SEP 18, 2013
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — The 2014 Bassmaster Elite Series
promises to be one for the history books. The 100 or so Elite Series anglers
who compete on the nation’s premier bass tournament circuit will visit rivers,
reservoirs and natural lakes in 11 states as they vie for fame, fortune and a
berth in the 2015 Bassmaster Classic.
Several of the fisheries are steeped in B.A.S.S. lore, and
the others soon will be.
“We’ve just finished an Elite Series season that saw
record attendance, record Internet traffic and record media coverage,” said
B.A.S.S. CEO Bruce Akin, “but we’re already looking forward to all that 2014
will hold.”
The Elite Series, which has included eight events for the
past five years, will grow to nine tournaments next year, he added, and one of
them will include a fan-attracting “BASSfest” reminiscent of the old summertime
Bassmaster Classics and with a $1,000,000 prize purse.
The Elite Series kicks off in Bainbridge, Ga., at Lake
Seminole, March 13-16. Seminole has been the site of 13 previous B.A.S.S.
events, including the very first tournament ever conducted under the auspices
of B.A.S.S., fishing’s largest membership organization. Two earlier events were
run by founder Ray Scott in 1967, but the organization had not yet been
formally created. This will be the first Elite event on Seminole and the first
B.A.S.S. event on its waters since a Bassmaster Southern Open in 2010.
From Seminole, the Elite anglers will head southeast to Palatka,
Fla., and the St. Johns River, March 20-23, where 18 previous professional
tournaments have taken place, including Elite events in 2011 and 2012. The St.
Johns produced the first 10-pound bass in B.A.S.S. competition history in 1973,
and double-digit fish could be plentiful at this springtime event. Edwin Evers
won the 2011 Elite stop at the St. Johns, while Alton Jones took top honors in
2012
After a short break, the trail moves to Branson, Mo., and
Table Rock Lake, April 3-6. “The Rock” has been the scene of 13 previous
B.A.S.S. tournaments won by such legends as Bill Dance and John Powell, as well
as several Elite anglers. In 2006, Todd Faircloth won what was arguably the
toughest Elite tournament in history. But that was in September; fishing will
be much better in April, and mixed bags of largemouth, smallmouth and spotted
bass will show the versatility of this great fishery.
B.A.S.S. has been competing on Toledo Bend Reservoir on
the Louisiana-Texas border almost since the lake began to fill in 1969.
Considered the best bass fishery in America during the 1970s, “the Bend” is
once again on everyone’s short list as a top fishery. May 1-4 will mark
B.A.S.S.’s 15th visit to the lake and the ninth time Many, La., has played
host. The most recent stops were Elite events in 2011 and 2012 won by Dean
Rojas and Brent Chapman, respectively.
The fifth stop will be Arkansas’ Lake Dardanelle, May
15-18, the site of one of the Elite Series’ most dramatic tournaments in 2009.
That year, Mark Menendez borrowed an aluminum boat and pushed and pulled the
smaller, lighter vessel through a tiny culvert to fish an area bigger boats
couldn’t reach. His extraordinary efforts paid off with an early spring win. In
2014, though, the tournament will be almost two months later, so different
areas and methods will likely prevail.
Following Dardanelle, the Elites move east to Dayton,
Tenn., and Chickamauga Lake, June 11-15, for the newest celebration of bass
fishing, BASSfest. The weeklong, fan-friendly festival will be highlighted by
Elite No. 6, to which some of the top Bassmaster Opens pros will be invited to
test their skills against the best bass fishermen in the nation.
Dayton is known for the celebrated “Scopes Monkey Trial”
of 1925, but to bass anglers, Chickamauga is famous as the site of the 1986
Bassmaster Classic won by the late Charlie Reed. Known for small, keeper bass
back then, Chickamauga has “evolved” into one of the hottest big-bass fisheries
in the nation, currently ranking sixth on the Bassmaster’s “100 Best Bass
Lakes” list for 2013.
When George Washington crossed the Delaware River in 1776
to surprise Hessian troops occupying New Jersey, there’s no record that he
stopped to do any bass fishing. For that, we’re actually grateful.
Nevertheless, that’s exactly what the Elite pros will be doing when they take
off from Philadelphia, Pa., Aug. 7-10. It’s the City of Brotherly Love, the
city that gave us famed fictional prizefighter Rocky Balboa, and the old
stomping grounds of 2003 Bassmaster Classic champion Mike Iaconelli. But you
can bet that when Ike strikes the famous Rocky pose on the weigh-in stage and
lifts his hands in the air, he’ll have two good bass in them.
Elite No. 8 will be held on Cayuga Lake out of Ithaca, N.Y.,
Aug. 21-24. Cayuga is one of the famed “Finger Lakes” and has hosted just one
previous B.A.S.S. event — a 2012 Northern Open. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo
teased the event in August, when he announced to the crowd at the Evan Williams
Bourbon Showdown at St. Lawrence River in Waddington, N.Y., that one of the
Finger Lakes would host an Elite event in 2014. An avid fisherman, Cuomo also
noted that he will host a special “Governor’s Cup” bass tournament involving
political leaders and celebrities in conjunction with the event.
The Cayuga clash will be a make-or-break event, for only
the Top 50 anglers in Toyota Angler of the Year points will go on to fish the
Toyota Angler of the Year Championship Sept. 18-21. The location of the
championship will be announced at a later date.
With the addition of the championship, Toyota All-Star
Week will not be held next year.
Marshal registration for the Bassmaster Classic and the
2014 Bassmaster Elite Series begins online at Bassmaster.com for B.A.S.S.
Nation and Life members on Oct. 1 at 9 a.m. CT. Phone registration for B.A.S.S.
Nation and Life members begins Oct. 3 at 9 a.m. CT by calling 877-227-7872.
Other B.A.S.S. members may register online beginning Oct. 8 at 9 a.m. CT and by
phone beginning Oct. 10 at 9 a.m. CT.
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