By Bryan Brasher
BASS PRESS RELEASE
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This 11 pounder plus 2 8-ponders equal mega limit for Cobb! (Photo: BASS) |
Then the bite of a lifetime at 2 p.m. moved
the day to the very top of his list.
The giant afternoon bass, which weighed 11
pounds, 1 ounce and ranked as his biggest ever, lifted Cobb’s five-bass limit
for the day to 37-15.
Now, with a three-day total of 84-1, he will
enter the final day of Toyota Bassmaster Texas Fest benefiting Texas Parks and
Wildlife Department on Lake Fork with margin of 7-5 over his closest
competition.
“I’ve never had a day like this before — not
even close,” said Cobb, who recorded his first Bassmaster Elite Series victory
in April on Lake Hartwell. “A 29-pound limit was my best ever until the other day
(Thursday), when I caught 31-11. Now this is without a doubt the most amazing
day I’ve ever had on the lake.”
Cobb went into the day with two-part game
plan.
He expected to spend much of his time fishing
shallow shellbeds away from the shoreline where bass have been feasting all
week on spawning shad. Then he planned to fish shoreline cover where he’s been
catching good numbers of solid bass, but nothing huge.
The shad-spawn bite paid off big time, as he
caught an 8-8, an 8-13 and a 4-4 — all before noon. Then when he moved to the
shoreline, he found something he wasn’t expecting.
“When I went to fish the bank, honestly, I
expected to catch 3-pounders,” Cobb said. “That was my goal for the day — to
catch big ones off the shad spawn and then fill a limit fishing the bank.
“But then, when I went to the bank, I caught
an 11 and a 5.”
The 11-1 monster not only helped Cobb jump
into the overall lead, it put him in first place for Toyota Tundra Big Bass of
the Week. The prize for that award is a new Toyota Tundra truck.
Cobb was fishing a frog down a shoreline when
he noticed the big bass sitting on a bed. He dropped his Power-Poles, believing
the bass weighed 7 or 8 pounds.
Then he proceeded to pester the fish until it
bit.
“It was one of those fish that looked like it
was gonna bite every cast,” Cobb said. “Every cast I would make, it would kind
of nose down and look at it. It took about 20 minutes to finally get it to eat.
But with the way she was acting, I knew I could catch her.”
Cobb’s meteoric rise was aided in part by the
struggles of Michigan pro Chad Pipkens. After catching 30-plus pounds the first
two days and entering Day 3 with more than an 11-pound lead, Pipkens caught
just four fish Sunday that weighed 5-8.
That allowed Cobb, Garrett Paquette (76-12), Brandon Card (73-4), Micah Frazier (70-13), Drew Cook (70-5) and Keith Combs (69-10) to all move past him in the standings. Pipkens will start Championship Monday in seventh place with 68-6.
After catching 28-12 Sunday, Paquette, a
first-year Elite Series pro from Michigan, said he believes he’ll need at least
30 pounds — and maybe a little luck — to catch Cobb and win the $100,000
first-place prize.
“Brandon caught an 11-pounder and two 8-pounders
today, and you can’t bank on doing that every day,” Paquette said. “So if I can
catch 30 pounds, I’ll feel like I did everything I could have done.”
Unlike Cobb, who is spending much of his time
shallow, Paquette is fishing offshore areas in about 10 feet of water — and
with the way the bite has been working, he could create some last-hour drama
Monday.
“It’s been really slow out there in the
mornings,” he said. “It seems like the longer I can wait to get on my best
stuff, the better it works out for me. About 2 o’clock (an hour before quitting
time) seems like the best time.”
Card caught 25-11 Sunday, but he has even more
ground — almost 11 pounds — to make up during the final round.
“I have a few key areas, and if you pull up on
them at the right time, you can catch a lot of weight in a hurry,” Card said.
“I’ll probably stay with the offshore stuff all day tomorrow and just see what
happens.”
The tournament will conclude Monday with the
Top 10 remaining anglers taking off at 7 a.m. CT from Sabine River Authority in
Quitman. The weigh-in will be at the same site at 3 p.m.
All fish are being weighed on the water and
immediately released, but each angler is allowed to bring to the “weigh-in” one
bass that measures more than 24 inches.
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