Local hero DeFoe a crowd favourite
By Bryan Brasher
BASS PRESS RELEASE
Ott DeFoe grabs lead with help from daily big bass, a 6lber. (Photo: BASS) |
Ott DeFoe came into Friday’s opening round of the GECIO
Bassmaster Classic presented by DICK’S Sporting Goods with two patterns in mind
that he thought would work on the Tennessee River.
Only one of them did — and even then, just barely.
But it worked well enough to give him the lead at the
Super Bowl of Professional Bass Fishing.
DeFoe caught only eight keeper bass on the day, but his
best five weighed 20 pounds and gave him an early cushion over Arizona pros Roy
Hawk, who was second with 17-11, and Clifford Pirch, who was third with 16-11.
“I got five good bites all day, and I landed them,” said
DeFoe, a Knoxville resident who was considered by many to be the odds-on
favorite coming into the event. “Honestly, it felt like a very tough day.”
DeFoe’s two-pattern strategy included one tactic he
believed would produce heavier bass and another he thought would be a good
“limit filler.” The limit-filling pattern didn’t work at all.
Fortunately for the Tennessee pro, the big-fish strategy
produced a 6-pound largemouth that anchored his catch.
“A 6-pounder here is a really big one,” said DeFoe, who
also took the Day 1 lead in the Berkley Big Bass competition. “So to get that
one and four other pretty good ones, I felt really blessed.”
This marks the first time that Fort Loudon and Tellico
Lakes have hosted a major Bassmaster event — and since DeFoe lives in the area,
he probably knows as much about the fisheries as anyone. But even he couldn’t
say exactly what changed the fishing so dramatically from what he had come to
expect in practice.
“Coming in, I felt like both of my patterns would hold up
all week,” DeFoe said. “I don’t know if the fishing pressure got to the one
that didn’t work for me today or if it was the fact that the water level came
up some.
“If I had to guess, I would say the water level coming up
probably caused the fish to scatter out in some places.” As the first-round
leader, DeFoe receives the GEICO Everyday Leader Award of $2,500.
“After what I saw in practice, I felt like you could have
a day like today,” Hawk said. “Two things made me believe that. One, I have a
lot of confidence in the bait I’m throwing right now and two, the mapping I’m
using is fantastic here.”
Hawk said a new C-Map of the fishery from Lowrance
allowed him to highlight the shallow areas and follow them exactly.
“I have the shallow water marked red, and I’m using a red
crankbait,” he said. “So you just connect the red with the red and let her
roll.”
Pirch said he had to make a quick adjustment Friday
morning after rains Thursday- night rains muddied the water he had planned to
fish.
“I was going to gin-clear water, and when I showed up it
was chocolate brown,” he said. “So I had to do things differently than I
expected. But it still worked out.”
Pirch wouldn’t disclose the bait he was using — or even
which one of the two lakes he was fishing. He only said he didn’t let the
muddier water scare him away.
“I didn’t know if the color of the water would make a
difference,” Pirch said. “I’ve caught them in practice this week in the
chocolatey-brown water, but I went there to do something totally different.
“Fortunately, they were still there.”
The tournament will resume Saturday with takeoff at 7:30
a.m. from Volunteer Landing and weigh-in at 4:15 p.m. at Thompson-Bolilng
Arena. Friday’s Day 1 takeoff at Volunteer Landing drew a Classic-record
takeoff crowd of 5,500 spectators.
The Bassmaster Classic Outdoors Expo presented by DICK’S
Sporting is also underway this week at the Knoxville Convention Center and the
adjacent World’s Fair Exhibition Hall. The Expo will be open Saturday from 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Sunday’s weigh-in will culminate with the crowning of a
new world champion and the awarding of the $300,000 first-place prize. Total
purse for the 52 anglers is $1 million.
“Coming in, I felt
like both of my patterns would hold up all week,” DeFoe said. “I don’t know if
the fishing pressure got to the one that didn’t work for me today or if it was
the fact that the water level came up some.
“If I had to guess, I would say the water level coming up
probably caused the fish to scatter out in some places.” As the first-round
leader, DeFoe receives the GEICO Everyday Leader Award of $2,500.
Hawk — an Arizona angler who finished second in last
year’s Bassmaster Rookie of the Year standings — said he spent all day fishing
shallow structure with an unspecified red crankbait. He said his solid weight
of 17-11 didn’t come as a huge surprise.
“After what I saw in practice, I felt like you could have
a day like today,” Hawk said. “Two things made me believe that. One, I have a
lot of confidence in the bait I’m throwing right now and two, the mapping I’m
using is fantastic here.”
Hawk said a new C-Map of the fishery from Lowrance
allowed him to highlight the shallow areas and follow them exactly.
“I have the shallow water marked red, and I’m using a red
crankbait,” he said. “So you just connect the red with the red and let her
roll.”
Pirch said he had to make a quick adjustment Friday
morning after rains Thursday- night rains muddied the water he had planned to
fish.
“I was going to gin-clear water, and when I showed up it
was chocolate brown,” he said. “So I had to do things differently than I
expected. But it still worked out.”
Pirch wouldn’t disclose the bait he was using — or even
which one of the two lakes he was fishing. He only said he didn’t let the
muddier water scare him away.
“I didn’t know if the color of the water would make a
difference,” Pirch said. “I’ve caught them in practice this week in the
chocolatey-brown water, but I went there to do something totally different.
“Fortunately, they were still there.”
The tournament will resume Saturday with takeoff at 7:30
a.m. from Volunteer Landing and weigh-in at 4:15 p.m. at Thompson-Bolilng
Arena. Friday’s Day 1 takeoff at Volunteer Landing drew a Classic-record
takeoff crowd of 5,500 spectators.
The Bassmaster Classic Outdoors Expo presented by DICK’S
Sporting is also underway this week at the Knoxville Convention Center and the
adjacent World’s Fair Exhibition Hall. The Expo will be open Saturday from 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Sunday’s weigh-in will culminate with the crowning of a
new world champion and the awarding of the $300,000 first-place prize. Total
purse for the 52 anglers is $1 million.
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