Thursday, December 18, 2025
Home Blog Page 952

A New Legend for Anglers Who Want it All – St.Croix Rods

A New Legend for Anglers Who Want it All

[print_link]

Legend X packs every technology at St. Croix’s disposal to deliver unrivaled performance

Park Falls, WI (May 3, 2018) – The Senko spiraled toward the bottom of a gin-clear lake, turning the reel on the opposite end ever closer towards the end of its spool. Twenty feet down and dozens of yards from the boat, a thin strand of four-pound fluorocarbon traced a line from fish to man. On a sunny day at this depth and distance, the line was impossible for the angler’s eye to see — then, a thump.

 

“I could feel it in my hands,” said angling guru Dan Johnston. “It blew my mind.”

 

Johnston, National Accounts Manager for St. Croix Rod, was in the midst of a three-day video shoot with Jarrett Edwards of Jarrett Edwards Outdoors. The gin-clear water belonged to the mystic desert fishery of Lake Powell, where a maze of clear water channels crisscrosses the Arizona/Utah border in a dance with time and nature. At Lake Powell, the ruins of an Anasazi empire and exposed fossils of plesiosaurs line the same canyon walls where bass loiter for food, feasting on shad in the shadows of legends.

It was here on Powell that Johnston and Edwards had come to document a legend of their own — a battle test for the St. Croix Rod Legend X.

“I was basing bite detection off of that thump in my hands,” Johnston said. “Usually, all of the conditions have to line up to feel that hit. Here, Jarrett and I were throwing a light soft plastic almost as far as we could throw, getting a bite at the very end of the cast, and in 20 feet of water you could still feel it.”

Adds Johnston, “You can write that, but people reading it will roll their eyes. They won’t believe you until they do it for themselves.”

Legend X rumors began to swirl last summer, just before the rod made its official debut at ICAST 2017. There, retailers got their first look at the production models which would eventually find their way out to the desert with Johnston and Edwards. Featuring Relentless Olive blanks with cork, split-grip handles and a familiar name, it didn’t take long for consumers who hadn’t seen the rods up close to dub Legend X a ‘Legend Elite with split grips.’ But Johnston says only part of that moniker is true.

“It does have the same SCV blank as the Legend Elite, and it does have split grips, but this is a rod built with every single technology St. Croix Rod has at its disposal. It’s a rod for the ultimate, discerning angler who understands that 32 pairs of hands have touched this rod during the manufacturing process. It’s for the angler who wants the ultimate in sensitivity and light weight. It’s for the angler who wants all of St. Croix’s rod building technologies. Every one of them.”

An 18-year veteran of St. Croix Rod, Johnston is no spring chicken when it comes to rod design. He’s fished nearly every rod the Wisconsin-based company has produced in almost two decades with the company; and in a field with many favorites, he says Legend X stands above them all.

“It’s a dream rod for me,” he elaborates. “A lot of people have been waiting on a SCV blank with split grips. Legend X is unbelievably impressive.”

The rod’s list of technical features reads like a laundry list of high-performance rod specifications: Integrated Poly Curve® (IPC®) mandrel tooling technology; Advanced Reinforcing Technology™ (ART™); a Taper Enhancement Technology (TET) blank; super high-modulus SCVI graphite with Fortified Resin System (FRS) in its lower section for maximum power and reduced weight; high-modulus/high-strain SCV graphite with FRS and carbon-matte scrim for unparalleled strength, durability and sensitivity; Fuji® Torzite® tangle-free guides with titanium frames; a Fuji® TVS blank-touch reel seat with a built-in hood on spinning rods; a Fuji® PTS blank-touch reel seat with a built-in hood on casting rods; anodized, machined-aluminum wind check and trim pieces; a Kigan titanium hook-keeper; two coats of Flex-Coat slow cure finish, and its signature split-grip super-grade cork handles.

Asked about the relentless, madman’s list of features, Johnston had a simple explanation.

“St Croix exists to provide every angler with the upper hand. That explains Legend X. That explains the engine behind the brilliance, the fuel behind the idea, the execution, and the final product. We wanted to give people the ultimate advantage on the water. Everything about Legend X is distilled to that. St. Croix Rod wanted to go all-in.”

 

Just a few short months after its ICAST 2017 unveiling, Legend X is starting to fill the dealer pipelines. Soon, Dan Johnston and Jarrett Edwards will have to share their legend with the rest of the angling world. Johnston swears Legend X is the ultimate fishing rod come to life.

It’s a tale that may seem hard to believe — but like the mysterious landscape of Lake Powell—is 100 percent true.

Lex & Xan Costas Win CATT Santee Cooper April 28, 2018 with 26.32lbs

We have 1 more Santee Cooper Spring Qualifier left! This coming weekend May 5th at Blacks Camp and is a GOLD event! Next year we will try to have all the entire Santee Cooper Spring trail launch from John C Land! Also Derrick is planning a Summer and a Fall Trail!

Carolina Post Frame is awarding the 2018 CATT Santee Cooper Spring Point Winners $500.00! Support them guys as they are supporting us!

Lex & Xan Costas took the win Saturday down on Santee with 5 bass weighing 26.32 lbs! They weighed the Academy BF at 9.10 lbs & with the BONUS $ added in they took home $2,484.00!                     Lex & Xan also received an Academy Gift Card!                   

 

2nd Place went to Mike Watson & Craig McFadden with 5 bass weighing 24.16 lbs! They weighed the 2nd BF at 8.12 lbs and took home $836.00!

3rd went to Wade Grooms with 23.48 lbs worth $425.00!

We paid back a total of 7 places and $4,615.00!

More pics at the bottom of the results!

 37 Teams Big Total    
  Fish Weight Winnings Points
Lex & Xan Costas  BONUS $ 1st BF 9.10 26.32 $2,484.00 110
Mike Watson Craig McFadden   2nd BF 8.12 24.16 $836.00 109
Wade Grooms 0.00 23.48 $425.00 108
Ben Smith 0.00 21.46 $325.00 107
Jamie Glasscock Jim Smoak 0.00 20.88 $240.00 106
Ed Paul 0.00 20.31 $175.00 105
David Benehaley Mike Cox 0.00 20.20 $130.00 104
Jesse Williams Ryan Steen 0.00 20.12 103
TJ Anderson Shai Haley 0.00 19.73 102
Mark & Glenn Curry 0.00 18.58 101
Bryan Cook Steve Harmon 0.00 18.45 100
Terry Barr Paul Davis 0.00 18.36 99
Gary Elsey Mark Hutson 0.00 18.07 98
Chuck Howard Ken Ellis 0.00 16.92 97
Horace Scott Scott Spittle 0.00 16.75 96
Mario- Reid Colangelo 0.00 16.60 95
Anthony Aaron Scott Perrine 0.00 15.63 94
Bobby Gibbs Don Pendorius 0.00 15.46 93
Brian Purvis 0.00 15.15 92
Patrick Williams Ray Spence 0.00 14.50 91
Danny & Ava Lowery 0.00 13.42 90
Brad Schwartz 0.00 13.13 89
Perry & Cash Holloway 0.00 13.08 88
Chad & Farrah Crosby 0.00 12.50 87
Brent Waynick & Emmett McCauley 0.00 12.48 86
Mac Altman Kevin Alford 0.00 12.25 85
Max & Bugzy Terry 0.00 11.74 84
Ted Urhardt & John Ford 0.00 4.10 83
Sid Fowler Cory Casey 0.00 0.00 82
Brandon Evans 0.00 0.00 82
J Weinberg Morgan Strange 0.00 0.00 82
Larry-Joe Avin 0.00 0.00 82
Hunter & Thomas Hoffmeyer 0.00 0.00 82
Freddie & Clark Gibbs 0.00 0.00 82
Tray Daniels & Ken Keels 0.00 0.00 82
Daniel Howell 0.00 0.00 82
Eric Bozeman Max Shuman 0.00 0.00 82
Total Entrys     $4,440.00  
BONUS $     $700.00  
Total Paid At Ramp     $4,615.00  
Santee Cooper 2018 Spring Final Fund   $450.00  
2018 CATT Championship Fund     $75.00  
         
2018 Santee Cooper Spring Final Fund Total   $2,940.00  
2018 CATT Championship Fund Total   $4,405.00  

Points Vs Channels Vs Swings: How To Fish Bass Highways – MTB

Points Vs Channels Vs Swings: How To Fish Bass Highways

[print_link]

Nearly all manmade reservoirs have three things in common. Whether it’s a highland, lowland or mixture of both, a reservoir usually contains points, flats, and channel swings.
These three primary structures of reservoirs serve as eating and resting places for bass throughout the year as the fish travel along their seasonal migration routes. The structures are also interrelated because the most productive flats and points lie near channel swings.

Finding bass along these areas is a matter of timing and identifying the different types of each structure. Here are some tips on how to catch bass from these holding areas.

Points

fishing points

A point is the primary structure of any lake. Channels are the bass highways in and out of the coves and creeks and the points are the primary holding spots for bass along those channels because the structures have deep water nearby in almost every direction. The prespawn and postspawn are the best times to fish points because bass are staging on this structure either on their way in or way out of the spawning coves and creeks.

Most reservoirs feature the following types of points: main and secondary, bluff or sharp, rocky drop-offs and round, flat gravel slopes. Main and bluff points are good in summer, winter and early spring. Secondary and flat gravel slopes are best in spring, early summer and autumn.

Flats

flats fishing

Warm water, cover, and baitfish activity draw bass to flats because it’s easier for the fish to chase prey there. Prespawn bass are attracted to the flats when sunshine warms up the shallow waters of this structure. Postspawn bass can be caught along flats near spawning areas when the fish use the available cover (grass or stumps) to ambush baitfish. Fall is a prime time to fish this structure because schools of shad move up on the flats then.

Channel Swings

spawn fishing

Channel swings, or bends, offer bass a deep-water sanctuary in the upper ends and creek arms of reservoirs. Channel swings cutting into a point or flat are good spots to find bass most of the year, except during the spawn. Bass tend to move off the flats and retreat to the deeper water of the channel swings whenever cold fronts hit in the spring and fall.
Current also draws bass to channel bends so summer is ideal for fishing this structure when water is being pulled through the dam for power generation.

Gregg Sanders Takes D40 win on Kentucky Lake with 11.28lbs – ABA – April 28,208

Gregg Sanders Takes D40 win on Kentucky Lake 

[print_link]

Gregg Sanders of Jackson, TN won the American Fishing Tour Division 40 on Kentucky Lake Saturday, April 28 out of Cuba Landing Marina. His four fish bag weighed 11.28 lbs. He won $451 for his first place finish.Taking second place and big fish was Tom O’Bryant of Cedar Grove, TN. He had 3 fish weighing 9.88 lbs.  He took home $254 for second place.  His big fish weighed 4.29 lbs.  Steve Lamer of Mason, TN took home $79 for winning third place for his two fish weighing 5.59 lbs.

It was a tough day for most of the anglers as 10 of the 16 fishermen did not weigh in any fish.

Remaining weights were:
Buddy Wallace               2 fish     5.04 lbs.
Martin “Marty” W. Tyler  1 fish   3.18 lbs.
Greg Salley                    1 fish     2.98 lbs

Division 40’s next tournament is Saturday, May 5 on Kentucky Lake out of Cuba Landing Marina.

For more information on this event or Division contact local director Larry Franklin at 931-209-2995 or visit www.drawtrail.com

These anglers are earning valuable points toward the divisional angler of the year title. The points champion from each division will compete in the annual American Bass Anglers AFT Angler of the Year Final Round at the American Fishing Tour National Championship.

The American Fishing Tour offers low cost, close to home bass tournaments that are designed for the weekend angler. All ABA anglers fish for money and points. The points advance the angler to their divisional championship and the top 500 anglers in the US are invited to the American Fishing Tour National Championship. For more information on American Bass Anglers please visit www.americanbassanglers.com or call (256)232-0406.

American Bass Anglers, Inc. is supported by Triton Boats, Mercury Outboards, Optima Batteries, GEICO, Berkley, Abu Garcia, T-H Marine, Livingston Lures, Best Western Hotels, Maui Jim, Power Pole, Garmin, and SiriusXM Marine Weather. American Bass Anglers, Inc. can be contacted at (256) 232-0406 or by visiting americanbassanglers.com

CLEAR LAKE SET FOR YETI FLW COLLEGE FISHING WESTERN DIVISION TOURNAMENT PRESENTED BY BASS PRO SHOPS

CLEAR LAKE SET FOR YETI FLW COLLEGE FISHING WESTERN DIVISION TOURNAMENT PRESENTED BY BASS PRO SHOPS

[print_link]

LAKEPORT, Calif. (May 2, 2018) – The FLW College Fishing season will continue next week as college anglers prepare to compete May 12 at the YETI FLW College Fishing event at Clear Lake presented by Bass Pro Shops. The tournament, hosted by the Konocti Vista Casino Resort & Marina, is the second of three regular-season events for anglers in the Western Conference, and will feature a top prize of a $2,000 club scholarship and a slot in the 2019 College Fishing National Championship.

“Right now the fish are in all three stages – prespawn, spawn and some are already postspawn,” said Joe Uribe Jr., of Surprise, Arizona, who has four top-10 finishes as a professional on Clear Lake. “The weather has been kind of hit-or-miss up there, and that’s going to dictate a lot of what the fish will do. The fish will be up shallow one day, and move off the next if a cold front comes in.

“The one thing that’s different this year on Clear Lake is the lack of grass,” continued Uribe. “The fish have had to resort to docks and tules, and that’s primarily what they’ll be holding on. When they come up to stage, they’ll be sitting up underneath docks or suspended in front of tules. As they’re spawning they’ll move closer to the dock pilings, or back in the pockets with tules. I think they’ll be spawning a little bit shallower than normal because they won’t have that outside grass to bed around.”

Uribe said he thinks finesse-type baits will be favored by competitors.

“I think a drop-shot rig and a Yamamoto Senko are going to be your bread and butter,” said Uribe. “Depending on the weather, jerkbaits or a small swimbait to mimic baitfish would be good, especially in the early morning or later in the afternoon if the wind picks up. Any type of bottom-fishing baits like a jig or a creature bait are good bets as well.”

Uribe predicted that it will take a five-bass limit in the 20-pound range to win the tournament.

“Someone could catch more, but again, the weather will dictate a lot,” said Uribe. “They’ll have to prepare for everything.”

Competitors will take off from the Konocti Vista Casino Resort & Marina, located at 2755 Mission Rancheria Road in Lakeport, at 7 a.m. PDT Saturday. Weigh-in will be held at the marina beginning at 1:30 p.m. Takeoff and weigh-in are free and open to the public.

Schools are allowed to register up until the morning of the tournament. Entries may be made either by phone or at CollegeFishing.com.

Schools expected to compete in the Clear Lake tournament include:

California State University-Chico – Austin Crane and David Griswold, both of Oroville, Calif.

California State University-Chico – Chad Sweitzer, Chico, Calif., and Tyler Firebaugh, Danville, Calif.

California State University-Chico – Thomas Avilla, Oakdale, Calif., and Travis Gonsalves, Modesto, Calif.

Sonoma State University – Jacob Coons, Lockeford, Calif., and Anthony Parrino, Stockton, Calif.

Sonoma State University – Trenton Wells, Windsor, Calif., and Brock Trudeau, Lancaster, Calif.

University of California-Merced – Herbie Leblanc, Gilroy, Calif., and Tshu Xiong, Merced, Calif.

YETI FLW College Fishing teams compete in three regular-season qualifying tournaments in one of five conferences – Central, Northern, Southern, Southeastern and Western. The top ten teams from each division’s three regular-season tournaments and the top 20 teams from the annual FLW College Fishing Open will advance to the 2019 FLW College Fishing National Championship. Additional teams will qualify for the National Championship if the field size in regular-season events exceeds 100 boats. The 2018 FLW College Fishing National Championship will take place May 30-June 1 on the Red River in Shreveport, Louisiana, and is hosted by the Shreveport-Bossier Sports Commission & Red River Waterway Commission.

YETI FLW College Fishing is free to enter. 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.

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 FacebookTwitterInstagramYouTube and Snapchat.

COSTA FLW SERIES WESTERN DIVISION HEADS TO CLEAR LAKE FOR EVENT PRESENTED BY EVINRUDE

COSTA FLW SERIES WESTERN DIVISION HEADS TO CLEAR LAKE FOR EVENT PRESENTED BY EVINRUDE

[print_link]

LAKEPOINT, Calif. (May 2, 2018) – As many as 350 boaters and co-anglers are set to compete on Clear Lake May 10-12 for the Costa FLW Series Western Division event at Clear Lake presented by Evinrude. The three-day tournament, hosted by the Konocti Vista Casino Resort & Marina, will feature a top prize of up to $85,000, including a brand new Ranger Z518C boat with a 200-horsepower Evinrude or Mercury outboard engine.

“This tournament is going to be a slugfest,” said Yamamoto Baits pro Jimmy Reese, of Witter Springs, California, who has 12 top-10 finishes on Clear Lake in FLW competition. “Aside from some clouds, which could change a few things, it’s supposed to be between 79 and 85 degrees just about every day leading up to the event. It’s going to be good.

“There has already been a wave of fish that have spawned, so anglers will be able to target them in all three phases – postspawn, spawners and even some prespawners,” continued Reese. “An underspin will play a big role for prespawners, as well as jerkbaits and lipless crankbaits like a Live Target Golden Shiner. For spawners, a Yamamoto Flappin’ Hog or another light-colored grub will be good choices.”

Reese said the postspawn fish will prefer topwater lures like a Boing Topwater or a Heddon Super Spook.

“I’ll throw a Super Spook when I’m trying to cover a lot of water, and the Boing in tighter places because it walks – it has a noise to it and sends out a vibration,” said Reese. “Buzzbaits and frogs will be good postspawn lures as well.”

Reese said he thinks most of the lake will be utilized by anglers for this event, especially the north end.

“The water level is lower this year compared to the last few years, due to the lack of rain. Docks and tules will still be the deal for fish in all three phases, though,” said Reese.

The California veteran said that a three-day cumulative total of 72 pounds should be enough to take home top honors.

“Everything is lined up for this to be a great event,” said Reese. “Clear Lake hasn’t shined in the last eight months like it has in the past, but I think people will be surprised by what they see in this tournament.”

Anglers will take off from Konocti Vista Casino Resort & Marina, located at 2755 Mission Rancheria Road, in Lakeport, at 6:30 a.m. PDT each day. Weigh-ins will also take place at Konocti Vista Casino Resort & Marina, and will begin at 2:30 p.m. each day. All takeoffs and weigh-ins are free to attend and open to the public.

In Costa FLW Series regular-season competition, payouts are based on the number of participants competing in the event. At Clear Lake, pros will fish for a top prize of up to $85,000, including a brand new Ranger Z518C boat with a 200-horsepower Evinrude outboard if Ranger Cup qualified. Co-anglers will cast for a brand new Ranger Z175 boat with a 90-horsepower Evinrude outboard, and $5,000 if Ranger Cup qualified.

The Costa FLW Series consists of five U.S. divisions – Central, Northern, Southeastern, Southwestern and Western – along with the International division. Each U.S. division consists of three regular-season tournaments with competitors vying for valuable points that could earn them the opportunity to compete in the season-ending Costa FLW Series Championship. The 2018 Costa FLW Series Championship is being held Nov. 1-3 on Lake Guntersville in Guntersville, Alabama, and is hosted by the Marshall County Convention and Visitors Bureau.

For complete details and updated information visit FLWFishing.com. For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow the Costa FLW Series on FLW’s social media outlets at FacebookTwitterInstagramYouTube and Snapchat.

Bassmaster Team Championship To Be Held On Florida’s Harris Chain For The First Time

Competitors in the 2018 Bassmaster Team Championship will fish the Harris Chain of Lakes out of Leesburg, Fla., Dec. 5-8. Up for grabs is the national team title and a berth in the 2019 Bassmaster Classic presented by DICK’S Sporting Goods.

Photo by Ronnie Moore/B.A.S.S.
[print_link]

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. —Steeped in bass fishing history, Florida’s Harris Chain of Lakes has been selected to host the 2018 Bassmaster Team Championship Dec. 5-8, B.A.S.S. announced today.

Part of the Oklawaha River Basin, the Harris Chain covers about 50,000 acres, including eight lakes — seven of which will be accessible to the bass fishing teams competing in the championship and connecting channels. Lake Yale, a 4,000-acre natural lake, is not accessible by boat from the other seven lakes.

In its 50-year history, B.A.S.S. has held 15 professional bass tournaments on the Harris Chain, including the first five B.A.S.S. MegaBucks tournaments, which featured a 10-hole fishing course where finalists competed for a $100,000 first prize. The Lake County network of bass lakes also hosted the B.A.S.S. Nation championships in 2006 and 2009.

“We love going to the Harris Chain, Leesburg and Lake County for events,” said Team Championship tournament director Jon Stewart, who also serves as B.A.S.S. Nation national director. The Harris Chain of Lakes should produce well in early December. The anglers might even come across a few early spawners, and when fishing in Florida, you always have a chance at catching the bass of a lifetime.”

One of the qualifiers for the event will be sure to have the tournament a lifetime, because he or she will earn a berth in the “Super Bowl of Bass Fishing,” the 2019 Bassmaster Classic presented by DICK’S Sporting Goods at Knoxville, Tenn.

Founded in 2014, the Bassmaster Team Championship fields approximately 175 two-angler teams each year. The teams qualify by winning championships or performance points titles on one of dozens of B.A.S.S. sanctioned team tournament circuits. The teams compete for two days — Dec. 5-6 this year — to earn the title of top team in the nation. Next, members of the Top 3 teams fish solo for two more days, with the winner of that phase qualifying for the Classic.

Tournament headquarters will be Leesburg, Fla. It is hosted by the Central Florida Sports Commission and LakeBigBass.com – Lake County, Fla.

“We are thrilled to welcome Bassmaster back to Lake County this December for the 2018 Team Championship,” said Jason Siegel, CEO of the Central Florida Sports Commission. “CFSC and B.A.S.S. have enjoyed a long-time partnership of more than 10 years, and we look forward to working with them on this event and in the future.”

Tim Frederick, a Bassmaster Opens angler who is sponsored by LakeBigBass.com, predicts good action for big fish in early December, which could provide some heavyweight bass entering the prespawn phase.

“I am excited to welcome the anglers in the 2018 Bassmaster Team Championship to my home, the Harris Chain of Lakes,” Frederick said. “December is a great time of year to be on the water with the prespawn bass. If the weather is right and an angler gets lucky, there could be some big bags on the scale. This is going to be an exciting tournament.”

In the 2018 team tournament held on Norfork Lake in Arkansas, brothers Brett and Beau Govreau of St. Louis, Mo., representing the US Anglers Choice circuit, won the team title over 169 other teams from 57 trails, while Ryan Butler of Blue Eye, Mo., who qualified from the Joe Bass Trail, won the Classic Fish-Off and the right to compete with the pros in the 2018 GEICO Bassmaster Classic presented by DICK’S Sporting Goods at Greenville, S.C.

Rodney Sorensen Wins ABA Georgia on Jackson with 13.04lbs April 28,2018

[print_link]

Congratulations to Rodney Sorensen of Gray, Ga for taking the win at Lake Jackson on April 28, 2018  for the AFT D72 tournament.  Rodney found his fish very shallow using a brush hog.  His five fish sack weighed in at 13.04 pounds, and Rodney took home $723 for the first place finish.

James Dudley of McDonough, Ga took the trophy for Big Bass and $165 for his bass weighing 4.60 pounds.

After recent heavy rain, the lake was full pool and the water was muddy to stained.  Saturday was sunny, and the water temperature was in the upper sixties.  Many anglers caught fish using a Spinnerbait on the rocks. More than half of the 33 anglers brought in a 5 fish limit.  A total of 118 fish were caught, and all were released alive

Congratulations to the Top Ten:
1 – Rodney Sorensen –   13.04 pounds – $723
2 – Randall Woodham – 11.56 pounds – $454
3 – Larry Cason –          11.53 pounds – $187
4 – Roger White –          11.10 pounds – $144
5 – Barry Collins –        10.18 pounds – $108
6 – Todd Clark-             9.95 pounds
7 – Bruce Askew –         9.75 pounds
8 – Joey Dobbs –           8.89 pounds
9 –  Chris Sanders –      8.82 pounds
10 – Chad Wilson –       7.93 pounds

After the awards of trophies and cash payouts, there were drawings for all anglers that were present. Three $50 bills were won by Duke Roberson, Bruce Askew, and Tommy Cooper.  Several soft pack coolers and a hat were provided by Frank Speights as draw prizes.  Danny Taylor assisted with the tournament by checking boats before launch and weighing fish at 3pm.

The next tournament for D72 will be on June 2, 2018  on Lake Oconee, going out of Sugar Creek Marina.

Please contact Director Benny Howell at 770-365-4795 for more information.

The American Fishing Tour offers low cost, close to home bass tournaments that are designed for the weekend angler. All ABA anglers fish for money and points. The points advance the angler to their divisional championship and the top 500 anglers in the US are invited to the American Fishing Tour National Championship. For more information on American Bass Anglers please visit www.americanbassanglers.com or call (256)232-0406.

American Bass Anglers, Inc. is supported by Triton Boats, Mercury Outboards, GEICO, Berkley, Abu Garcia, T-H Marine, Livingston Lures, Best Western Hotels, Maui Jim, Power Pole, Garmin, Optima Batteries and SiriusXM Marine Weather. American Bass Anglers, Inc. can be contacted at (256) 232-0406 or by visiting americanbassanglers.com

Z-Man’s Finesse TRD HogZ Advances the Ned Rig Narrative

More Ned? Absolutely.

Z-Man’s Finesse TRD HogZ Advances the Ned Rig Narrative

LADSON, SC (May 1, 2018) – For the legendary Ned Kehde — the man behind the miraculous Ned Rig— testing prototypes and lending insights into bass bait design is all in a day’s “work,” if indeed it’s possible to assign such a term to fishing nearly every day, all year long. Following a two-year testing phase, Kehde simply refers the new Z-Man® Finesse TRD HogZ™ as “our best producing coldwater bass bait, period.”

During one brief outing, Kehde caught 55 bass in 69 minutes on a single 3-inch HogZ. “I mailed the bait back to Daniel Nussbaum of Z-Man,” recalls Kehde, “after this lone HogZ produced 112 fish total. It was still in really good shape.”

.’

Kehde, who has chronicled and participated in the finesse bass scene going back to the early days of Guido Hibdon and Chuck Woods, says the HogZ pays homage to Woods’ original Puddle Jumper—a timeless, pressure-immune bait and often disregarded design that’s accounted for untold thousands of bass and other species. Nussbaum, President of Z-Man Fishing, calls the HogZ “the next phase of the Ned Rig genre; a highly detailed, lively, yet subtle bait that’s already selling out in select hot zones across the nation.”

Highlighting the newest member of Z-Man’s ElaZtech finesse bait line, the HogZ sculpt features a specialized flattened nose, facilitating tight flush-rigging to a mushroom style jig, such as Z-Man’s Finesse ShroomZ or NedlockZ HD. Kehde further notes that Z-Man mimicked the shape of its own power-fishing creature bait, the Boat HogZ. “The downsized TRD HogZ sprouts three fine appendages on either side of its multi-ribbed thorax, abstractly replicating the swimmerets adorning a crayfish’s abdomen.”

Breathing life into the finesse creature bait, a pair of refined legs kick, quiver and hypnotically glide. Terminating each leg is a small “foot,” providing surplus thump, plus accentuated up-and-down jet propulsion, reminiscent of the fast-darting movements of crayfish and other invertebrates.

From Kehde’s Midwest reservoirs to Northeastern smallmouth streams, guide Joe Raymond has quietly relied on the TRD HogZ for the past two seasons. “For a guide, this little bait is a dream because it’s even more attractive to bass than a tube, and almost can’t be fished wrong,” says Raymond, who runs 225 trips a year, via susquehannasmallmouthguides.com.

“It’s become my go-to presentation for much of the year for big river smallmouths. Just today, we rocked a bunch of bass by fishing it both like a shakey-head and by dragging and deadsticking it on bottom, rigged on a 1/5-ounce NedlockZ jig.

“I fish the baits with a collection of 6-foot 10-inch St. Croix Legend Xtreme spinning rods and 2500-size Shimano CI4s. Each is spooled with either 20-pound Seaguar Smackdown braid and a 10-pound test leader of Seaguar AbrazX fluorocarbon or a mainline of 8-pound AbrazX. Throw this bait in ambush areas—behind boulders, eddies and other visible targets when working down a bank—and you’ll be hooked up pretty often.

“I think of tough ElaZtech and the HogZ specifically, as tube fishing 2.0—the future of finesse bass fishing. Around here, you have to dig deep to even find baits left on the pegs. That’s how hot the HogZ has become.”

Ned Kehde’s original TRD HogZ, 112 fish later.

Raymond says he’s not sure what the bait imitates—crayfish, hellgrammite or a general ‘something alive and tasty’—but he’s pretty sure fish respond to it because they haven’t seen anything like it attached to a jighook. “Fishing is really competitive on the river here,” Raymond adds. “Occasionally, I’ll fish through one of my better spots and fail to get bit. When that happens, I’ve learned it’s usually because someone’s already fished the spot with HogZs. It’s like the same thing that happens when you work an area with live bait; catches every active bass in the neighborhood.”

Outside its lively movements and natural underwater posture, the buoyancy of the TRD HogZ is an overlooked attribute. “To the delight of many finesse anglers,” observes Kehde, “these particular ElaZtech baits are not salt-impregnated, making them exceeding buoyant and durable. We’ve noticed the extra buoyancy gives these baits a more pronounced glide, an essential element in our style of fishing.”

Raymond adds that the bait’s buoyancy also makes it work well over snag-inducing rocks, as well as sitting in a natural tail-up position when deadsticked on bottom. “The Hogz’s posture keeps the hook up and away from rocks or wood. But it can still become snagged when pulling between rocks. Actually, buoyancy is why it’s so important not to snap the bait off on snags. The HogZ looks so lifelike on bottom, even when it’s snagged and broken off an angler’s line that fish often still eat it. That’s a bad deal all around.

“If you don’t break off, a single TRD HogZ is durable enough to last all day—even a wolfpack of hungry bass aren’t mean enough to shred it.”

Available in ten radical patterns, such as PB&J, Molting Craw and The Deal, Z-Man’s 3-inch TRD HogZ is available in 6-packs, available at outdoor retailers nationwide. For more information, visit zmanfishing.com.

Read Ned Kehde’s full review of the Z-Man TRD HogZ.

WEST FRANKFORT’S MCCORD WINS T-H MARINE FLW BASS FISHING LEAGUE ILLINI DIVISION OPENER ON REND LAKE

WEST FRANKFORT’S MCCORD WINS T-H MARINE FLW BASS FISHING LEAGUE ILLINI DIVISION OPENER ON REND LAKE

Philo’s Kirby Wins Co-angler Title

[print_link]

WHITTINGTON, Ill. (April 30, 2018) – Boater Brennon McCord of West Frankfort, Illinois, caught five bass weighing 16 pounds, 15 ounces, Saturday to win the 2018 T-H Marine FLW Bass Fishing League (BFL) Illini Division opener on Rend Lake. For his victory, McCord earned $3,671.

According to post-tournament reports, McCord caught his fish on the southern end of the lake flipping an unamed beaver-type creature bait.

The top 10 boaters finished the tournament in:

1st:          Brennon McCord, West Frankfort, Ill., five bass, 16-15, $3,671

2nd:         Michael Black, Toledo, Ill., three bass, 9-11, $2,035

3rd:         Neil McCord, West Frankfort, Ill., three bass, 9-10, $1,324

4th:         Darren Frazier, Anna, Ill., two bass, 8-9, $1,326

5th:         Travis Wilson, La Harpe, Ill., three bass, 6-10, $734

6th:         Mike Quinlan, Mooresville, Ind., three bass, 6-9, $673

7th:         Derek Jenkel, Pinckneyville, Ill., two bass, 6-2, $612

8th:         Dan Morehead, Paducah, Ky., two bass, 5-11, $851

9th:         Justin Hatton, Dix, Ill., three bass, 5-5, $458

10th:       Shawn Panick, New Lenox, Ill., one bass, 5-5, $458

Complete results can be found at FLWFishing.com.

Frazier caught a bass weighing 5 pounds, 10 ounces – the heaviest of the event in the Boater Division – and earned the day’s Boater Big Bass award of $470.

Jeff Kirby of Philo, Illinois, won the Co-angler Division and $2,170 Saturday after catching a bass weighing 4 pounds, 14 ounces. The bass also earned Kirby the day’s Co-angler Big Bass award of $235.

The top 10 co-anglers were:

1st:          Jeff Kirby, Philo, Ill., one bass, 4-14, $2,170

2nd:         Todd Blakeman, Chatham, Ill., two bass, 4-11, $918

3rd:         Michael McKinley, Woodlawn, Ill., one bass, 3-11, $612

4th:         Andy Paschedag, Worden, Ill., two bass, 3-9, $447

5th:         Mario Rossi Jr., Granite City, Ill., one bass, 3-9, $447

6th:         Jacob Bovara, Wadsworth, Ill., one bass, 2-13, $321

7th:         Derwin Thomas, Little Rock, Ark., one bass, 2-13, $321

8th:         Dave Dobill, Royalton, Ill., one bass, 2-11, $275

9th:         Chad Jackson, Indianapolis, Ind., one bass, 2-4, $245

10th:       Daniel Sutton, Cadiz, Ky., one bass, 2-3, $214

The top 45 boaters and co-anglers in the region based on point standings, along with the five winners in each qualifying event, will be entered in the Oct. 25-27 BFL Regional Championship on  Lake Chickamauga in Dayton, Tennessee. Boaters will compete for a top award of a Ranger Z518C with a 200-horsepower Evinrude outboard and $20,000, while co-anglers will fish for a new Ranger Z518C with a 200-horsepower Evinrude outboard.

The 2018 BFL is a 24-division circuit devoted to weekend anglers, with 128 tournaments throughout the season, five qualifying events in each division. The top 45 boaters and co-anglers from each division, along with the five winners of the qualifying events, will advance to one of six regional tournaments where they are competing to finish in the top six, which then qualifies them for one of the longest-running championships in all of competitive bass fishing – the BFL All-American. The 2018 BFL All-American will be held May 31-June 2 at Cross Lake in Shreveport, Louisiana, and is hosted by the Shreveport-Bossier Sports Commission. Top performers in the BFL can move up to the Costa FLW Series or even the FLW Tour.

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