vertical, shorten your leader down to eight or ten inches. Experiment with different shakes, hops, and drags and let the fish tell you what they want.

Rig A Drop Shot In Two Minutes:

Ready To Catch Some Fish?

mystery-tackle-boxGear up and catch more fish! With a Mystery Tackle Box Subscription, you’ll get a box of baits hand delivered to your door each month. In addition to the best new baits you’ll have access to our expert tips, how-to videos, fishing decals, MTB exclusive baits, and more. With baits up to 40% off retail, this is one service every angler needs to try!

Learn More

Pickwick Lake Announced As The Site For 2018 B.A.S.S. Nation Championship

The 2018 Academy Sports + Outdoors B.A.S.S. Nation Championship presented by Magellan Outdoors will be held on Alabama’s Pickwick Lake, Nov. 8-10. Caleb Sumrall, who is now an Elite Series rookie, won the title last year and a berth to compete in the 2018 GEICO Bassmaster Classic presented by DICK’S Sporting Goods. 

Photo by Gettys Brannon/B.A.S.S.

July 6, 2018

Pickwick Lake Announced As The Site For 2018 B.A.S.S. Nation Championship

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BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — The Academy Sports + Outdoors B.A.S.S. Nation Championship presented by Magellan Outdoors features a field as diverse as any you’ll find in bass fishing.

It’s not unusual for a boater from North Carolina to be paired with a nonboater from California or Oregon on the first day. Then on Day 2, that same boater might be paired with someone from Australia or Japan.

No matter where they’re from, this year’s B.A.S.S. Nation Championship venue should offer a little something to make them all feel right at home.

B.A.S.S. officials announced today that Pickwick Lake — a 43,000-acre Tennessee River fishery that sports excellent populations of both largemouth and smallmouth bass — will host the annual year-end event, which is scheduled for Nov. 8-10. More than 125 anglers will take off from McFarland Park in Florence each competition day at 6 a.m. CT. Weigh-ins will be held at the same location at 2 p.m.

“We’re really excited to be having the Championship at a venue with as much to offer as Pickwick Lake,” said Jon Stewart, director of the B.A.S.S. Nation, which has chapters in 47 states, nine countries and the province of Ontario. “When you go to Pickwick — especially during that really good stretch in the fall — you never know what it’s going to take to win.

“You’d better have a plan going in, plus a backup plan and a second backup plan — and you’d better consider largemouth and smallmouth because they’re both usually going to play.”

Pickwick has been the site of numerous B.A.S.S. events, dating back to the early 1980s. Former pro angler and current Bassmaster LIVE host Davy Hite of South Carolina won a Bassmaster Elite Series event on the lake in 2011 with a four-day total of 84 pounds, 9 ounces.

The fishery’s historical significance makes it a fitting venue for the Championship, considering the tremendous effect the event has on the pro-fishing world each year.

The Top 3 finishers from the Championship will earn a spot in the 2019 Bassmaster Classic presented by DICK’S Sporting Goods, which is set for March 15-17 in Knoxville, Tenn. The list of anglers who qualified for the Bassmaster Classic through the Nation Championship at the start of their careers includes Idaho’s Brandon Palaniuk, New Jersey’s Michael Iaconelli and Connecticut’s Paul Mueller.

The Top 3 finishers from the Nation Championship will receive the “Nation’s Best” package, which includes paid entry fees into the Bass Pro Shops Bassmaster Opens division of their choice in 2019 and the use of a fully rigged Phoenix boat for the year.

The overall winner of the Championship will also receive an invitation to fish the 2019 Bassmaster Elite Series. Last year’s Nation Championship winner, Caleb Sumrall of Louisiana, is currently fishing the Elite Series and has finished in the money at four of seven events this season.

“There may still be some people out there who don’t realize what a big event the B.A.S.S. Nation Championship really is,” said B.A.S.S. CEO Bruce Akin. “It allows anglers from all over the world to showcase their abilities — and for the top finishers, it could truly be a life-changing thing.”

Pickwick is nationally known for producing giant smallmouth, including the 8-pound, 3-ounce behemoth caught by Bassmaster Opens angler Sam George earlier this year that now ranks as his personal best.

Besides having both major species of black bass, the lake offers a variety of terrain — from shallow backwater areas to creek channels to main-river scenarios that require anglers to read and rely on current.

“I fished a club tournament there in early December one year, and there were as many big largemouth caught as smallmouth,” Stewart said. “I think the top finishers will have to have both — and they’ll have to have a couple of different patterns working.

“When you consider all of that and then the great history and reputation of Pickwick, the tournament should really be a lot of fun.”

The Florence/Lauderdale Convention and Visitors Bureau will host the event.

“Florence/Lauderdale CVB is excited to host the 2018 Academy Sports + Outdoors B.A.S.S. Nation Championship,” said Suzie Shoemaker, manager sport/event sales for Florence/Lauderdale CVB. “Anglers from all over the world will vie to be the B.A.S.S. Nation Champion of Pickwick Lake in November!”

For more information, visit Bassmaster.com.

DJ McEachern & Jeremiah Jenson! Win CATT Lake Murray Open with 18.62 lbs June 30th!

Next Lake Murray CATT Open is July 28th at Dreher Island!

1st Place DJ McEachern & Jeremiah Jenson! 18.62 lbs!

2nd Place Rhett Manus & Doug Lown 1st BF!

Meredith Haivard & Phillip Anderson with some nice uns!

Legend Glass series adds the perfect spinning rod for smaller crankbaits and lighter line

 

St. Croix Starts Spinning Glass

Legend Glass series adds the perfect spinning rod for smaller crankbaits and lighter line

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Park Falls, WI (July 6, 2018) — America’s most eccentric rod engineers have struck again, answering the call for a spinning version of the immensely popular Legend Glass.

St. Croix’s Legend Glass rod series took home top freshwater rod honors at ICAST 2016 for blending classic fiberglass feel to modern IPC® mandrel technology with a blank made of super premium, 100% linear S-glass. For nearly two years, anglers have raved about the lightweight, sensitive feel of Legend Glass, while St. Croix’s Wisconsin manufacturing facility kicked into overdrive to supply the feverish demand.

Crankbait anglers from coast-to-coast are fawning over Legend Glass, and the new 7’2” medium power, moderate action spinning model (LGS72MM) now puts the power to launch small and midsized baits in your grasp. The newest Legend Glass model is the perfect partner for windy days or situations that call for lighter baits delivered with both distance and accuracy. An open water specialist, the LGS72MM is designed to handle small-to-medium crankbaits, including square bills and similarly sized bladed jigs, and excels with midrange, standard lip crankbaits that dive to depths of 16 feet.

“When you grip a Legend Glass rod, you immediately note its weight — uncharacteristically light for a glass rod,” says St. Croix Rod’s Promotions Manager Rich Belanger. “When you cast and retrieve a crankbait through cover, and set hooks into a big bass, what really strikes you are the rod’s balance, backbone, and that familiar St. Croix feel factor.”

“Legend Glass spinning is going to be a go-to rod for folks that throw light crankbaits on light line, especially the thin profile baits that tend to tumble when cast on rods that are too stiff,” says St. Croix’s Dan Johnston. “The blank bends down enough to protect very light fluorocarbon line with a light crankbait which is something anglers have been looking for.”

 

“That linear S-glass on the IPC mandrel made Legend Glass arguably the best fiberglass bass rod ever put on the market,” Johnston adds. “The fact that we just put it on a spinning rod is really exciting. It’s cool to be able to finally throw thin-profile lightweight cranks on lightweight line.”

Legend Glass rods employ Fuji® K-Series tangle-free guides with Alconite® rings and Corrosion Control™ (CC™) matte finish frames that are ideal for all line types. The new spinning rod features a Fuji DPS reel seat with frosted silver hoods matched to a split-grip/super-grade cork handle and Kigan hook-keeper. Legend Glass rods feature a 15-year transferable warranty backed by St. Croix Superstar Service. Retail on the new LGS72MM is $260.

Lowrance Angler Claims Title of FLW Rookie of the Year

Lowrance Angler Claims Title of FLW Rookie of the Year

Matt Becker Comes From Behind to Win the Trophy
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Tulsa, Okla. – Lowrance®, a world-leader in fishing electronics since 1957, took the podium again this weekend as Lowrance professional angler Matt Becker was named 2018 Fishing League Worldwide (FLW) Rookie of the Year at the final FLW Tour stop at Lake St. Clair, Michigan. Becker finished the event with a four-day total weight of 56 pounds, 6 ounces.

The Finleyville, Pennsylvania native entered the event 73 points behind Sheldon Collings of Grove, Oklahoma, in the Rookie of the Year race. While both pros got off to great starts, Becker, followed up his 20 pound, 8 ounce bag on Day 1 with a 19-11 haul on Day 2 to overtake Collings.

“My Lowrance HDS Carbon 12’s were a huge key to my success this year,” said Becker. “I relied on them every single day on the water from locating the bait, bass, and structure, as well as navigating the body of water. The many features on the Carbons helped me keep my waypoints and trails organized, which lets me stay focused on catching bass!“

“We congratulate Matt Becker on his well-deserved Rookie of the Year honor,” said Leif Ottosson, CEO, Navico. “We are proud to produce products that help anglers from all levels find more fish.”

For more information on Lowrance and its tournament-winning fishfinding technology, including the award-winning HDS Carbon please visit www.lowrance.com.

Avant-Garde Crawfish Bass Bait from LiveTarget

Avant-Garde Crawfish Bass Bait

Paradigm-shifting Hollow Body Craw will have jig & pig and tube fans reconsidering the best bottom bait for big largemouth and smallmouth bass

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Niagara-on-the-Lake, ON (July 5, 2018) – Crawfish. Crayfish. Crawdads. Freshwater lobsters. Yabbies. Mudbugs. Whatever you call ‘em, both largemouth and smallmouth bass love ‘em.

So do fans of authentic Cajun cuisine, a culinary tradition that puts the critters to use in gumbo, jambalaya, étouffée, fried and fully dressed with remoulade on a Po’ Boy, or boiled in seasoned water with corn, sausage, garlic, and potatoes…

LIVETARGET Hollow Body Craw: Mud Blue (147)

But first you’ve gotta catch ‘em. For humans, that means nets and traps. For bass, it’s processing numerous sensory cues at light speed, whether that crawfish-locating information is received through sight, olfaction, their hyper-sensitive lateral line and auditory system, or a combination of it all…

The life of a crawfish ain’t easy. Besides bass, other opportunistic fish species, and hungry humans, crawfish have to keep on the lookout for mink, otters, birds like Great Blue Herons, raccoons and more. Lucky enough to escape predation, the omnivorous crawfish is only concerned with a few things: eating vegetation and decaying animal matter—and mating—then eating and mating some more when the time is right. The rest of the time they’re burrowed under rocks, undergoing some stage of the molting process, and using that cover for protection.

But the minute craws emerge from their rocky lairs, the chase is on, largely due to the volume of their locomotion, a combination of tapping, clicking, and clacking that is carried afar (like any underwater sound), bringing in bass to investigate.

Hence savvy bass anglers’ use of rattles on their jig and trailer combos, which gets to be an exhaustive and expensive process – having to dress each jig with the right shape head, skirt color combination, rattles, and soft plastic trailer.

While jig and trailer combos or tubes catch bass, LIVETARGET knew there had to be a more realistic and better way to imitate this ultra-important bass forage, all in one hyper-realistic bait ready to fish right out of the package.

New for 2018, LIVETARGET’s bass-crazy lure designers are proud to introduce the revolutionary Hollow Body Craw at ICAST 2018, an avant-garde bait that combines form and function. A paradigm-shifting blend of critical elements from two distinct lure families—bass jigs and hollow body topwaters—the Hollow Body Craw is a unique, must-cast lure for both largemouth and smallmouth bass.

 

Brown/Red (144)

 

Junebug/Chartreuse (148)

 

Red (306)

For starters, its revolutionary design features amazing three-dimensional anatomy, rendering it superior to traditional bass jigs. The lure’s hollow head and cephalothorax anchor a snag-resistant design, and together with its extra strong custom hook, provide exceptional hookup ratios. The hook eyelet protrudes from the top of the slightly curved abdomen, orienting any retrieve the way nature intended, with the craw moving in reverse—head, pincers, antennae, and silicone skirt (that mimics a craw’s walking legs and feeding appendages) flared up just like a fleeing or defensive craw. Visually, the bait is a near spot-on imitation of the real thing, and the internal jig head weight produces the tapping, clicking, and clacking that attracts bass from afar. And should anglers want to create an even more raucous sound, rattle tubes are easily inserted into the bait’s hollow body. Anglers can also squeeze scent past inside the hollow cavity for a long-lasting trail.

Incredibly effective both on the bottom and in heavy cover, the Hollow Body Craw sets a new standard in crawfish imitations.

The LIVETARGET Hollow Body Crawfish will be introduced in three lengths and weights (1 1/2” and 1/2 oz; 1 ¾” and 5/8 oz; or 2” and 3/4 oz) and available in eight bio-realistic color schemes (725 Grey/Brown, 723 Natural/Brown, 144 Brown/Red, 306 Red, 145 Olive/Orange, 146 Green Chartreuse, 147 Mud/Blue, and 148 Junebug/Chartreuse), allowing anglers to Match-the-HatchTM of the regional and molting variations of crawfish encountered in any bass waters they fish.

The LIVETARGET Hollow Body Craw will be available in late fall 2018, with an MSRP of $9.99-$11.49 USD.

Visit us in booth 2508 at ICAST 2018 for your first look at the LIVETARGET Hollow Body Craw, engineered to dominate bass fisheries everywhere!

Grey/Brown 725

 

Green/Chartreuse (146)

 

Olive/Orange (145)

Natural/Brown (723)

Mike Byrd & Clint Byrd Win CATT Wateree June 30, 2018

We have 1 more Wateree Summer Qualifier left! July 21st and it’s a GOLD!

Mike Byrd & Clint Byrd take the win this past Saturday with 5 bass weighing 17.23 lbs! Great catch guys!

2nd Place Butch Williams & Max Price! 1st BF!

3rd Chad Gainey & Todd Butler!

Mike King & Chris Crawford 4th & 2nd BF

 

17 Teams Big
Team Fish Weight Winnings Points
Mike Byrd – Clint Byrd 5.03 17.23 $500.00 110
Max Price – Butch Williams  BONUS $ 1st BF 5.38 16.97 $629.00 109
Chad Gainey – Todd Butler 3.78 15.44 $100.00 108
Chris Crawford – Mike King   2nd BF 5.22 14.83 $51.00 107
Brad Petway – Brett Collins 3.85 14.22 106
Alan Fletcher & Donald Fletcher 4.61 13.00 105
John Paul George – Jason Quinn 2.95 11.61 104
Steve Phillips – Jason Bateman 3.32 11.17 103
Walt Almond – Chad Rabon 4.31 9.20 102
David F Canupp – David L Canupp 2.90 5.70 101
Greg Corvin – Scott Floyd 0.00 2.44 100
Michael Maxfield – Miles Maxfield 0.00 1.84 99
Matt Nettles – RB Blackmon 0.00 0.00 98
Gary Kirkbride – Ed Mathews 0.00 0.00 98
Jeff Reynolds – Greg Sigmon 0.00 0.00 98
Lewis Thompson – Chris Holman 0.00 0.00 98
Johnny Allen 0.00 0.00 98
Total Entrys $1,360.00
BONUS $ $300.00
Total Paid At Ramp $1,280.00
Wateree 2018 Summer Final Fund $350.00
2018 CATT Championship Fund $35.00
2018 Wateree Summer Final Fund Total $2,095.00
2018 CATT Championship Fund Total $460.00