Location key to fast, flurry of bass.
By Joel Shangle
MLF PRESS RELEASE
Dean Rojas takes home the trophy and $100,000 check after winning the Bass Pro Tour. (Photo: MLF_ |
It’s an age-old question in competitive bass fishing: pattern or location? If you ask MLF pro Dean Rojas this week, he’ll come down firmly on the side of “location”.
Fishing an
area on the upper end of Smith Lake that he had found during practice for the
Bass Pro Tour Phoenix Boats Stage Five Presented by Mercury, the Arizona pro
went to work on the Sunday-morning shad spawn with a mix of baits (primarily a
crankbait, swim jig, frog and swimbait). By the end of the first period, Rojas
had put 23 fish on SCORETRACKER® for 36 pounds, 5 ounces – enough spotted and
largemouth bass that Rojas could’ve put his rods down for most of the rest of
the day and still won.
“It’s not
too often that you get into a Championship Round where the fish are biting like
that and you can use multiple baits to rack up a big lead,” Rojas said. “The
conditions were right: we had overcast skies, a breeze, warm temperatures, and
the fish were just feeding in the area I was in. It was just about capitalizing
on this format. I knew I had to catch as many fish as I could early to put some
distance between me and the field.”
Rojas
added an additional 9-1 in the second and third periods for good measure,
finishing with 47-0 and a 6-plus-pound win over Brent Chapman (40-14), Michael
Neal (34-15), Jason Christie (32-6) and Todd Faircloth (32-2). Mark Rose
(29-14), Brent Ehrler (26-0), Dustin Connell (24-14), Mike Iaconelli (17-14)
and Fred Roumbanis (10-1) rounded out the Top 10.
“At the
end of the first period, that was the end of (the bite),” Rojas admitted. “It
was a big deal that I caught as many fish as I could to build a big lead.
Period 2 and Period 3 were a matter of catching a few here and there, but I was
struggling because they just wouldn’t bite.”
Rojas was
one of a handful of anglers in the 80-man field who identified his primary
area, a stretch of bushes in the Ryan Creek Arm. Rojas hit the area throughout
the week of competition, sharing it periodically with Boyd Duckett, etc., but
had the whole stretch to himself on Championship morning.
Chapman
Made a Late Run at Rojas
Just 24
hours after qualifying for the finals thanks to a 3-13 largemouth that he
caught with 10 seconds left, Chapman made another final-period run at the top
of SCORETRACKER®, catching a 3-14 largemouth and a 4-10 largemouth in the final
20 minutes of competition to cut Rojas’ lead in half.
“I noticed
going into the third period that things were getting tough, and that little
point where I caught had a fish on every bush when there was a shad spawn going
on,” Chapman said. “I figured that my best chance was to go somewhere where I
knew I was putting my bait around fish on every single cast. I figured that was
my best chance to at least put myself in position to have a chance to win.”
Rojas’
Stage Five win is his first tour-level win since a Bassmaster Elite Series
title on Toledo Bend Reservoir in 2011, a span of 80 events … Neal fished his
third Championship Round in five events this season … Sunday’s round was the
first Bass Pro Tour Championship Sunday without Edwin Evers: the current Bass
Pro Tour Points Race leader finished 16th, to add to his previous finishes of
second, first, fourth and seventh … Faircloth was named the MLF Autism
Awareness Champion on Sunday after weighing the most fish in April (Autism
Awareness Month).
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