Hack Blasts The Pack
November 22, 2008 by admin · Leave a Comment
The Walmart FLW Series East-West Fish-Off was designed around head-to-head matchups for Forrest Wood Cup berths to offer a multitude of competitions between FLW Series Eastern and Western pros for added excitement.
And while a few matchups did offer some close finishes, in the end it was a three-man race for the tournament’s winner-take-all purse of $25,000 that became the most exciting matchup of all.
That’s because for two days David Fritts, Terry Bolton and Greg Hackney all brought in 30-pound-plus limits to grapple for the overall lead. And with 6-pound bass being “a dime a dozen on Falcon,” as Fritts commented, none of the three pros had any intention of slacking off going into day three. In fact, all three felt pretty confidence that their respective fishing areas could produce a 40-pound limit on the final day.
And when the pros’ feet hit the bank for the final weigh-in on day three, whispers of possible 40-pound bags among the leaders filtered through the weigh-in line.
What’s more, when three giant tails are protruding from a weigh-in bag because the first two bass in the bag took up all the room, it’s kind of hard to disguise what kind of catch a pro has.
The real excitement began with Bolton, whose day-three limit topped the scales at 38 pounds, 15 ounces to give him a three-day total of 105-8.
That left Hackney needing 33 pounds, 14 ounces to take the overall lead.
Hackney burst into fist-pumping elation when Chris Jones belted out Hackney’s day-three weight: 37 pounds, 11 ounces.
Hack’s massive limit was anchored by an 11-7 brute and gave him a three-day total of 109-6.
Finally, it was Fritts’ turn, but the Chevy pro’s wheels ran off on the final day – well, if you can consider 19-6 as wheels running off. Unfortunately that’s the harsh reality of Falcon Lake.
So in the end, it was Hackney’s week to shine.
Hack: ‘What a week!’
For just a quick review, here’s what Greg Hackney accomplished during an amazing week on Falcon Lake.
One, he rewrote the FLW Outdoors record books. He now owns the heaviest single-day five-bass limit at 39-11. He also came within 15 ounces of beating FLW’s all-time cumulative tournament weight record, and he did it in just three days. The current record is held by Jeremy Guidry, also from Louisiana, who caught 110-2 in four days on Falcon during the Stren Series event held there in January of this year.
Two, he earned a ticket to the 2009 Forrest Wood Cup by crushing his Western competition, John Billheimer, by some 80 pounds.
Three, he collected the winner’s check of $25,000.
Four, he won his first major title in FLW Outdoors competition.
“What a week!” Hackney said after the win. “This is just unbelievable. To end my 2008 season this way makes it all worth it. I’m so pumped right now I can’t even explain it.”
Hackney’s success this week came from two specific areas located near the dam on Falcon.
The first was a submerged pond dam and the other was big flat, which was crowned with a fence row and gravel road bed before falling off into the main channel.
“The main thing that both areas had in common was a hard clean bottom that dropped off vertically into deep water,” Hackney explained. “All those big fish were sitting up on top of the hard bottom in 10 to 20 feet of water right where it fell off into deeper water.”
Hackney’s primary weapon all week was a pair of 10-inch Strike King Rage Tail Anaconda worms (Bama bug and red bug) topped with ½-ounce and 3/8-ounce sinkers.
“The whole key was to keep that worm in constant contact with the bottom,” he said. “I never lifted my rod or raised it to swim the worm at all. I held my rod in one position and barely crept the worm along the bottom with the reel only. If the worm lifted off the bottom, they would not eat it; it had to be crawling on the bottom.
“I’ll remember this week as long as I live,” he added. “The thrill of setting the hook into every one of those bass and just wondering how big it was – 9 pounds? 10 pounds? 12 pounds? – I still get chills thinking about it.”
Bolton runner-up
How would you like to fish a bass tournament, catch 105 pounds, 8 ounces over three days and still not win?
Welcome to the world of Terry Bolton. Despite weighing in 38-15 today and breaking the century mark, he still ended up some 4 pounds short of victory.
“Oh well, what are you going to do?” Bolton laughed. “Let’s see, 36-13, 29-12 and 38-15, and I still don’t win? What can I say?”
Bolton, however, is the first to point out that his week was the result of some tremendous good fortune.
During practice over the weekend, he happened to be in an area where he witnessed a couple of anglers reeling in giant bass for a local tournament that was going on.
Bolton made a mental note of it and returned later to investigate the area for himself. After spending a great deal of time fishing and graphing the area, he finally found the sweet spot.
“There was one precise cast you had to make at just the right angle,” Bolton said. “If you were just a tad to the right or left, you’d never know there was a gazillion pounds of bass living down there. But once I hit the sweet spot, it was a big one every cast.”
Bolton believes that the key element on the bottom was an old road bed.
“The road bed was probably on dry land before the water came up,” he said. “But I think it kind of intersected with the old shoreline; it was a hard, clean bottom, and they were loaded on it.”
Bolton’s two main lures were a 10-inch Zoom Old Monster topped with a ½-ounce Tru-tungsten weight and a Rapala DT-20 crankbait in chartreuse and brown.
He fished the Old Monster on 20-pound-test Trilene 100% fluorocarbon and the crankbait on 12-pound-test Trilene 100% fluorocarbon.
To make his week even more memorable, Bolton got a little surprise at the day-three weigh-in. Unbeknownst to him, his wife, Pam, who is part of the National Guard fishing team, flew all the way from Jonesboro, Ark., to Zapata, Texas, to witness the incredible week he was having.
In fact, Bolton had no clue that his wife was even on the scene until he climbed the stage to weigh his fish. Then she appeared, much to his surprise, and helped him weigh his fish.
“This only makes this week even more special,” Bolton said. “No matter what, this has been the coolest week of my life. I’ve caught the three biggest stringers of my life, my wife showed up to help me weigh in the 38-15 today, and I earned a spot in the Forrest Wood Cup.”
Fritts ends up third
It’s hard to believe that anyone could call catching 19 pounds, 6 ounces a bad day of tournament fishing, but when you’re in contention for a win on Falcon Lake, anything under 20 pounds barely gets an honorable mention.
And that’s exactly what happened to cranking king David Fritts today. After leading the first day and barely falling to second on the second day, Fritts slipped off the blistering Falcon pace today with just 19-6, leaving him in third place overall with a three-day total of 89-15.
The Chevy pro spent the week cranking a DT-14 (brown bone and hot mustard) on 14-pound test Suffix line around the tops of submerged bushes.
“I probably hurt my places a little too much yesterday,” Fritts said. “I culled three bass yesterday that weighed 6-9 a piece and several others right at 6-pounds before that, so I threw back a 30-pound bag yesterday. But I was going for the win, I wanted to catch a 40-pound bag yesterday and I think I just went through too many fish.”
All is not lost, though. Fritts easily qualified for the Forrest Wood Cup by winning his match up by some 50 pounds.
Baumgardner catches a 12
Snicker’s pro Chris Baumgardner made his drive all the way from North Carolina worth it this week by catching limits of 25-10, 30-11 and 29-15 for a three-day total of 86-4, earning him a trip to the Forrest Wood Cup by easily winning his bracket.
What’s more, Baumgardner weighed in the biggest bass of the tournament – a 12-pounder – on day three.
“That’s what you come to Falcon for right there,” Baumgardner said while holding his fish up for photos.
Baumgardner’s main pattern all week was to fish “point bushes” with a spinnerbait – a ½-ounce homemade model, featuring a white and chartreuse skirt.
“The fish were suspended in the tops of those point bushes out on the main lake,” Baumgardner said. “I was only getting seven or eight bites a day, but they were all big ones.”
Kreiger rounds out top five
Koby Kreiger of Florida garnered a spot in the 2009 Forrest Wood Cup this week as well by amassing a three-day total of 82-14.
Kreiger’s primary Falcon pattern was to fish “fluffy” mainlake bushes with a 1-ounce Oldham’s spinnerbait and a Zoom Brush Hog.
“The biggest, bushiest flooded trees were the best,” Kreiger said. “The fish were suspended around the tops of them and the spinnerbait did most of the damage.”
Fun with the numbers
With the head-to-head matchups over, here’s a look at a few of the more interesting duels:
Closest match-up: Believe it or not, one of the match-ups came down to a single ounce. That’s right, Michael Rooke of Lake Havasu City, Ariz., beat out Jonathan Newton of Rogersville, Ala., for a Forrest Wood Cup berth by a single ounce. Rooke had 44-2 compared to Newton’s 44-1.
Lowest qualifying weight: Chris Zaldain of San Jose, Calif., is going to the Forrest Wood Cup on a three-day total of 43-6. Even with that, he easily defeated Georgia’s Tony Couch who had just 21-3.
Highest loosing weight: This one is painful, but it always happens in this head-to-head format. Coppertone pro Brett Hite caught the highest weight in a loosing match-up: 69 pounds, 9 ounces. He was defeated by BP pro David Walker who caught 76-14.
Lastly, the final East versus West tally was East 20, West 10. Though the East dominated the top 10, other top-10 Western pros included Zack Thompson (6th), Ken Wick (9th) and Brent Ehrler (10th).
Hack Attacks Falcon
November 21, 2008 by admin · Leave a Comment
Yesterday it was the Fritts Blitz; today it was the Hack Attack. If it sounds like there is an all-out war going on at the Walmart FLW Series East-West Fish-Off, there is.
Fish-Off pros continued to dismantle the foundations of FLW record books with explosive limits of Falcon bass on day two.
David Fritts’ all time one-day heaviest limit record of 37 pounds, 2 ounces set yesterday lasted only 24 hours as Louisiana’s Greg Hackney set the bar even higher today with five bass weighing an astounding 39 pounds, 11 ounces.
The two biggest bass in Hackney’s hog trough consisted of a 9-11 and an 11-3 brute. He now holds the all-time FLW Outdoors record for a heaviest single-day five-bass limit.
After Hackney’s pig show, Koby Kreiger of Florida also stepped over Fritts’ day-one record and weighed in five bass for 37-4 to take the second-heaviest five-bass limit position in the record books.
And all this happened despite a drastic 30-degree drop in temperature. Yesterday, Zapata’s air temperature was 83; today, anglers endured a wet, drizzly 50-degree high.
Although Fritts and Hackney are not matched against each other in the head-to-head matchups, they are now the two top contenders for the $25,000 top prize.
Hackney has slim lead in the overall tournament with a two-day total of 71 pounds, 11 ounces to Fritts’ 70 pounds, 9 ounces. Behind them is Terry Bolton with 66 pounds, 9 ounces.
Here’s a closer look at the leaders and their brackets:
Hackney going to 2009 Forrest Wood Cup
In addition to rewriting FLW Tour record books, Hackney is pretty much a shoo-in for a 2009 Forrest Wood Cup Berth. His matchup opponent, Western pro John Billheimer of Discovery Bay, Calif., has amassed just 7 pounds, 2 ounces in two days, giving Hackney a 64-pound lead.
“I’m telling you, this is a surreal experience,” Hackney said. “I caught a 9-11 and an 11-3 on back-to-back casts … man, at that point I was a little scared to make another cast out there because I was not real sure what was going to happen next.
“I know this sounds crazy, but it’s entirely possible to catch a 50-pound limit on this lake,” he suggested. “I’m not claiming I’m going to do it, I’m just saying that with so many 9- to 11-pound bass in this lake, it’s not outside the realm of possibility to see a 50-pound bag here someday.”
Despite such a monster bag today, Hackney claims he lost three more giants.
“Yesterday I broke off one on heavy fluorocarbon line, so I went to 50-pound braid today and still broke one off on that same spot,” he said. “But I don’t think it’s necessarily my fault. There’s something down there that’s cutting my line; it wouldn’t matter what I use. With the weather the way it was today and the way the big ones were biting, I really thought I might be able to weigh 45 pounds if I got everything in the boat, but it didn’t happen that way; everything has to go just right to get those giants hooked up right and in the boat.
“I’m fishing the exact same kind of stuff on each spot I visit,” he continued. “I have three or four different spots, and I’m fishing different depths at each spot, but it’s all the same kind of structure.”
Hackney did say he is catching his fish on a Strike King Hack Attack jig and a Rage Tail Anaconda worm.
“Those are the only two baits I’ve showed them so far,” he added. “Tomorrow, I’m going to really sit on them and show them a lot of different lures. Man, is that going to be fun.”
Fritts looking to win
After adding another 33 pounds, 7 ounces to his weight of 37-2 yesterday, David Fritts now has nearly a 50-pound lead over his Western competitor, Cody Meyer of Redding, Calif., and is a certain lock for the 2009 Forrest Wood cup as well.
But Fritts has made it known verbally that he has come here to win – and with a two-day total of 70 pounds, 9 ounces, that’s certainly possible.
“I still have not gotten used to culling 6-pounders,” Fritts laughed. “It’s like being in the ‘Twilight Zone.’ I caught a lot more fish today, and every time I toss a 5- or 6-pounder back, it’s the weirdest feeling in the world; you wonder how that’s possible.
“I’ve got two more spots I have not hit yet, and I’m really hoping to get 35 or 40 pounds tomorrow. I think that’s possible.”
Bolton keeps the hammer down on Riehl
Imagine for moment being Western pro Rob Riehl of Tracy, Calif. You have caught a 25-1 bag on day one and a respectable 18-9 bag on day two for a two-day total of 43-10, and you are still some 23 pounds behind in your matchup.
That’s what Riehl is facing since he happens to be paired against Terry Bolton, who has sacked 66 pounds, 9 ounces in two days.
“I don’t even know what to say anymore,” said Bolton after catching another 29-12 today after yesterday’s 36-13. “This has been the most incredible two days in my bass-fishing career.”
One thing Bolton found comical was the size of the “arches” he has seen on his depth finder the last two days.
“I’ve seen a lot of fish on depth finders over the years,” he laughed. “But when one of those Falcon giants swims under the transducer, it leaves a big old squiggly line on the graph.”
Kreiger speechless too
After weighing in the second-biggest five-fish limit in FLW Outdoors history today – 37-4 – Koby Kreiger was also at a loss for words as how to explain what just happened.
Instead of words, Kreiger’s eyes told the story. He had a facial expression that read something like this: Did that just happen? Am I dreaming?
“This is just unbelievable,” said Kreiger, who is now in fourth place overall. “I had no idea I had that much weight. I’ve never had the experience of having to add up that kind of weight in my head. I mean I figured I had enough to get to 30 pounds, but after that I just didn’t know what was in there.”
Kreiger said he is fishing a Zoom Brush Hog and an Oldham’s 1-ounce spinnerbait around trees.
“But it’s just not any trees,” he explained. “I’m looking for a certain kind of tree set up a certain way in the pockets. I ran into a pocket I’ve never fished today and saw the exact kind of tree that fit the pattern and caught a big one.”
Kreiger’s matchup, Randy Mcabee of Bakersfield, Calif., made a run at Kreiger with a 33-pound, 13-ounce limit today, but unfortunately Mcabee got a bit behind yesterday with just 8 pounds, 12 ounces. Despite his giant limit today, Mcabee still faces an uphill climb of some 22 pounds to catch Kreiger.
Baumgardner handling Hawk
In the fifth-place position, Eastern Division pro Chris Baumgardner of Gastonia, N.C., broke the 30-pound barrier today with 33-11. Add that to his 25-10 from day one, and he has a two-day total of 56 pounds, 5 ounces.
This has allowed Baumgardner to amass a 30-pound margin over his competitor, Western Division pro Roy Hawk of Salt Lake City, Utah.
Baumgardner said he is fishing the outside bushes with a ½-ounce spinnerbait.
Texas shootouts
The whole idea of the East-West Fish-Off was to create a head-to-head battle for Forrest Wood Cup berths. After day two, several of the head-to-head matchups have turned into real shootouts for a Forrest Wood Cup ticket.
Here’s a quick summary of some of the particularly close battles with weights after day two:
Jake Deeds of El Dorado, Ark., (E) 43-7 vs. R.J. Bennett of Roseville, Calif., (W) 42-15.
Jon Strelic of Alpine, Calif., (W) 46-3 vs. Dion Hibdon of Stover, Mo., (E) 45-9.
Jason Borofka of Salinas, Calif, (W) 39-0 vs. Keith Combs of Del Rio, Texas, (E) 36-12.
Shin Fukae of Mineola, Texas, (E) 37-15 vs. Brent Lyon of Reno, Nev., (W) 37-0.
Jim Davis of Lumas Lake, Calif., (W) 31-7 vs. J.T. Kenney of Palm Bay, Fla., (E) 30-6.
David Walker of Sevierville, Tenn., (E) 46-3 vs. Brett Hite of Phoenix, Ariz., (W) 43-15.
Dan Morehead of Paducah, Ky., (E) 33-7 vs. Cameron Smith of Dana Point, Calif., (W) 30-15.
Fabiszak Feasts on Falcon’s Fish
November 21, 2008 by admin · Leave a Comment
It was predicted that Falcon Lake would be feast or famine for anglers competing in the Walmart FLW Series East-West Fish-Off.
For most co-anglers, at least, that’s how it’s shaping up.
Among the field of 59 anglers 27 caught heavier bags on Friday than they did on Thursday. The top 10 got four new members. Ron Fabiszak still leads with 40 pounds, 9 ounces and the South Bend, Ind. native increased his lead over second place from a day one margin of 2 pounds, 12 ounces to a day two margin of 3 pounds, 11 ounces. That despite weighing just three fish on Friday and seven of a possible 10 for the tournament.
Fabiszak is feasting, no question.
But the big bag of the day belonged to Mark White of Tucson, Ariz., who jumped from 48th place to 12th place with five fish weighing 24 pounds, 3 ounces. Ten anglers caught nothing. None could have been more frustrated than Robert Wood of Jupiter, Fla., who was in second place on day one but got skunked on day two and fell to 18th.
If you weren’t catching fish than Falcon wasn’t a pleasant place to be Friday. The day started cold and wet and ended cold and dry. Anglers rubbed their hands on stage. Some wore stocking caps and snowmobile bibs. Many said that staying focused on fishing was tough. Saturday should be warmer, according to the weather forecast.
Fabiszak didn’t appear cold at the weigh-in, nor did he appear nervous. Perhaps he should be. He’s in first place despite not having weighed a limit so far. How many guys win a three-day tournament without at least one limit? Fabiszak is catching the right fish, for sure, but can he hang on at Falcon?
“I hope so,” said the South Bend, Ind. angler. “It would be nice to have that money to pay for the trip home. It’s a long drive.”
Fabiszak used the same spinnerbait Friday that he fished with Thursday, but said he didn’t get as many bites and lost a big fish in a tree. “It was just one of those days,” he concluded.
Iloski takes over second
One of those days is what Mike Iloski needs to finish first. He took over second place with a five fish limit weighing 16 pounds, 11 ounces and has a two-day total of 36 pounds, 13 ounces.
The Escondido, Calif. angler said he switched from plastics to reaction baits on Friday. Last year he won a tournament on the Delta and finished fourth overall in points in the Western Division. This year he was third.
“This place is unbelievable,” Iloski said of Falcon. “What’s most incredible is that at this time of year we’re seeing sacks like these. I just fished the Delta and we were happy to get 9 pounds.”
Sniffen moves up to third
Greg Sniffen improved from fourth place to third place Friday with four fish weighing 15 pounds, 13 ounces. He did it with a spinnerbait and now has a cumulative weight of 36 pounds, 4 ounces.
“It was cold today and the fishing was tough,” said the Saratoga, Calif. angler. “I got 12 bites yesterday and six bites today .”
Sniffen has good reason to be hopeful on Saturday. He’s paired with pro Greg Hackney, who set a new FLW one-day record with five bass weighing 39 pounds, 11 ounces.
“I just hope I can catch half of what he caught today,” Sniffen said.
Matsushita in fourth
Masayuki Matsushita of Aichi, Japan jumped into fourth place with a five fish limit weighing 20 pounds, 7 ounces, the third biggest catch among all co-anglers. He said he caught his fish on a Japanese bait named Deps. Added to his day one weight of 12 pounds, 9 ounces, Matsushita now has 33 pounds for the tournament.
Crawford makes big leap into fifth
Troy Crawford made the biggest one-day jump of the tournament so far, going from 30th place on Thursday to fifth place on Friday. He was helped by an 8 pound, 5 ounce bass, one of the biggest weighed by any co-angler, that brought his five-fish bag for the day to 32 pounds, 2 ounces.
“It feels good,” Crawford said of his meteoric rise in the standings, “but we’re on Falcon Lake, where anything can happen.”
Crawford didn’t lose faith in the presentation he started with Thursday. He went back to Texas rigging plastics. “There’s a lot of brush in the lake and this is the best way to get through it,” he said.
Fritts Puts “Blitz” On Falcon
November 20, 2008 by admin · Leave a Comment
Going into the Walmart FLW Series East-West Fish-Off, the words “feast or famine” were used to described the conditions.
After day one of the Fish-Off, feast or famine is a dead-on description of what is happening on what has become known as America’s top big bass location.
Indeed, Falcon did represent with some true glory bags today. In all, four limits over 30 pounds crossed the stage. Behind those, another five bags came in between 25 and 30 pounds.
But at the same time, there were 15 pros who did not break the 10-pound mark – feast or famine.
In the overall count between the Eastern and Western Division match-ups, the East did more feasting today. All total, 20 Eastern Division pros won their match-ups compared to 10 Western Division pros who beat their opponents.
And already the leaderboard is littered with some serious landslides. After day one there are now seven match-ups that feature a 20-plus pound deficit between the two pros.
Two Eastern Division pros in particular who are feasting big time, complete with momentum appetizers, include Chevy pro David Fritts and Yamaha pro Terry Bolton.
Fritts, who is coming off a Clarks Hill Eastern Series win, carried his momentum to Falcon to catch the biggest bag of the day: five bass for 37 pounds, 2 ounces.
What’s more, Fritts’ catch now stands as the heaviest single-day catch in FLW Outdoors history.
Just behind him is Bolton with 36 pounds, 13 ounces. Bolton, too, is on roll after a third place finish in the recent Forrest Wood Cup at Murray and a fifth place finish at Clarks Hill.
Fritts takes overall lead, blisters Meyer
“This is the most incredible tournament day I’ve ever had in my career,” said Fritts after weighing in his 37-2. “This place is unreal, I’ve never had my string stretched like that; I’m not used to catching fish like this, it’s a different universe here.”
Fritts’ bag consisted of two 8-pounders with the biggest weighing in at 8-13.
He caught his fish on a mixture of crankbaits, plastics and jigs. He fished just three areas, with the first area giving up several giants on his first three casts.
“After that, it kind of slowed down and I had to work for them,” he added. “I’ve only hit three of my best places and I’ve got four other places I did not touch.”
“And here’s the scary part,” Fritts warned. “That might be the smallest bag I weigh-in this week. All the places I’m fishing have big fish like that.”
That news does not bode well for Fritts’ opponent, Western Division pro Cody Meyer of Redding, California. While Fritts was feasting, Meyer experienced famine with just two bass weighing 6 pounds, 8 ounces.
But it’s not all bad news for Meyer because he has already qualified for the 2009 Forrest Wood Cup by being the top finisher in the Stren Series Championship from the West.
Bolton experiences Falcon at its best, but Riehl lurks
Yamaha pro Terry Bolton of Jonesboro, Ark., will forever remember five consecutive casts he made on Falcon Lake on day one of the East-West Fish-Off.
His first five fish he put in the boat today weighed an estimated 34 pounds. A few casts later he culled up to 36-13 before leaving his spot to let it rest.
Bolton’s magnificent limit consisted of a 9-1 and an 8-7 as his two biggest bass to put him in second place overall.
“I might not catch another bass the rest of the week, and you know what, I don’t really care,” said Bolton as his hands still shook uncontrollably from his surreal fishing day. “That’s the most unbelievable fishing day I’ve ever experienced; I’ll have that memory for as long as I live.”
Bolton, however, did not get lined up on his best spot correctly first thing this morning.
“I fished around it about 30 minutes without a bite when I looked at my GPS and discovered I was just a tick off the right spot,” he related. “I moved down just a tad, made a cast and it was on. I caught a giant and in the next four casts I caught all her big sisters.”
Ironically, Bolton noted that his magic spot does not look all that impressive on a depthfinder.
“You’d think there would be something major down there holding on those fish, but there’s not,” he explained. “Honestly, it does not look all that impressive.”
Bolton caught his fish on a Zoom Ol’ Monster worm and a Rapala DT 20 crankbait.
“I can you tell one thing, though,” he added. “I’ll have some bigger hooks tomorrow. I jumped a big one off today. And come to think of it, you know it’s been a good day when you jump off a 7-pounder and say to yourself, ‘oh well, no big deal.’”
But even after such a tremendous day, Bolton can not quite count his ticket to the Forrest Wood Cup punched just yet. That’s because his opponent, Rob Riehl of Tracy, Calif., did not have too shabby of a day either.
Riehl checked in a respectable 25 pounds, 1 ounce to hold his ground against Bolton. He is now some 12 pounds behind Bolton, which is nothing on Falcon, especially with two more days to play.
“I was feeling pretty good about my day until I saw Terry’s bag,” laughed Riehl. “But I’m fishing well, I feel good about what I’m doing and we still have two more days. Terry is one heck of a fisherman and if I have to catch even more than what I caught to beat him, then I need to live up to that.”
Hackney on the attack with 32, Billheimer trails with 7-2
Eastern Division pro Greg Hackney of Gonzales, La., cracked the 30-pound mark with 32 pounds to initiate an avalanche against young Western Division pro John Billheimer of Discovery Bay, Calif., who brought in three bass for 7 pounds, 2 ounces.
Hackney noted that Falcon Lake bass are some of the meanest on the planet and that he even had trouble getting a few of the monsters in the boat today.
“I broke my first one off, lost a couple more and then had one on that I could not even turn the reel handle on,” Hackney said shaking his head. “I’m telling you, these are a different breed of bass on this pond. And they have a whole world of trees and brush down there to use to their advantage.”
Hackney added that he is not really running a pattern, but is “spot fishing.”
“I have no pattern,” he said. “I’ve got three or four key areas that I’m bouncing around on and that’s it.”
Rose breaks 30, Spence close to 16
Eastern Division Mark Rose of Marion, Ark., broke the 30 pound barrier by one ounce to take a 15-pound lead over his competition, Bill Spence of Livermore, Calif., who weighed in 15-15.
Rose, currently fourth overall, has one little area he’s hoping will hold up for three days and put him in the Forrest Wood Cup.
“I’ve got one school of fish and all my eggs are in that basket,” Rose said. “From the looks of my limit, you’d think I jacked them up all day, but it was not really that easy. My bites were few and far between and it took all day to get my limit.”
“You can not even imagine how big and mean these fish are here,” he added. “I have a newfound appreciation for largemouth bass after today.”
Baker represents Western Division by doling out 29-3 to McMillan’s 5-4
All in all it was a tough day for the Western Division pros. Not only is the East ahead 20 to 10, but the first four positions in the tournament are taken up by Eastern Division pros.
But Western pro Dustin Baker of Lakeside, Calif., refuses to let his Western brethren down. He represented the West today with a limit weighing 29 pounds, 3 ounces to take fifth overall and leave his Eastern Division opponent Jimmy McMillan of Belle Glade, Fla., in the dust at two bass for 5 pounds, 4 ounces.
Baker has found one creek channel break from 10 to 28 feet that is holding some quality fish.
“It was the very first place I checked in practice,” Baker said. “I caught a couple of decent ones off it and thought: this is nothing, I’m going to find some real bass. Well, after spending the rest of practice struggling, I went right back there this morning and it turned out to be better than I thought.”
Too close to call
With so much disparity in almost half the match-ups, there are a couple that are turning into real nailbiters.
For starters, Eastern Division Kellogg’s pro Jim Tutt of Longview, Texas has a slim lead of 3 ounces over National Guard Western Pro Brent Ehrler of Redding, Calif.
Tutt caught 16 pounds, 12 ounces, while Ehrler reeled in 16 pounds, 9 ounces.
Another close contest is that of Eastern Pro Jake Deeds of El Dorado, Ark., and Western pro R.J. Bennett of Roseville, Calif.
Deeds has 21-13 to Bennett’s 21-8, making the margin just 5 ounces, which is basically a single scale off a Falcon Lake monster.












