Giant jig key to win.
BASS PRESS RELEASE
Greg Hackney of Gonzales, La., started the day in
third place, but weighed in 17 pounds, 15 ounces on Championship Sunday to
increase his four-day winning total to 66-2 at the GEICO Bassmaster BASSfest
presented by Choctaw Casino and Resort at Lake Texoma.
A win plus lead of BASS Angler of the Year! (Photo: BASS) |
With his win, Hackney earned the $100,000
first-place prize and a berth in the 2017 GEICO Bassmaster Classic. Hackney’s
final limit of bass helped him slip past Brandon Card of Caryville, Tenn., by a
slim margin of 1-15.
Hackney, the 2014 Toyota Bassmaster Angler of the
Year, knew he needed to have a solid day to contend for the win. As a result,
he fished his spots in reverse order because the larger fish were biting later
in day.
Hackney’s best locations were adjacent to the main
river channel. He also caught a lot of fish on the inside turns of coves and
the points that were created on the outside edges of those coves.
“Green, leafy bushes were key to finding bass,” he
said. “The fish were holding tight to brushy cover, and it often took multiple
flips to the same piece of structure to make one eat. When it was hot and
sunny, it was a grind. But today with the cloud cover, I felt like the fishing
was much better.”
Most of Hackney’s morning bass came on a 1-ounce
Strike King Hack Attack jig with a black-and-blue trailer. He’d switch to a
green pumpkin trailer during the afternoons.
“It was critical for me to raise and lower the jig
vertically in the middle of the bushes,” he said. “Pulling bass out of that
thick and nasty cover requires heavy tackle and durable line. I lost quite a
few big fish that became tangled in the brush. Sometimes you have to wrestle
them out of the cover, and you don’t always win.”
Card weighed the heaviest limit of the tournament
on Championship Sunday with 21-2, which bumped his total weight to 64-3 for the
week.
“I wasn’t on the pattern I caught my fish on this
week until the final day of practice,” Card said. “I was actually targeting
smallmouth on the lower end of the lake near the dam.
“With an hour of practice remaining, I drove up the
lake and marked a bunch of great looking structure and returned to those spots
during each day of the tournament. I’m sure glad I did.”
Card caught his fish flipping the flooded bushes
with a jig and Texas rigged soft plastic during the first three days of the
tournament. With the cloudy conditions Sunday, he knew there would be a quality
topwater bite throughout the day.
“I caught most of my fish today on a buzzbait and a
Yo-Zuri walking bait in a bone color pattern,” he said during Sunday’s final
weigh-in. “My first stop of the morning, I caught two nice fish, which gave me
the confidence to stick with the topwater pattern all day long. The fishing
slowed down mid-morning, but the wind calmed down and I knew it was game on.”
Gerald Swindle of Warrior, Ala., finished in third
place with a four-day total of 60-6 after bringing in only 12-1 on the final
day of competition.
“I had a great tournament, and I’ve got nothing to
complain about,” Swindle said. “I caught a lot of great fish, but I missed some
key bites today and lost several fish that cost me a better finish. But that’s
tournament fishing and a big part of why I love this sport.”
Rounding out the Top 12 were Chad Morgenthaler
(57-9), Ott DeFoe (56-11), Casey Ashley (56-8), Rick Clunn (56-3), Dean Rojas
(56-2), Jordan Lee (54-10), Randall Tharp (54-2), Keith Poche (53-15) and
Bradley Roy (53-4).
Hackney was awarded $1,000 for the leading the
Toyota Bassmaster Angler of the Year points race at the end of the event.
Gerald Swindle also earned the Power-Pole Captain’s
Cash award of $1,000 for being the highest-placing angler who is registered and
eligible and uses a client-approved product on his boat.
Hackney also earned the Livingston Lures Leader
Award of $500 for leading on the second day.
Card won the Toyota Bonus Bucks of $3,000 for being
the highest-placing eligible entrant in the program. The second-highest-placing
eligible entrant, Chad Morgenthaler, received $2,000.
The Phoenix Boats Big Bass Award of $1,500 was
presented to Randall Tharp for weighing in the overall biggest bass of the
event — a 7-6 bass caught on Friday.
Card also earned the A.R.E. Top Angler Award of
$1,000 for being the highest placing angler using A.R.E. products.
Dick Cepek Rolling Forward Award of $1,000 will be presented to the
angler who makes the largest gain in Toyota Angler of the Year points from
tournament to tournament.
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