Tharp thumps ‘em
By Bryan Brasher
BASS PRESS RELEASE
The tournament format was
complicated.
It was one event on two lakes over
the course of four days.
But through all of the shifting and
changing, Florida pro Randall Tharp decided to keep things simple — and that
stay-the-course approach ultimately led to a victory in the Bassmaster Elite at
Bull Shoals/Norfork event.
Tharp used a 4x4 Jig — the Randall
Tharp Signature series that he designed for the company — in the golden craw
color pattern with a green pumpkin Zoom Big Salty Chunk to catch his fish all
four days.
Nothing like your first Elite win. (Photo: BASS) |
His final total of 61 pounds, 10
ounces was more than 2 pounds better than that of second-place finisher Skeet
Reese (59-8).
Chris Zaldain (58-12), Matt Herren
(58-10) and Bill Lowen (58- 5) made up the rest of the top five.
Tharp said he discovered the key to
winning on the third day of practice and really dialed it on the fourth and
final practice day, which he spent at Norfork.
On the first day of the tournament,
he caught 15-8 on Norfork to put himself in fifth place. He didn't fare quite
as well on the second day of the event at Bull Shoals, catching only 13-12. But
he made a slight adjustment the next day on Bull Shoals — and that may have
been the key to his winning the tournament.
"I used a 1/2-ounce and a
5/8-ounce version of the jig this week, but the majority of the fish I weighed
in came on the bigger one," Tharp said. "I had one fish in the boat
Saturday, and I just kept thinking they wanted something quicker. That's why I
went to the bigger jig."
Tharp's Saturday catch of 16-4 pushed
him into the lead going into Sunday's finale on Norfork. He landed 16-2 Sunday
to stay ahead of a Top 12 that was separated by only 4 pounds coming into the
day.
"Just about everything I caught
all week came from 5 feet of water of less," he said. "The whole
stringer that I weighed in today probably came from 2 feet or less."
Though bass were spawning on both
lakes, Tharp said he wasn't sight fishing for bedding fish.
"I was just looking for crevices
in rocks — shady places," he said. "I was looking for isolated stuff
that was different, whether it was a stump or a laydown or whatever.
"If there was a whole bunch of
cover, it usually wasn't all that good. I just keyed on little turns or
isolated boulders — stuff that stood out."
Tharp was already a three-time winner
on the Bass Pro Shops Bassmaster Opens circuit, but Sunday marked his first
time to raise the coveted blue trophy awarded to winners on the Bassmaster
Elite Series. The $102,000 he received for first place pushed his career
earnings with B.A.S.S. to $492,457.
Last year's Elite Series season was
one of the toughest of Tharp's professional career. He earned checks in only
two of the eight regular-season events and failed to qualify for the Toyota
Bassmaster Angler of the Year Championship or the GEICO Bassmaster Classic
presented by GoPro.
But so far this season, he's made up
for all that went wrong.
Tharp finished 11th in the 2016 Elite
Series opener on the St. Johns River in his home state of Florida and 16th in
the second tournament of the season earlier this month on South Carolina's
Winyah Bay. His victory Sunday vaulted him into first place in the Angler of
the Year standings.
"Before last year, two bad
tournaments in a row was the longest bad stretch I'd ever had," Tharp
said. "For some reason, I just couldn't put two good days together.
"Maybe I got all of my bad days out of the way,
because I have yet to have one this year."
No comments:
Post a Comment