Spencer Shuffield Finishes Second, Martin DeHaven Tops
AAA Division
LAUGHLIN, Nev.
– October 16, 2024 –– The first two days of the 2024 WON Bass U.S. Open
presented by Ranger Boats and Mercury had proven to be the shootout that was
predicted. As the 172-boat field ventured out on to the waters of Lake
Mohave in Laughlin, Nev. for Championship Wednesday less than two pounds
separated the day two leader Bryant Smith (43.84 pounds) and second place pro,
Kyle Grover (41.88 pounds), the defending Champion.
Like most
events, the one thing that is a certainty is that once the field gets
accustomed to the conditions, they will change. The first two days
featured barely a breath of wind, and the water’s surface resembled a
mirror. The final day brought winds in in the 10 mile per hour range
which added a wrinkle to the narrative of the event.
The question
remained as to which of would be able to maintain the quality results they had
to date, or would they fall to the hard charging efforts of pros like third
place pro Spencer Shuffield (40.99 pounds), fourth place pro Josh Bertrand
(40.16 pounds) or fifth place Julius Mazy (40.03 pounds).
The answer to that question would be Smith. The Roseville, Calif. pro bagged 20.90 pound of Lake Mohave smallmouth bass to push his final weight to 64.74 pounds to earn the top prize of a fully rigged 2024 Ranger Z520R powered by a Mercury ProXS 250 equipped with Lowrance Electronics, Bioenno Lithium Batteries, Power Pole Charge, Megaware Keelguard and DD26 Accessories valued at more than $90,000. Along with the Ranger / Mercury prize boat, the $70,000 winner’s share of the payout brings his total package to $160,000.
Shuffield
finished second after posting a 21.10-pound limit of smallmouth bass to bring
his total to 62.09 pounds for the Championship. 2023 U.S. Open Champion
Kyle Grover caught a 19.61-pound limit to finish third for the event with 61.49
pounds. Arizona pro Joe Uribe Jr. weighed 19.89 pounds to post 58.62
pounds and finish fourth while Shane Edgar posted 19.44 pounds to finish with
57.29 pounds to round out the top five.
Bryant reported
that his practice period started slow, but that he began to put the pieces of
the puzzle together as his pre-tournament scouting progressed. “It took
me a while, but I was able to find them in the same areas I fished last year,
but had to make adjustments,” he said. “I targeted smallmouth that had
sand, grass and bait in the main bowl and my depth varied from the 10 to
20-foot range.”
He caught his
fish using a green pumpkin Stike King Half Shell on a drop shot rig. He
set it up on a 6’10-inch Alpha Angler DSR spinning rod designed by Elite Series
pro Brandon Palaniuk, a Lew’s Custom Lite spinning reel spooled with
10-pound-test braided main line to a 6-pound-test Seaguar Tatsu Fluorocarbon
Leader. His Half Shell was rigged on a size 4 Gamakatsu Drop Shot
hook and 3/8 and 1/2-ounce Tour Grade Tungsten Drop Shot Weights.
He said he had
dreams of winning the U.S. Open for many years. “Every serious angler
from the West dreams of being the U.S. Open Champion, and it has been for me
for years,” he said. “Now I can say that I am the winner and is something
that hasn’t hit me yet, but this is absolutely humbling; I can’t believe it.”
Like Smith,
Shuffield fished on the bottom as well. He fished in the main bowl himself and
targeted edges where short grass and rock were inhabited by baitfish. “I
fished a dropshot rig on a 7’3” medium-light Ark Reinforcer spinning rod with
15-pound white Yozuri Super Braid with a 10-pound-test T7 Fluorocarbon and a
Baby Too,” he said. “I also Ned rigged a 7’1” Reinforcer with the same
line and caught all of my fish on those two setups using my Livescope to find
those edges.”
This marks the
second time Shuffield has placed second in the U.S. Open and finishing fourth
in his other attempt. “I am thrilled to have another strong finish out
here, but to come close again makes me want it even more,” he said. “I
just wasn’t able to chase Bryant down, but gosh I really want to win this
tournament.”
Martin DeHaven,
who led the AAA Division after day one, become the AAA Division Champion by
posting at three-day total of 51.42 pounds. Zack Hayes finished second
for the championship with 51.14 pounds, he was followed in third position by
Dean Yamagata with 51.10 pounds. Fourth place went to Larry Llanes with
49.91 pounds and Nicolas Skerston finished fifth with 49.82 pounds.
The top 10
standings in each division are below – to see full results go to: https://wonbassevents.com/pages/2024-us-open-pairings-and-results
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