Dustin Connell goes back-to-back, claims third championship title on Lake Guntersville with 87-11
Dustin Connell captured his third REDCREST title with 87 pounds, 11 ounces on 27 Lake Guntersville bass. Photo by Phoenix Moore.
Mitchell Forde
BASS PRO TOUR Press Release
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — The 2025 iteration of Bass Pro Shops REDCREST Presented by MillerTech on
Lake Guntersville marked the third time Major League Fishing’s championship
event has been held in the bass-fishing mecca of Alabama.
For the third time, Dustin
Connell is keeping the trophy in his home state.
Connell ran away from the field on Championship Sunday, both
figuratively and literally. After making a roughly 70-mile trek away from the
history- and largemouth-rich waters of lower Lake Guntersville to the tailrace
below the Nickajack Dam, Connell stacked up 87 pounds, 11 ounces on 27 scorable
bass. The best single-day total of any angler at the event (despite a 65-minute
delay due to weather), that was enough to hold off a late charge from Wesley
Strader by 8-5.
Connell earned $300,000 for the win and further cemented
himself as the best big-event performer going. The only angler to win REDCREST
multiple times, he’s claimed the title in back-to-back years and three times
total – he previously won on Lake Eufaula in 2021 and Lay Lake in 2024. He’s
now just the third angler ever with three tour championship titles. Only Bass
Fishing Hall of Famers Kevin VanDam and
Rick Clunn have won more with four apiece.
This also marked his seventh total win on the Bass
Pro Tour. Shortly after it became official, an emotional Connell said that,
in some ways, it’s the most special one yet.
“I think just me winning the tournament doing my own deal,
winning it with my style of fishing that I love, and then coming off of a
couple tough tournaments and just a lot of adversity, I was very, very, very
shook up,” Connell said.
Here’s how the Top 10 anglers who qualified for the
Championship Round finished:
- Dustin
Connell — 87-11 (27)
- Wesley
Strader — 79-6 (29)
- Zack
Birge — 44-12 (17)
- Paul
Marks Jr. — 43-5 (15)
- Jake
Lawrence — 38-10 (15)
- Chris
Lane — 38-10 (16)
- Brent
Ehrler — 37-12 (14)
- David
Dudley — 33-8 (10)
- Ron
Nelson — 15-2 (6)
- Bobby
Lane — 8-5 (3)
Ironically, to keep his REDCREST track record perfect in his
home state, Connell ventured all the way to Tennessee. Connell grew up fishing
current on the Coosa River, and he said he’s been thinking for months about
venturing to the Nickajack Dam so he could fish in his comfort zone.
That flew in the face of conventional Guntersville wisdom,
which Connell admits gave him pause.
“I had this in my mind literally six months ago,” he said.
“I was like, ‘I want to go up that river, I want to go up that river.’ But
Guntersville is such a badass lake, and on the way, I just didn’t think that I
could compete up there. I was like, ‘I feel dumb even going up here.’”
So, Connell started Day 1 trying to target spawning
largemouth at the lower end of the fishery. Pre-tournament chatter suggested
that would be the dominant pattern, but Connell caught just one scorable bass
during the opening period of the event. He ran to Nickajack in Period 2, but
strong winds made for a long trip. He only added one more fish during that
period, and at the end of it, he sat in 47th place out of 50
anglers.
“I just wasn’t catching them,” Connell said. “The wind was
blowing again, and there was pollen everywhere. It just was not the deal.
“I get to the dam, and I caught 20-something pounds at the
dam late in the day. So, I said, ‘screw this; I’m fishing the whole tournament
up there, good, bad or ugly.’”
Connell, who caught all three species of bass (largemouth,
smallmouth and spotted) in the tailrace, steadily climbed SCORETRACKER®
throughout Day 2. Still, he needed a last-minute flurry to earn a spot in the
Top 20 and advance to the Knockout Round. He caught four bass totaling 12-6 in
the last 13 minutes before lines out to jump from the wrong side of the
elimination line into 17th.
Connell attributed that rally to a bait change. After
spending most of the day throwing a 2.5-inch CrushCity The Mayor swimbait, he switched to a CrushCity Mooch Minnow. Even without the aid of
forward-facing sonar (he didn’t catch a bass all week that he first saw on his
screen), he was able to shake it in the current breaks along the dam’s concrete
walls and trigger bites.
“The sun was out, and they kind of quit biting,” Connell
said. “I was initially catching them on a Mayor, and I was winding it down the
walls. … Well, late in the day, I picked that rod up with a Mooch Minnow on
there. And I made like three casts with it, and I caught two back-to-back. And
I figured out the bait that they were really wanting, and the action of it.”
It’s not just the REDCREST champion that will be familiar to
MLF fans but the baits that won him the trophy. While Connell said he caught a
few fish on both a CrushCity Janitor worm and a Rapala
Mavrik jerkbait, the two tools that did most of his damage were a
Mooch Minnow and a CrushCity Freeloader – the same baits he used most
often in his win on Lay Lake last year. He rigged the Freeloader on a scrounger
head and threw it on baitcast gear with 17-pound Seaguar Invizx fluorocarbon. He affixed the Mooch Minnow to
a 3/16-ounce VMC Redline tungsten jighead.
The perfect storm on Championship Sunday
Even after his strong finish to the Qualifying Round,
Connell wasn’t sure he’d found the winning pattern. However, during Saturday’s
Knockout Round, he noticed how well the bass were biting during early-morning,
low-light conditions. Knowing the forecast for Sunday called for storms all
day, he started to get excited.
“Yesterday morning, I was like, ‘dude, this tournament just
got real interesting,’” he said. “I was like, ‘there is a chance this could go
down.’”
Thunderstorms delayed takeoff, giving Connell less time to
catch up after his long run, and made for a rough ride. But once he arrived, it
didn’t take long to see that his hopes were well-founded. The storms both
ignited a feeding frenzy below the dam and killed the sight-fishing pattern
much of the Top 10 had relied on to get to the Championship Round.
Connell arrived at his starting spot around 9:35 a.m., 45
minutes after lines in. On his second cast, he landed his first scorable bass.
By 9:50, he’d caught three more and brought his total to 14-15, taking a lead
he would never relinquish. In all, Connell caught 31-0 in the span of 36
minutes before the period break.
While Connell consistently added to his total, Strader – who
also made a long run up the river, albeit not all the way to the dam – stayed
on his heels. It seemed like every time Connell had pulled away, Strader would
cut his lead to 10 pounds or so. Connell didn’t catch a scorable bass during
the final 47 minutes before lines out, and Strader trimmed his deficit from
more than 20 pounds at the start of Period 3 to less than 9. However, he could
never quite get over the hump.
Connell called the final period “the most stressful period
of bass fishing I’ve had in my life.”
“I know how big it is of an event, and I knew it was mine to
lose,” he said. “I was like, ‘dude, if I could just add on a few more fish –
don’t light it on fire, just catch some.’ And I did my job.”
Key for Connell was the caliber of fish he found during the
Championship Round. Strader actually caught two more scorable bass on the day,
but Connell boated six weighing 4 pounds or more, including three over 5. His
average scorable bass weighed about 3.25 pounds compared to 2.72 for the rest
of the field – more than half a pound per fish.
“I knew there were some big ones up there,” Connell said.
“But I did not expect to catch the quality I caught today. I mean, it was
unreal.”
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