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Monthly Archives: October 2023
How and Where To Catch April Lay Lake Bass with GPS Coordinates
April Lay Lake Bass with Chandler Holt
Catch big largemouth and Coosa spots in grass or go a little deeper for them on ledges, points and bluffs. Both patterns will produce good limits of fish this month on Lay Lake on just about any bait you like to throw, so you have a lot of options right now.
Lay Lake is an Alabama Power lake on the Coosa River south of I-20, just downstream of Logan
Martin. The upper end is riverine but downstream there are big grass flats, shallow creeks and pockets and river ledges and bluffs to fish. It is a fertile lake and produces fat largemouth and spots with 20-pound tournament limits common.
Chandler Holt is a senior at Briarwood Christian
High School and has been on the fishing team for all four years there. His parents didn’t fish but have fully supported him after he got into tournament fishing. He started fishing farm ponds around his home but got hooked on bass fishing and tournaments, and his parents got him a boat when he was 16. His fishing team coach is Curtis Gossett and the team has done well.
Over the past ten years as a high school bass team coach, Curtis’s teams have won four state championships, one southeast championship and one national championship. His fishermen have placed third once and fourth three times in the national championship tournament.
During his time coaching, Curtis has had two BASS High School All Americans, including his son Zeke, a Jacksonville State senior fishing team member. This year Zeke won the college championship on Lay on Sunday and got to weigh in on the Classic stage.
On Saturday, Chandler fished the high school championship on Lay and got to weigh in on the Classic stage, placing second just nine ounces out of first place. Chandler has done well fishing at the high school level and just signed a scholarship with University of Montevallo to fish on that college team next year.
Although he is just starting his fishing career, he has had great support from his parents and coaching from Curtis, as well as studying everything he can find on-line about bass fishing, to make him and excellent young fisherman. He considers Lay Lake his home lake.
“Some big bass spawn in March, but most Lay largemouth spawn in April. Most spots spawn from mid-
March through April,” Chandler said. So right now you have some of both species post spawn and spawning, and many still on a pre spawn pattern. That gives you lots of options.
A wide variety of baits will work on all three patterns, but Chandler has his favorites. He loves to throw a swim jig, bladed jig and spinnerbait in grass, and flip a punch bait into it. For fishing bluffs and and open water areas, he will have a spinnerbait, a big worm Texas rigged, a big crankbait and a drop shot worm ready.
Chandler and Curtis took me fishing on Lay the first week of March, and it rained like it did every day then. The river current was fast and the lake was full and stained to muddy except back in some creeks. He was trying to find a good pattern for the highs school championship the following Saturday.
The following places were already good, producing two four-pound largemouth and a 3.5-pound spot as well as several more solid keeper bass in the five hours we fished. And while we fished Curtis’s son Zeke practiced for his College tournament on Sunday. He mostly fished the following bluff bank pattern and caught five spots weighing 20.17 pounds on his scales!
1. N 33 10.657 – W 86 31.141 – Put in at Beeswax Park and there is not need to crank your big motor. There is a good grass bed running along the bank downstream of the ramp and many released fish go to it and hold and feed there. We started here and Chandler quickly caught a 3.5-pound spot on a Z-Man Jackhammer, his favorite chatterbait. He was using a white bait with a silver blade in the muddy water. He will also throw black and blue in stained water but goes to a green pumpkin bait in clear water.
Fish from the ramp downstream, working all the grass. It looked dead, and Chandler said it might have been sprayed this year, but hopefully it will come back. Both largemouth and spots will hold and feed in this grass both pre and post spawn, and will spawn in the grass, too.
Hit any variation or transition in the grass like points, holes and cuts here and in all other grassbeds you fish. Try a swim jig and spinnerbait in the more open grass, and punch the thick places with a punch bait, especially on sunny days.
2. N 33 10.779 – W 86 30.771 – Across Beeswax
Creek a small island sits off the upstream point of a big cove. There is a huge house on the point with a rock seawall then a steep wall further back. Go back into the creek to about half-way between the house and garage behind it. Grass runs out from the seawall here that holds good fish.
Fish the grass on this side then work further back into the creek, hitting all the cuts, points and holes with swim jig, bladed jig and spinnerbait. We caught a long skinny largemouth here on a Z-Man Chatterbait that weighed about four pounds.
Chandler says he reels the Jackhammer along steadily then gives it little pauses and speeds it up, making it dart with an action the fish love. He also fishes a Dirty Jigs swim jig with a matching Baby Paca Craw on a Temple Fork Outfitters seven-foot three inch heavy action Pacemaker rod. You need the heavy rod to get the fish out of the grass. In stained to muddy water like we fished in most areas he likes a dark jig, but the water was much clearer back here and he used a white or bluegill color bait for it.
3. Go out to the long point running out from the left bank near the mouth of the creek and stop out from the Greek style gazebo on the bank. It looks like a big mushroom on pillars. The seawall running along this bank out to and around the point is an excellent feeding and staging area for bass moving in and out of the creek.
Keep your boat out a long cast from the bank and cast your baits right against it. Where the grass is thin, a spinnerbait or bladed jig is good. Chandler likes a white War Eagle bait with white blades in the muddy water but goes with something chartreuse and blue with silver blades in clear water.
Work around the point to the pocket on the downstream side. Hit the thick grass near it with your punch bait and swim jig. Fish the dock in the pocket, the downstream point of it and the grass on that side, too.
4. N 33 10.712 – W 86 30.242 – Go out to the river and look downstream. Green channel marker 39 sits way off the downstream point of Beeswax Creek and a good ledge with brush on it is upstream of it. Idle over the river ledge from even with the mouth of
Beeswax going downstream toward the marker to find the brush in 5 to 15 feet deep. Both pre and post spawn largemouth and spots hold in it this month.
Early in the day Chandler fishes the shallower brush but goes deeper as the sun gets bright. He stays off the brush and cast a 6XD crankbait in shad colors if he sees fish holding over the brush. If the fish are showing up down in the brush he uses a watermelon candy Ol’ Monster worm behind a three sixteenths to one half ounce sinker, a three sixteenths ounce shaky head or a drop shot worm to fish the brush.
Current moving through the brush helps the bite, as it does on all river places. Some breeze ruffling the surface of the water will help fishing everywhere. Try to cast up current and work your bait with the current in a natural movement way.
5. N 33 10.179 – W 86 29.705 – going down the river, Sally Branch enters on your right where the river channel swings to the left. Just downstream of the branch the bank is a steep rock bluff running downstream a couple hundred yards. At the end of the bluff it flattens out a little and has some grass on the edge just upstream of a small pocket.
Stop at the pocket and fish the wood cover and grass back in it, some fish will spawn in these small pockets. Then fish the rocky point on the upstream side, working a shaky head on it as well as a crankbait and spinnerbait. When the current is strong like it was the day we fished, largemouth will often pull inside the point out of the current while spots will stay on it in the current and feed.
If the current allows, come out of the pocket and work upstream, fishing the grass with swim jig, bladed jig and spinnebait. When you get to the bluff wall watch for little rock points, outcroppings that break the current. Cast a half ounce spinnerbait or jig and pig into these eddies.
This is a good pattern for big spots. Zeke caught most of his big limit doing this and had a five-pound spot. The current was so strong when we were here we went up almost up to the branch and let the current carry the boat downstream backwards, with Chandler pitching a black and blue jig into the eddy then Curtis, on the trolling motor, would hit it with his spinnerbait.
6. N 33 12.005 – W 86 29.303 – Going up the river past Bulley Branch on the left, red channel marker 48 sits off the right bank. Behind it is a flat running to the bank where a riprap point with grass on it is on the upstream point of a small cove.
Stop out from the marker and idle close enough to the point to fish it with your grass baits. Then work into the cove and fish there. Bass feed on the point pre and post spawn and move into to the cove to spawn. Largemouth will also pull back into the coved to get out of strong current, but spots will stay out in it and feed.
Chandler says the Jackhammer is worth its high cost because it has an action better than other similar baits. He says when he gives it a little jerk while working it through the grass it darts in an action that is irresistible to bass.
7. N 33 11.408 – W 86 29.892 – Across the river and downstream, the mouth of Bulley Creek has a ledge across it where bass hole both pre and post spawn. Green channel marker 43 is on the upstream end of this ledge but it runs across the mouth of the creek downstream.
Stop out in 20 feet of water and cast a big crankbait up into the mouth of the creek, bumping bottom with it from 12 feet deep out to the drop. Also fish it with your Ol’ Monster worm and shaky head. Chandler puts a black Trick worm on his three sixteenths ounce shaky head.
8. N 33 11.054 – W 86 29.891 – Going down the river past the mouth of Pope Branch, watch for a yellow and brown house on the upstream point of a small cove. Stop out from the point and you will see a private ramp in the cove behind the boat house. That ramp is actually the old road and you can see the bridge piling on the right bank. The roadbed is on a ridge that runs across the mouth of the cove and holds bass.
Stay a long cast out from the ramp and work across the cove, casting a shaky head, spinnerbait and jig and pig across the roadbed and point. Work it up the inside drop, across the top then down the outside drop.
9. 33 09.219 – W 86 29.175 – Run down the river to the mouth of Flat Branch on the right. Paradise Point Marina is back in it. The upstream point of the branch is a steep rocky point and there are two signs on it, one for the marina and one for land for sale. Both spots and largemouth hold on the point pre and post spawn.
Chandler says this is a “twofer” point. First you can fish the grass along the edge with your grass baits. Then you can work around the point with shaky head and jig and pig, targeting fish holding in seven or eight feet of water. There are big chunk rock on the bottom at that depth the spots love.
10. N 33 09.927 – W 86 29.060 – Going back up the river the right bank is steep and there is no development on it. Where it opens back to the right you will see some low brown buildings marking part of the Alabama 4-H Youth Development Center. Downstream of it a bluff bank runs out to a couple of small points on the river.
Depending on current, stop on the downstream point and fish it with crankbait, shaky head, jig and worm. Then work up the bluff, casting spinnerbait and jig and pig into eddies behind any protrusion on the bank. Rocks and blowdowns will break the current and offer a feeding spot for bass to hold.
If the current is strong, go up to the end of the bluff and fish it drifting backwards with the current, using your trolling motor to control speed and boat position.
Fish were hitting on these spots a few weeks ago, our best five from them weighed about 14 pounds. Zeke, fishing similar places, had 20 pounds. You can catch Lay Lake spots and largemouth like that for the next six weeks.
Pursuing The American Dream With Japanese Angler Masayuki Matsushita
Japanese Angler Masayuki Matsushita
from the Fishing Wire
Masayuki Matsushita just finished up his second year on the Bassmaster Elite Series where he qualified through the Bassmaster Opens in 2021. He also won the 2020 Bassmaster Central Open at Sam Rayburn Reservoir which qualified him for the 2021 Bassmaster Classic. These are great accomplishments, but they take a lot of sacrificing as a Japanese angler. During the tournament season, he resides in a self-built home in the bed of his Toyota Tundra. There are lots of unique features he added such as air conditioning, a microwave, a mini fridge, storage shelving, and hydraulics that lift the camper shell for extra room.
Matsushita was taught how to fish by one of his junior high school classmates and he fell in love with it ever since. Influenced by fishing magazines, he developed a deep longing to visit America, the birthplace of bass fishing. He quit high school at 19 years old and went to Dallas where he visited Bass Pro Shops every day for a week straight and never got tired of it. This excitement that he experienced fanned the flame of his burning passion to move to America. After returning to Japan, Matsushita became a bass fishing guide on Lake Biwa and purchased his first bass boat at 21 years old. He claims that he almost gave up on his dream many times as it was hard to make a living as a guide and was even doubted by people around him that told him he could never make it to America, but then he was inspired by anglers like Ken Iyobe and Morizo Shimizu.
Matsushita’s life in America is not easy as he is away from his family for most of the year. He returns to Japan twice during the tournament season and once during the off-season to spend time with family. During the season, he stays in campgrounds where the average price is about $25 per night. For food, he usually buys “SUSHI” rice at Walmart and cooks it with vegetables and meat. During tournaments, he likes to get up at 4:30 am to make onigiri (rice balls). Living in America has allowed Matsushita to develop long-lasting friendships like with his friend Calvin whom he met while competing in the Bassmaster Opens. Matsushita states, “We went to a few more tournaments together, developing a strong friendship that extended to include his family. I’ve known his children since they were babies, so they’ve become like a second family to me. They are a big part of my success in America”.
One of the most challenging experiences that Matsushita has had on the Elite Series was shortly after his 3rd place finish to start off his rookie season. After that event on the St. Johns River, he was in a hurry to head straight to the next event on the Harris Chain. Without fully locking his pop-up camper, he headed down the road. About 10 minutes later, a tremendous wind blew the camper top off the bed of his truck into the middle of the road. A passerby who had heard Matsushita’s speech on stage in the previous tournament was kind enough to bring a trailer to load up the roof for him so that he could compete at the Harris Chain. There are other challenges that occur like break downs with the truck or boat, and Matsushita says that it can be extremely stressful since he can’t speak fluent English to ask for help. However, he knows that he must adjust his mindset and stay positive to be successful. A good thing about Japan is that you can easily call a nearby friend for help, but America is too big for that as he travels all over the country. On a positive note, however, he claims that many Americans have been willing to lend a helping hand when he is in trouble.
When Matsushita was in his 20s, some older people told him that his dream to live as a bass pro was over. Now he is in his 40s, and although it has taken some time, he believes that anything is possible if you truly have a dream. Matsushita states, “If you keep challenging yourself at your own timing and pace you will make it happen. You don’t need reasons why you can’t do it, but you can think of reasons why you can do it and will do it. In doing this, your dream will become true one day”. He strongly recommends that Japanese anglers see America at least once, but he also feels that it is important to be successful in Japan before expanding. Despite his struggles, Masayuki Matsushita is in love with America. He explains, “I have experienced many things in America that I couldn’t in Japan. There was no mistake in my decision to come to America, and I want to continue it for the rest of my life. There are many struggles, and each moment is tough, but overall, I find joy in it. America, which I have dreamed of for 20 years, is where I truly belong”.
How and Where To Catch March Neely Henry Bass
March Neely Henry Bass with Peyton Nance
Pre-spawn bass in the grass and feeding on points leading to bedding areas, eating just about any bait you cast. Neely Henry can’t be beat for March fishing, where those hard fighting Coosa spots are fighting with quality largemouth for your lure.
Neely Henry is an 11,235-acre lake on the Coosa River at Gadsden running 77 miles from its dam to the Weiss dam upstream. The upper lake is mostly river, with some oxbows and sloughs. The lower lake has big flats and creeks to fish. The whole lake has extensive shallow grassbeds, docks, rocks and sandy bottoms that are important in the spring.
Peyton Nance grew up right on the lake in Attalla. His father and grandfather took him fishing as far back as he can remember. His father entered them into a tournament on Neely Henry when Peyton was ten years old, and he fell in love with bass tournament fishing.
Peyton’s uncle, Brian Colegrove, was a well-known tournament fisherman in the area for years. He also taught Peyton a lot about bass fishing.
He fished some high school tournaments but concentrated on playing football and made the Auburn football team. He has been on the football team and the fishing team at Auburn the past three years.
Peyton also fishes local pot and buddy tournaments on Neely Henry as often as his college schedule allows and does well in them. As we fished, he constantly pointed to places and said things like “we got a limit there weighing 18 pounds,” or “thats where we won the tournament in the last hour, catching five weighing 19.5 pounds.”
Two days after Peyton and I fished Neely Henry, he and his dad won the big ninth annual Rat-L-Trap tournament at Guntersville with five bass weighing 22.79 with a 7.03 kicker!
“By the end of February, water is warming enough, and days have gotten long enough that both spots and largemouth are concentrating on spawning,” Peyton said. They are positioning themselves near spawning flats and feeding heavily to get ready. They may move some with changing conditions day to day, but they will be near the spawning flats all this month.
“I usually keep it simple in March with just five baits out, and three of them are crankbaits,” Peyton said. He always has a DT 4 and DT 6 as well as a Little John squarebill in shad colors rigged. Those baits cover the water depth he fishes this month.
To back them up, he has a white swim jig and a white and chartruese bladed jig ready to fish in the grass. Although those five baits will cover almost all situations, he will also be ready to pull out a rattlebait, bladed jig, shaky head and jig and pig if the situation calls for them.
Peyton and I fished the first Friday in February, the day after the flooding rain. The river current was ripping as the Alabama Power Company released water trying to get ready for all the new water coming in, and it was muddy everywhere. The lake dropped four feet from Thursday afternoon to Friday morning, making it tough for us.
The following places are good all month long. You may have to adjust some based on daily conditions, but you can have great catches of both spots and largemouth right now.
1. N 33 56.624 – W 86 01.221 – Going up the river just upstream of the Highway 77 bridges, a slough enters the river on your right. AS you enter it splits to the left and right. To your left two small pockets are full of grass where March feed heavily. The point coming off the left bank at a blue pumphouse runs way out across the slough and holds staging bass.
Peyton eases into the slough and stops in the middle of the left side, out from the point between the two arms. But that is not the point he fishes; the point to fish comes off the left side across the mouth of the left pocket. It has big stumps on it the bass use for cover, ambushing shad moving into the coves.
Sit in about eight feet of water at full pool and make long casts across the point. Depending on water level, you want to bump the bottom two to five feet deep, and Peyton chooses the DT right for that depth, a four for hitting up to four feet deep and the six for up to six feet deep.
After fishing the point, go into the grass and fish around both pockets with swim jig and bladed jig. Watch for birds in the grass, indicating baitfish is present. When we fished white cranes were feasting on shad that had gotten trapped in the grass by the rapidly dropping water.
This short pocket right on the river gives early bass fast access to the shallows. There were a few bass chasing shad here, and a couple bumped Peyton’s bladed jig out in front of the grass, but the muddy water made it tough to hook up.
2. N 33 57.048 – W 86 00.885 – Going up the river from the bridges, a roadbed runs right along the edge of the water on the left. Go to where the bank swings back to the right and leaves the roadbed. There is a brown fishing dock with blue chairs on it, in front of two camping trailers. Start at that dock.
The river channel swings in right on this corner and largemouth, with a few spots mixed in, feed on the riprap alone the bank. Cast your squarebill right on the rocks and bump them as you reel out. Peyton likes a shad colored bait most days, but if the water is stained up bad, he will go with a red color.
Fish up to the first small point past the dock and fish it hard. It is rocky and worth a few casts with a shaky head or jig and pig after using your crankbait. Sometimes fish on the point just want a slow-moving bait.
3. N 33 56.846 – W 86 00.379 – Going upstream past the big pocket with the marina but before you get to the small island, a white wood fence is on a point on your left. The point out from it is pea gravel and holds pre-spawn bass going into the cut behind it to spawn, but spots will spawn out on the point.
Peyton will fan cast it with his crankbaits, bumping the bottom with them. He will also try a rattle bait and likes a chrome with blue back Rat-L-Trap, buzzing it across the point. Some days the bass just seem to want that noisy vibrating action more than a wiggling crankbait.
4. N 33 57.096 – W 86 00.453 – Go back into the big pocket with the marina in it. The water in the mouth of it is very shallow but a channel is marked with poles to get into it. Big grass beds all around the back hold feeding fish all month, and some will spawn in here in March since the shallow water warms fast.
Peyton says he starts at the marina on the right side of it and fishes all the way around the back. He says if you hit every blade of grass in here with a swim jig like a three-eights white 6th Sense jig with a white Rage Craw trailer on it, you will catch a limit most days. He normally uses a half ounce swim jig, but this shallow water calls for the lighter one.
You will be fishing shallow water, most less than two feet deep, and you will have to trim up your motor to keep it from dragging. But the fish are hear even in the very thin water. Toward the end of the month in warmer water, a frog like a Ribbet, reeled over and through the grass, will also catch fish here.
5. N 33 56.101 – W 86 02.090 – Going back down the river under the bridges, a development with rainbow colored houses is on your left. At the end of them is the opening to the slough that runs back up parallel to the river. The upstream point of the opening is a major staging area for bass moving into the slough to spawn.
Peyton says there are big logs and stumps on this point that the fish use. Stop out on the end of it on the river side and fan cast it with crankbait, bumping bottom at different depths, then buzz a rattle bait on it. Work upstream covering the end five or six feet deep all the way up to a foot deep at the bank.
Since this slough runs upstream, muddy water does not push into it fast and it will be clearer than the river when it first muddies up. There was a definite mud line across its mouth the day we fished. When this happens, shad and bass will often move back into the clearer water.
Under those conditions, go back into the slough and fish the grass with swim jig and bladed jig. We tried that, but the fast dropping water must have pulled the fish out with it. Under stable conditions, this pattern will work on tough days.
6. N 33 54.707 – W 86 04.031 – Going down the river channel marker 12 sits on the downstream point of one of the islands in the string of them out from the bank. Behind it is an old sand quarry and big spawning flats, and Peyton says the point is a place many bass hold on moving in during the month. Late in March there may even be some post spawn fish moving back out during a warm month.
Stop out on the river side. With the water down we could see the point of the island behind the marker drops down into a saddle that comes back up onto a hump with a big log on it. Peyton says that saddle is the key spot for holding fish.
Get your boat in close to the marker and cast toward the bank, across the tip end of the island in close to it in a foot of water. Use both crankbaits, bladed jig and rattle baits. Work them all the way across the saddle, bumping bottom until you get to the log. Unless the water is real high you should be able to see them. Work a jig or shaky head through them.
Peyton chooses his jig based on water color, using black and blue in stained water and green in clear. But with both he uses a green pumpkin chunk trailer. Work the log carefully with it.
7. N 33 51.527 – W 86 05.733 – Canoe Creek is a big creek on the right downstream where the river makes a sharp turn to the left. It is wide and shallow, so be careful back in it. Go in to where is swings to the right. Straight ahead is Permeter Creek and a bridge crosses near the mouth of it.
Peyton says bass hold on the riprap and move to the bank on the downstream right end of it to spawn back in the flat there. Start at the bridge and cast your crankbaits along the rocks, bumping them from right on the bank down to six feet deep. Sun on the rocks will warm them and make the bite better, especially early in the month. And Peyton likes a little breeze in all the places he fishes, enough to ruffle the water and break up his baits silhouette. That improves the bite.
Fish to the end of the rocks and the area at the end of them. Bass bed back in here so later in the month, drag your shaky head and jig on the bottom in likely bedding spots.
8. N 33 51.686 – W 86 05.678 – Just upstream of the mouth of Permeter Creek a long shallow point runs out. If you have a good GPS map on your electronics, or a paper map, you can see how the Canoe Creek channel hits the bank upstream of it then turns and runs a long way along it. Fish hold all along the channel drop and move up it to spawning areas.
Leaving the riprap you have to swing way out, it is only a couple feet deep going across the point. Get way out on the end of the point with your boat in the channel in 10 – 15 feet of water. You will be a short cast from the top of the point that is three to five feet deep. Cast your DT 6 up on top then bump it along the bottom until it clears the drop. Your bites will usually be right on the lip of the channel.
Also work your shaky head the same way. Peyton rigs a green pumpkin Big Bite Baits finesse worm on a three sixteenths ounce Spot Sticker head and crawls it along the bottom. When it gets to the drop, feed it line so it falls down the slope on the bottom.
This drop is long enough you can spend a lot of time fishing it, and going back over places you catch fish is worth it.
9. N 33 51.768 – W 86 06.077 – Going up Canoe Creek a big ramp, Canoe Creek Park, is on your left. There are a few houses downstream of it with a riprap bank in front of them. Stop downstream of the last house from the ramp and fish upstream to the pocket above the ramp.
This bank is an outside bend of the creek. The riprap and docks along it hold bass as does the wood cover along the bank. Just downstream of them there are a lot of blowdowns that are good to fish and there are stumps all along the bank, too.
Fish your squarebill crankbait, bumping rocks and wood, then follow up with your jig and pig, fishing it close to all the cover. Released fish refresh this bank every weekend.
10. N 33 52.343 – W 86 06.223 – Muscadine Creek enters Canoe Creek on the left a little further upstream. A big house with some big tall trees in front of it sits on the point between the two creeks. It is a big, flat, shallow point where spots and largemouth stack up pre-spawn moving into both creeks.
Peyton says you can have your best day ever for spots right here in March. To prove his point, he hooked a spot that looked like it weighed about five pounds but came off right at the boat.
You should sit on the Muscadine Creek side in about seven feet of water just off the end of the point. Fan cast it with your crankbaits, that is what the big spot hit. Also try crawling your bladed jig on the bottom. We got a good three pound largemouth here on one.
There are some big stumps and gravel on the point.
A shaky head will catch fish here, too. Fan cast all over the point, hitting water three to five feet deep.
These places are producing spots and largemouth right now. Check them out and catch some!
Bassmaster Classic Takes 2023 SportsTravel Award For Best Professional Event
Have You Ever Attended? Bassmaster Classic Takes 2023 SportsTravel Award For Best Professional Event
from The Fishing Wire
Birmingham, AL — The 2023 Academy Sports + Outdoors Bassmaster Classic presented by Toyota was honored as the “Best Professional Event” at the annual SportsTravel Awards. The awards recognize the best events, venue and host city in the sports-event industry. The NCAA Women’s Final Four and Salt Lake City, host of the 2023 NBA All-Star Weekend, were among the event’s other honorees.
“There is just no way to overstate the significance of the Bassmaster Classic to the sport of bass fishing, fishing fans, host communities and the sportfishing industry as a whole, and we are thrilled to see this iconic tournament recognized as the best professional sports event in the country,” said Chase Anderson, CEO of B.A.S.S.
“We’re thrilled to see the Bassmaster Classic mentioned alongside the Stanley Cup Finals, Super Bowl and World Cup, which have all won this same award previously. This is a true testament to the hard work of the B.A.S.S. team, talented professional anglers, dedicated sponsors and our partnership with Visit Knoxville. It also shows what our organization has known and proven for more than 50 years — fishing and the outdoor industry are a win for fans and local economies.”
The Bassmaster Classic not only welcomed a staggering crowd of 163,914 fans to Classic Week activities across Knoxville, Tenn., but also reached 4.5 million viewers across the two days of FOX and FS1 coverage. Bassmaster.com and the B.A.S.S. social media channels also broke records for engagement as fans devoured content on the web and social channels. During the 2023 Bassmaster Classic, records were set for social media impressions, engagement and video views as well as BassTrakk page views and streams of Bassmaster LIVE coverage — 1.2 million streams for more than 32.7 million minutes across Bassmaster.com, Tubi and the FOX Sports digital platforms.
The Super Bowl of Bass Fishing has also proven itself as one of the best investments in sports.
According to numbers released by Visit Knoxville, the Bassmaster Classic generated an economic windfall of more than $35.5 million for the community. In addition to producing more than $2.85 million in state and local tax revenue, including taxes on sales, restaurant purchases and lodging, the 2023 Bassmaster Classic and associated activities supported a total of 12,698 jobs.
Fans traveling from across the nation and as far away as Australia and Japan also accounted for 31,525 room nights at hotels across Knox County.
“The SportsTravel Awards recognize the stars of the sports-event industry,” said Jason Gewirtz, vice president of the Sports Division of Northstar Travel Group, which publishes SportsTravel magazine, in a release by the organization. “As events began to come back in 2022, we were thrilled to see hundreds of worthy events nominated for this year’s awards. The winners in each category exemplify everything that we love about the sports-event industry and underscore the resiliency and power of the sports-related travel market.”
The SportsTravel Awards are nominated and voted on by the readers of SportsTravel magazine. Criteria included superior organization of and attendance at the event and competitor and/or spectator experience.
2023 Bassmaster Classic Title Sponsor: Academy Sports + Outdoors
2023 Bassmaster Classic Presenting Sponsor: Toyota
2023 Bassmaster Classic Premier Sponsors: Bass Pro Shops, Dakota Lithium, Humminbird, Mercury, Minn Kota, Nitro Boats, Power-Pole, Progressive Insurance, Ranger Boats, Rapala, Skeeter Boats, Yamaha
2023 Bassmaster Classic Outdoors Expo Presenting Sponsor: U.S. Army
2023 Bassmaster Classic Local Partners: Calhoun’s, Lithium Pros, Tennessee Tourism, TNT Fireworks, TVA
2023 Bassmaster Classic Host: Visit Knoxville
Connect with #Bassmaster on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and TikTok.
About B.A.S.S.
B.A.S.S., which encompasses the Bassmaster tournament leagues, events and media platforms, is the worldwide authority on bass fishing and keeper of the culture of the sport, providing cutting edge content on bass fishing whenever, wherever and however bass fishing fans want to use it. Headquartered in Birmingham, Ala., the 500,000-member organization’s fully integrated media platforms include the industry’s leading magazines (Bassmaster and B.A.S.S. Times), website (Bassmaster.com), TV show, radio show, social media programs and events. For more than 50 years, B.A.S.S. has been dedicated to access, conservation and youth fishing.
The Bassmaster Tournament Trail includes the most prestigious events at each level of competition, including the Bassmaster Elite Series, St. Croix Bassmaster Opens Series, TNT Fireworks B.A.S.S. Nation Series, Strike King Bassmaster College Series presented by Bass Pro Shops, Strike King Bassmaster High School Series presented by Academy Sports + Outdoors, Bass Pro Shops Bassmaster Team Championship, Yamaha Rightwaters Bassmaster Kayak Series powered by TourneyX, Yamaha Bassmaster Redfish Cup Championship presented by Skeeter and the ultimate celebration of competitive fishing, the Academy Sports + Outdoors Bassmaster Classic presented by Toyota.
Is Fishing The Carolina Rig The Anytime Big Fish Technique
Fishing The Carolina Rig The Anytime Big Fish Techniqu
from The Fishing Wire
Whether competing in a bass tournament or simply fishing a weekend afternoon, all anglers are constrained by one element: time. This time constraint has led to the strategy known as “power fishing,” epitomized by the run-and-gun approach introduced by Kevin Van Dam, who recently retired with the best track record in competitive bass fishing history.
Power fishing is not just fishing fast; rather, it’s about covering water with improved time management and efficiency in order to get a sense of how the most active bass are behaving on a given day. Once located, an angler can slow to a more methodical means to catch more bass located in an area.
What if you could utilize a technique that offered the best of both worlds: long casts to cover water relatively quickly but also a means to efficiently probe the lake bottom and surrounding cover for bass? Such is the appeal of the Carolina rig, aka the “ball and chain.”
The Carolina rig shot to the national spotlight in the 1985 Bassmaster’s Classic when Jack Chancellor dragged it across river sand bars for the winning catch. He called it the “Do-Nothing Rig,” which is appropriate given the simplicity of the technique.
The Carolina rig is a heavy barrel weight, such as Epic’s ¾ or 1 oz Tungsten Barrel Weight, separated from the hook and an 18-36” leader by a barrel swivel. Most anglers will include a series of plastic or metal beads above the swivel knot to cushion it from the heavy sinker and add an audible component to attract a bass’ attention.
If you want extra cushion and less clack, use the XL Blue-Colored Weight Peg from Epic. Place the peg right above the swivel so that when the weight comes down, it will bounce back. If Epic’s Tungsten Bead is on there, then it will have a different sound than glass beads.
Soft plastic choices for the Carolina rig are a matter of the angler’s imagination and preference, with creature baits and craws a popular choice, as are the more subtle 5-inch “french fry” worms or even the ubiquitous Senko. Choices in hooks can include a 3-4/0 EWG (extra wide gap), such as the AlphaPoint® Assault Tactical Wide Gap Hook, or the offset round bend hooks in the same size.
Typically, the Carolina rig uses 30-50# braided line to eliminate stretch on a long hookset. The leader material is usually 12-15 pound fluorocarbon to reduce underwater line visibility and increase abrasion resistance.
The Carolina rig can be fished on the bottom from shallow to deep, stirring up sediment as the heavyweight drags along the bottom with short bursts from the rod tip. The efficiency of the setup comes from the ability to bomb the rig great distances with long casts due to the heavy sinker. The sinker also impacts structure along the lake bottom as it drags, which draws fish to the commotion. It also offers feedback to the astute angler about the composition of the lake bottom. One can feel the tactile change in feedback through the rod tip as the sinker drags through the muted feel of a silty bottom to the more “crunchy” sensation of gravel or shell bottom. These little patches of gravel and shell are what is known as a “hard bottom” among accomplished offshore anglers and is considered “the juice” when searching for schools of feeding bass.
Among all the components of dragging a Carolina rig effectively, the rod is front and center. The technique requires a specialized rod long enough to heft the heavy sinker and extend leader a great distance while also maintaining the sensitivity to feel those subtle bottom changes through the rod tip. The new KastKing Assegai “Sweet Caroline” is aptly named, as it checks all the boxes for defining the perfect rod for lobbing and dragging the old ball and chain.
At 7 ‘6”, the Sweet Caroline has the needed length to fire the Carolina rig to its maximum range, as well as move a lot of line in a hurry on the hookset with a sweep of the long rod. Considered a “fast/medium/heavy” action, this technique-specific rod from KastKing also offers the tip sensitivity to feel the bottom and detect the bite, but has the power to drive the hook home on bass from a great distance.
Want a wide spool reel that eliminates backlashes and also lets you know the distance of your last cast? You can pair the Assegai rod with the new KastKing iReel, which is an incredibly smooth reel that casts the Carolina rig a country mile. At ICAST ’23, all the buzz centered around the iReel’s ability to provide audible feedback for the casting distance, as well as retrieve speed, both important metrics when fishing any lure. Should you choose to turn off the audio capability, the iReel records all the casting data to your phone via the KastKing app for your review at a later time.
The Carolina rig is a versatile technique that can be fished fast or slow, shallow or deep, regardless of the season. When searching for schools of bass away from the shoreline, drag ‘em up with the “ball and chain.”