By Christopher Decker
BASS Press Release
Thanks to a dazzling Championship
Sunday performance, the 20-year-old rookie from Eva, Ala., earned his first
Elite Series victory at the Lippert
Bassmaster Elite at Lake Martin with a four-day total of 54 pounds, 6
ounces.
Opening the tournament with
11-6, Anaya worked his way into the Top 10 on Day 2 with a limit weighing 12-13
before claiming the Day 3 lead with a sack weighing 14-7. Entering the day with
a 2-ounce lead over Brock
Mosely, Anaya landed the biggest bag of the tournament on Championship
Sunday, a 15-12 limit of spotted bass to secure the title.
His Championship Sunday limit was
the biggest bag he’s ever weighed on Lake Martin.
“This feels awesome,” Anaya said.
“I didn’t know if I’d ever win one of these. My buddy Gerald
Swindle always tells me it’s not easy to win one of these, so if you get a
shot to win, you better make it work. I knew this one would set up in my
wheelhouse, I just had to get the bites and land them.”
After winning the Nitro
Boats Bassmaster Elite Qualifier presented by Bass Pro Shops Angler of the Year,
Anaya made his much-anticipated debut last week at Lake
Guntersville. That ended with a disappointing 65th place
finish.
Lake Martin has always suited
Anaya’s fishing style, however, thanks to a lot of time on Lewis Smith Lake. He
was able to get even more dialed into the Tallapoosa River impoundment by
winning a tournament before the off-limits period went into effect.
“I won a small local tournament here that paid $5,000, and won Phoenix money,” he explained. “I had right at 15 pounds with all spotted bass and thought, ‘Maybe I can make something work down here.’ I fished the same exact way, just in different areas.”
Anaya spent his tournament
targeting prespawn staging areas in big pockets on the south end of Lake
Martin, a much cleaner section of the lake. Once he arrived, he would put his
trolling motor down and hunt with his Garmin LiveScope for bigger than average
bass.
The majority of his spotted bass
were located on rockpiles in less than 10 feet of water, but on the final day
he found a lot of the bass were staging on stumps.
“A lot of the females were staging
on rockpiles in 5 to 7 feet of water and the males were really shallow,” he
said. “The females were staging on any piece of cover they could find before
they went up to spawn.”
An unnamed 13 mm dice-style bait
rigged on a VMC Redline treble hook and a 1/32-ounce nail weight produced all
of his best bites. He tossed that bait on a 7-foot-4 13 Fishing Myth spinning
rod with 16-pound mainline braid and 12-pound Suffix fluorocarbon leader. In
most instances, Anaya needed to keep the bait above the spotted bass.
LiveScope was imperative for making
accurate casts, but Anaya also sight-fished several key bass, especially on Day
3.
“Staying my distance away from them
was (important). I tried to hit them from 50 to 70 feet away to give them time
to see the bait and not the boat,” Anaya said. “Some of them would come up and
blow up on it and others I’d have to force feed it to them.”
Most days, it has taken most of the
day for any angler to work up to the 13- or 14-pound mark, but Anaya put his
foot on the gas amidst the pouring rain, something he assumed would hurt his
bite.
“I thought the rain and clouds
would make it tougher, but it honestly made it better,” he said. “It was quick.
Like every cast I was catching one over 2 1/2, so I can’t complain when I’m
doing that.”
After filling out a limit early on
with two 2 1/2-pounders, Anaya landed an almost 4-pound spotted bass just
before 9 a.m., a bass that ate his bait 5 feet away from the boat.
“As soon as my bait hit the water,
I saw her open her mouth and close on it,” Anaya said. “I set the hook and
freaked out a little. A 4-pounder out here is major. I’ve never caught a spot
that’s 4 pounds out here before.”
About an hour later, he landed
another 3-pound spotted and upgraded one more time in the afternoon with a 2
1/2-pounder. While he felt comfortable with the weight he caught, Anaya wasn’t
convinced he had won until he got back to weigh-in.
“I thought I had caught enough to
make it happen, but in the back of my mind I kept thinking Brock had caught a
6-pounder on spinnerbait,” he said.
Mosley, meanwhile, notched his
sixth second-place finish as a Bassmaster Elite Series angler with a four-day
total weighing 52-14. The Mississippi pro lead the first two days of the
tournament with mixed bags weighing 15-7 and 10-15. He fell to second on Day 3
after landing 12-2 before catching 14-6 on the final day.
“I went shallow all day and caught
a pretty good one early on,” Mosley said. “The bite wasn’t as good as I thought
it was going to be. There was no wind and the rain quit, and the bass started
slapping my bait. I knew they were going to catch them ’Scoping. Finally when
it rained this afternoon, they committed to it again and I put a good stringer
in the boat.”
Mosley’s best bites during the
tournament came in the afternoon, and the final day was no different. Around 1
p.m., he landed a largemouth that was almost 4 pounds and late in the day, he
added a 2-pounder and a 3-pounder, but it wasn’t enough to unseat Anaya.
“Hats off to him, he beat me,”
Mosley said.
Mosley’s best bites during the week
came in shallow pockets with dirtier water on the northern end of the lake.
Secondary points, docks and wood cover all held bass. A 3/8-ounce Z-Man Evo
Tungsten ChatterBait paired with a Yamamoto Zako shined the final two days,
while a spinnerbait, a Bill Lewis ATV squarebill and a Buckeye Lures Thump Jig
also produced key bites.
With daily totals weighing 11-1,
14-10, 11-12 and 13-6, Georgia pro Emil
Wagner finished third with a total of 50-13. The Progressive
Bassmaster Elite Series sophomore targeted shallow prespawn staging
areas.
The final day, Wagner caught over
50 bass on a fluke before moving to his primary pattern. He culled out those
five bass during the rest of the day, including two spots weighing 3 pounds as
the tournament ended.
Several baits produced bites for
Wagner, including a Berkley Magnum Hit Worm, a Berkley The General rigged on a
shaky head and a dice-style bait. Power-Pole Vision was also key.
“I can look at Google Earth, so I
went back in time and found new places to fish,” Wagner said. “The bass were in
different places every day. The second day they wanted to be on points and
today I caught some on short points with chunk rock.”
Canadian pro Cory
Johnston leads the Progressive
Bassmaster Angler of the Year race with 180 points followed by Illinois pro
Trey
McKinney in second with 175 points. Mosley is third with 174 points, Kyle
Welcher is fourth with 173 points and Stetson
Blaylock is fifth with 170 points. Caleb
Hudson, John
Garrett, Drew
Cook, Cody
Meyer and Matt
Robertson round out the Top 10.

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