Hometown hero wins Classic.
By Bryan Brasher
BASS PRESS RELEASE![]() |
Ott DeFoe wins Knoxville in style with 49-03lbs. (Photo: James Overstreet BASS) |
Now it’s happened four times in six years.
Tennessee pro Ott DeFoe, who makes his home in Knoxville,
caught five bass Sunday from the Tennessee River that weighed 18 pounds, 14
ounces to win the Super Bowl of Bass Fishing and the $300,000 prize that goes
with the iconic trophy.
His three-day total weight of 49-3 helped him slip past
second-place angler Jacob Wheeler before a raucous home crowd at the University
of Tennessee’s Thompson-Boling Arena.
The world-championship bass tournament drew a record-total
attendance of 153,809 to tournament venues, including daily weigh-ins in
Thompson-Boling Arena, the Bassmaster Classic Outdoors Expo consumer show
presented by DICK’S Sporting Goods in the Knoxville Convention Center and
World's Fair Exhibition Hall, and morning takeoffs at Volunteer Landing.
Attendance counts, including as many as 6,500 at Saturday’s early-morning
takeoff, were provided by officials at each of the venues. “This is a dream
come true — a dream I’ve had since I was a 9-year-old kid,” said DeFoe, who now
has six career victories with B.A.S.S. “When we came over here and did the
walk-through the day before the tournament, I actually imagined hearing my name
after the words ‘Bassmaster Classic champion.’
“For it to happen now … I just keep thinking I’m gonna wake
up.”
For the first 36 years the event was held, no home-state
angler claimed the Classic crown. But that streak was broken in 2007, and then
home-state anglers won three straight times from 2014-16.
Since DeFoe lives in Knoxville — and since few others in the
52-angler field had much experience on the tournament waters of Fort Loudon and
Tellico lakes — he was one of the obvious favorites coming into the event.
But things didn’t go smoothly for him in his own backyard
all three days.
After catching 20 pounds during Friday’s opening round,
DeFoe caught five bass that weighed just 10-5 Saturday — and he said that tough
day might have been the best thing that could have happened to him.
“If I would have had a good Day 2 — if I’d had even 14 or 15
pounds — I might have been totally committed to what I was doing,” DeFoe said.
“It was working. Why would I not stay with it?
“But the fact that it just didn’t work for me, that caused
me to just scrap it all. I just went fishing today, and that’s exactly what I
needed to do.”
DeFoe spent Day 1 far away from the shoreline fishing the
shallow tips of points in 1 1/2 to 3 1/2 feet of water. His primary bait was a
Storm Arashi Vibe lipless crankbait in the “rusty craw” pattern — but it was
almost unrecognizable after he doctored it with orange, red and black Sharpies.
“I was making it a lot prettier than it is to start with,”
DeFoe said, laughing. “That’s definitely a confidence thing, but I altered the
color of the bait pretty substantially to give it a lot more orange and red.
“It may be a confidence thing, but who’s gonna argue with
it?”
After staying offshore for most of the first round, DeFoe
switched to fishing shallow boat docks the second day, when a strong north wind
interfered with his pattern. His bait of choice around the docks — a 3/8-ounce
bladed jig — helped him land three of his five keepers on Day 2.
He used the bladed jig again Sunday. But he moved from the
shallow docks to the outside wall of a marina after a quick conversation with
Keith Poche, a fellow Classic competitor from Alabama who failed to make the
cut for Championship Sunday.
“In this tournament, we can all talk and share,” DeFoe said.
“That kind of thing happens all the time, and sometimes it works to go try some
of that stuff.
“These guys all know what they’re doing, or they wouldn’t be
here.”
DeFoe’s closest competition came from Wheeler, an Indiana
native who moved to Tennessee two years ago after enjoying great success on
fisheries in the Volunteer State. Wheeler has two career B.A.S.S. wins — one on
Lake Chickamauga and one on nearby Cherokee Lake.
“I knew it was going to be hard to beat Ott on this
fishery,” said Wheeler, who caught 12-15 Sunday and finished with a three-day
weight of 45-5. “All I can say is I caught fish every day, so it was a great
week for me.
“If I just had to come up a little short, I’m glad to see
Ott win it.”
Tuskegee, Ala., angler Mark Daniels Jr. and Talala, Okla.,
pro Edwin Evers split the Berkley Big Bass prize with identical 6-pound,
3-ounce bass. Winners of the Toyota Bonus Bucks contingency prizes were DeFoe,
who collected $7,500 and Daniels who collected $2,500.
The 49th world championship of bass fishing paid a total of
$1 million to the 52 professional anglers competing.
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