Showing posts with label current. Show all posts
Showing posts with label current. Show all posts

Monday, August 25, 2025

Pat Schlapper Wins 2025 Pro-Guide Batteries Bassmaster Elite at the Upper Mississippi River!

Canadians: Cory Johnston 3rd & Gallant 10th 

Wisconsin's Pat Schlapper has won the Pro-Guide Batteries Bassmaster Elite at Upper Mississippi River with a four-day total of 66 pounds, 5 ounces. (Photo: Seigo Saito/ BASS)


BASS Press Release

LA CROSSE, Wis. — Pat Schlapper was surprised by his first Bassmaster Elite trophy, but not his second. The latter — this week’s season-ending Pro-Guide Batteries Bassmaster Elite at Upper Mississippi River — fulfilled the Eleva, Wis., pro’s honest expectation with a winning total of 66 pounds, 5 ounces.

 

“This one’s so sweet, it means a lot to me,” said Schlapper, who also won the MAXAM Tire Bassmaster Elite at Sabine River in mid-May. “The people that I get to fish with down here, it’s for them. We put in a ton of work down here (prior to the off-limits period a month prior to the event) and it paid off.

 

“The Sabine was a kind of surprise to me, but this one I’m not surprised, because I fish down here so much and I have a ton of history. I’m so happy I won this (event). I love the Mississippi River and I hope we come back.”

 

In a week marked with fluctuating water levels from heavy pre-tournament rains and strong winds the third and fourth days, Schlapper adjusted to the changing conditions and kept himself in the hunt.

 

On Day 1, he caught a fourth-place limit of 18-8. Adding a second-round bag that weighed 15-4, he rose to third. A limit of 14-2 kept him in third for Semifinal Saturday.

 

Concluding with a Championship Sunday limit of 18-7, Schlapper recorded the heaviest winning weight in a Bassmaster Elite event at the Mississippi River. Californian Ish Monroe won with 65-7 in 2018.

 

Edging fellow Wisconsin pro Caleb Kuphall by 2-12, Schlapper took home the $101,000 top prize. The season finale also awarded an invitation to fish the 2026 Bass Pro Shops Bassmaster Classic presented by Under Armour, March 13-15 at the Tennessee River.

 

Because Schlapper qualified for the Classic through his 30th-place finish in the Progressive Bassmaster Angler of the Year points, his invitation goes to Progressive Bassmaster Elite Series rookie Dakota Ebare, the first angler outside the Classic cut.

 

Tapping into what he described as significant local knowledge, Schlapper followed a well-calculated daily game plan that involved locking up to Pool 7 and then returning to Pool 8, from which the tournament launched.

 

“I know Pool 7 better and I figured with the Classic qualification and a lot of things on the line, a lot of people wouldn’t lock,” he said. “A lot of people get scared of (not making it back in time).”

 

In Pool 7, Schlapper targeted vast expanses of eel grass, where he used a Big Bite Baits Jerk Minnow on a 5/0 round bend hook and a Spro Bronzeye Frog to search for schooling fish. In Pool 8, he punched dense vegetation in the Goose Pond area with a creature bait on a 4/0 hook with a 1 1/2-ounce weight.

 

“Those are all ways I love to fish,” Schlapper said. “I only lost one key fish all week. I like fishing this way and I’m really glad I got to do it this week.”

 

In a fishery known for impressive quantity, big bites were the difference makers. On Championship Sunday, Schlapper caught two in the 4-pound class — one around a quarter to 9, the other at a quarter past 2. Schlapper’s 4-5 was the final day’s biggest bass.

 

“I wasn’t lying on the dock this morning when I said that these guys should be scared if they knew what I was around,” Schlapper said. “They thought I was just trying to get into their heads, but that was the caliber of fish I’ve been around all week.

 

“It’s just been tricky to get them to bite. Today, I got five of them to bite and I got all of them in the boat.”

 

Hailing from Mukwonago, Wis., Kuphall led the first three days with limits of 18-15, 17-3 and 14-10. Ending with 12-13, Kuphall finished second with 63-9.

 

All week, Kuphall also leveraged his extensive experience, as he committed himself to a pattern he learned over 20 years ago. Targeting undercut banks with occasional current breaks, he caught all of his fish on a 3/8- to 1/2-ounce Do-it Molds Sparky Head jig with a Big Bite Baits 2.75-inch Chunk.

 

“Coming into this event, the whole deal was making the Classic,” Kuphall said. “I was in 36th place (in AOY points) coming in and, out here, that is a very consistent way to catch fish. I felt like I could catch enough to make the Classic. I had no idea it was that good, that it would contend for the win.”

 

“I probably caught double the fish today that I did yesterday. I was just missing the big bites.”

 

Cory Johnston of Otonabee, Canada finished third with 62-6. His daily weights were 17-7, 14-9, 14-10 and 15-12.

 

Johnston caught his fish on a 6th Sense frog, a 3/8-, 1/2- and 3/4-ounce jig with a chunk trailer and a Texas-rigged 6th Sense Bongo. The key, he said, was locating small zones of opportunity amid the river’s vast habitat.

 

“This place is spot-oriented; you gotta find the sweet spot with a group of fish,” Johnston said. “I found two of those the first day of the tournament in Pool 7 and they carried me through the tournament.

 

“I had one really good grassmat the size of my boat. It was starting to blow away yesterday, but I still caught a 4-pounder out of it. Today, it was totally gone and I had to rely on my other spot.”

 

Cooper Gallant of Bowmanville, Canada and Jonathan Kelley of Old Forge, Pa., tied for  Phoenix Boats Big Bass award. Each angler received a $1,000 award for their 5-pound, 9-ounce fish.

 

Texas pro Lee Livesay earned the $2,000 Rapala CrushCity Monster Bag of the Tournament bonus for his 21-11 limit from Day 2. 

 

Austin Felix earned the $1,000 BassTrakk contingency award for accurate reporting.  

 

Virgina’s John Crews the highest place entrant to the Toyota Bonus Bucks program, earning the $3,000 bonus while Paul Mueller earned the $2,000 bonus as the second-highest entrant. 

 

Schlapper earned the $4,000 Yamaha PowerPay bonus for the highest finishing entrant running a Yamaha Outboard while Kyoya Fujita earned a $1,500 PowerPay bonus. 

 

Chris Johnston of Otonabee, Canada won the Progressive Bassmaster Angler of the Year title with 776 points. Johnston, who also won the 2024 title, became only the fourth angler in Bassmaster history to win consecutive AOY titles. Previous consecutive winners were Roland Martin (1971-73, 78-79, 84-85), Guido Hibdon (1990-91) and Kevin VanDam (2008-11).

 

Tucker Smith of Birmingham, Ala., won the Dakota Lithium Elite Series Rookie of the Year title with 631 points.

Friday, August 22, 2025

2025 Pro-Guide Batteries Bassmaster Elite at the Upper Mississippi River Day 2: Kuphall Still Leads!

Canadians: Gallant 6th, Cory Johnston 11th, Chris Johnston 22nd, Evan Kung 82nd Gustafson 86th.

Wisconsin's Caleb Kuphall maintains the lead on Day 2 of the Pro-Guide Batteries Bassmaster Elite at Upper Mississippi River with a total of 36 pounds, 2 ounces. (Photo: Seigo Saito/ BASS) 

BASS Press Release

LA CROSSE, Wis. — Caleb Kuphall was banking on his local knowledge and that expectation delivered both metaphorically and practically as the pro from Mukwonago, Wis., retained the lead on Day 2 of the Pro-Guide Batteries Bassmaster Elite at Upper Mississippi River.

After setting the high mark with a first-round limit of 18-pounds, 15-ounces, Kuphall entered Day 2 an ounce ahead of second-place KJ Queen. Today, Kuphall added 17-3, tallied a total of 36-2 and widened his lead to a 1-13 margin over Bryan Schmitt, who won the 2022 Guaranteed Rate Bassmaster Elite at Upper Mississippi River.

“What a day today; I think I’ve weighed in the two biggest bags that I’ve ever weighed in on this river today and yesterday,” Kuphall said. “I got out of the gate good this morning and caught them right away. I think I caught five and culled like four or five times in the first 40 minutes.

“I had a lot of confidence that I can catch a lot of fish here, but the big ones show up when they want to. We’ll see what happens. Hopefully another couple big ones show up tomorrow.”

Trusting the Mississippi River pattern he learned over 20 years ago, Kuphall has been focusing on undercut banks. Key spots had an isolated tree, a cluster of weeds, or a little point to influence fish positioning.

2025 Pro-Guide Batteries Bassmaster Elite at the Upper Mississippi River Day 1: Caleb Kuphall Scores Lead!


Wisconsin's Caleb Kuphall has taken lead on Day 1 of the Pro-Guide Batteries Bassmaster Elite at Upper Mississippi River with a total of 18 pounds, 15 ounces. (Photo: Seigo Saito/BASS) 


BASS Press Release

LA CROSSE, Wis. — Four years ago, when Caleb Kuphall claimed his first Bassmaster Elite trophy at Lake Guntersville, the Wisconsin pro leveraged his deep knowledge of northern grass fishing to pull the winning fish out of Alabama milfoil.

Today, Kuphall intentionally avoided the typically prominent local game to find the 18-pound, 15-ounce limit that leads Day 1 of the Pro-Guide Batteries Bassmaster Elite at Upper Mississippi River.

Topping a tight leaderboard with only a pound and 14 ounces separating first and 10th, Kuphall leads second-place KJ Queen by an ounce. Third-place Brandon Card sits 5 ounces off the lead.

“I’m actually not fishing any grass at all,” Kuphall said. “I’m just fishing the way I like to fish up here. I mostly fish grass back home (in Mukwonago, Wis.), but I kinda avoid the grass here.

“We’ve had a major influx of eelgrass in this (area of the river) in probably the last five years. There used to be more milfoil, but most of that is gone now.”

Drawing on his solid river history, Kuphall said he did all of his work around a particular type of current break. He kept his specifics thin, but he noted that the way he’s fishing is the way he’s fished for two decades.

“I think I have something better figured out,” Kuphall said. “My first tournaments were here, way back in the early 2000s and I kinda learned this style of fishing and a particular technique throughout the years.

“This is a really consistent pattern. I caught two 4 1/2-pounders — you just don’t catch those here.”

Tuesday, August 5, 2025

Cory Johnston Wins 2025 St. Croix Bassmaster Open at St. Lawrence River!

Canadians: Erik Luzak 3rd!

By David A Brown

BASS Press Release

WADDINGTON, N.Y. — Cory Johnston’s high standards kicked in the extra motivation he needed to turn in his best performance of the week and tally a three-day total of 74 pounds, 15 ounces to win the St. Croix Bassmaster Open at St. Lawrence River presented by SEVIIN.


With three decades of local fishing, the Progressive Bassmaster Elite Series star from Otonabee, Canada took seventh place on Day 1 with 24-7 and gained three spots with a second-round limit of 24-1.


For many, that’s pretty good fishing. Not for Johnston.

“It’s crazy to say, but 24 pounds out here really isn’t a good day and anything over 25 is what you need to win,” Johnston said. “This is a special place.”

Taking his own advice, Johnston stepped on the gas and sacked up a final-round limit of 26-7 and came within an ounce of hitting that 25-pound average. He finished with a margin of 2-11 over Day 2 leader Zack Goutremout.

Wednesday, July 2, 2025

Ott DeFoe Wins Zenni Stage 6 Presented by Athletic Brewing Company Championship Round

DeFoe takes down Stage 6 at Potomac for fifth Bass Pro Tour win 

Ott DeFoe topped the field on the Potomac River with 78 pounds, 11 ounces on 32 scorable bass. Photo by Phoenix Moore

By Tyler Brinks

Bass Pro Tour 

MARBURY, Md. – After a week that saw Ott DeFoe near the top of SCORETRACKER® every day he was on the water, the Tennessee pro finally shot to the top when it mattered most, taking down the Zenni Stage 6 Presented by Athletic Brewing Company Championship Round for his fourth Bass Pro Tour regular-season win and fifth BPT win overall.

With a dominant final-day performance, DeFoe stacked up 32 bass for 78 pounds, 11 ounces to beat his closest pursuer in Ron Nelson by nearly 27 pounds. Nelson finished as the runner-up, his best finish on the Bass Pro Tour since joining the ranks last season.

DeFoe is one of the winningest anglers in Bass Pro Tour history, behind only Jacob Wheeler and Dustin Connell, but this marks his first individual win since Heavy Hitters in 2022. It’s his fourth regular-season BPT win, the first since 2021 on Florida’s Harris Chain of Lakes. He did it in typical DeFoe fashion, too, escaping the bulk of the 66-angler field and fishing far up a creek in the Potomac River backwaters.

Here’s how the Top 10 pros finished the Championship Round:

  1. Ott DeFoe – 78 – 11 (32)                

  2. Ron Nelson – 51 – 13 (23)            

  3. Bradley Roy – 44 – 11 (20)           

  4. Cole Floyd – 43 – 11 (21)               

  5. Zack Birge – 41 – 09 (20)

  6. Adrian Avena – 40 – 12 (20)        

  7. James Elam – 36 – 07 (18)           

  8. Keith Poche – 35 – 07 (15)

  9. Spencer Shuffield – 31 – 01 (15)               

  10. Keith Carson – 30 – 01 (14)       

Complete results

DeFoe gets shallow and skinny for the win

Kicking off the event, DeFoe found himself in second place behind Keith Poche after catching 70-2 during the first day of qualifying, most of it early in the day in what would end being his winning area, the extreme backwaters of Neabsco Creek.