Canadians Jeff Gustafson 4th and Cory Johnston 8th!
FLW PRESS RELEASE
John Cox of Debary, Fla., loves fishing ponds. As a kid, he cut
his teeth fishing ponds. The first bass club Cox ever joined was a johnboat-only-club
that fished on small ponds. The first aluminum boat Cox owned had a blown
outboard on it that he could not afford to get fixed. But that didn’t bother
him one bit. After all, he just wanted to put the boat in on ponds where he
could use the trolling motor to fish around the banks.
Staying quick and aiming shallow proved the difference for Cox. (Photo: FLW) |
Maybe that helps explain why Cox has mostly run aluminum boats
on the Walmart FLW Tour. It might also help explain why Cox usually seeks out
smaller, limited access backwaters connected to lakes during Tour events.
“These big lakes confuse me,” Cox laughs. “I feel much more
comfortable fishing in smaller backwaters off of a main lake or river.”
Today, Cox utilized just such a secluded backwater to come from
second place and win the Walmart FLW Tour presented by Evinrude and hosted by
the Anderson Convention & Visitors Bureau at Lake Hartwell. His final-day
weight of 16 pounds, 2 ounces was enough to nudge past Clark Wendlandt at the
finish line by a mere 7 ounces. In four days, Cox accrued 67 pounds, 6 ounces to
win the $100,000 payday.
This is the second time Cox has accessed an obscure area for a
Tour win. His first Tour win was in 2011 at the Red River when he pushed his
aluminum boat through a culvert into a backwater area to reach unpressured
fish.
“I’ve fished this place in other FLW Tour tournaments here at
Hartwell,” Cox reveals. “It’s a small pond off the main river that is cut off
by a sandbar. It’s a cool little pond, but it’s only big enough for a one-day
catch. In low water it’s harder to get into because of the sandbar but with
water high like it is now, it’s not a problem to access.”
Cox fished the pond in other Tour events during the qualifying
days and it earned him a check. This year he decided to reverse his strategy
and save the pond for the final day, if he made it that far.
“I went and checked it practice this year and had three good
bites,” he says. “I decided right then to just save it as back up because there
were plenty of bedding fish down the lake to catch for the first couple of
days.”
During the first three days, Cox relied on his savvy
sight-fishing skills to climb atop the leaderboard. On day two, he caught a
20-pound, 5-ounce bag that put him in the lead. That hefty limit was anchored
by two brutes – one weighing 6-11 – that came from skipping a wacky rig around
docks.
He fell to second behind Wendlandt on day three and sat just
1-pound, 5-ounces off the lead.
With deteriorating weather conditions for sight-fishing on day
four, Cox felt the time was right to make the run up the river and get into a
place he felt the most comfortable – a pond.
Cox knew he had made the right decision when his first fish of
the day was 5-pounder that struck his bait twice. The first time, he had the
fish on, but the hook flexed enough for the fish to wiggle free. He returned to
the fish a bit later and caught her on the first cast. At that point he knew he
had a chance to stage a comeback and retake the lead.
For the rest of the day Cox circled the pond just like he used
to do back in his johnboat-only days. His primary weapon in the pond was a
3/8-ounce Z-Man
ChatterBait (black and blue) with a Strike King
Menace Grub trailer. In all, the pond produced about 8 keepers,
including the 5-pounder, three 3-pounders and a 2 pounder – just enough to overtake
Wendlandt.
During the first three days, Cox used wacky-rigged Yamamoto
Senkos and Zoom Trick
Worms (watermelon and green pumpkin) in the mid portion of the
lake to skip docks and sight fish. The wacky rigs were fished on 10-pound test
braid tied to 10-pound test leader and skipped with a SJ842-MHX spinning rod.
“That rod is a 7-foot, medium action and is perfect for skipping
wacky rigs,” Cox says. “It has plenty of tip to skip and enough power to pull
fish away from cover. It’s the rod I used to catch most of my weight the first
three days.”
With his win, Cox now also leads the FLW Tour Angler of the Year
race with 389 points.
Top 10 pros
1. John Cox – DeBary, Fla. – 67-6 (20) – $100,000
2. Clark Wendlandt – Leander, Texas – 66-15
(20) – $30,000
3. Jamie Horton – Centerville, Ala. – 62-9
(20) – $25,200
4. Jeff Gustafson – Keewatin, Ontario – 59-14
(20) – $20,500
5. Bryan Thrift – Shelby, N.C. – 59-8 (20) – $19,100
6. Darrel Robertson – Jay, Okla. – 59-3 (20) – $18,000
7. Larry Nixon – Bee Branch, Ark. – 57-14
(20) – $17,000
8. Cory Johnston – Cavan, Ontario – 56-5
(20) – $16,000
9. Peter Thliveros – Saint Augustine, Fla. – 55-0
(20) – $15,000
10. Powell Kemp – Scotland Neck, N.C. – 54-10
(20) – $14,000
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