Pat Byle puts bad memories of tournaments lost behind after netting FLW Walleye Tour title on Lake Erie

Pat Byle Wins The Walmart FLW Walleye Tour on Lake Erie

FLW Outdoors
PORT CLINTON, Ohio –(FishNLand.com)- Redemption for Pat Byle totaled 1 pound, 5 ounces.
That was the margin of the Colgate, Wis., pro’s winning weight over second-place Ted Takasaki at the 2009 Walmart FLW Walleye Tour season opener on Lake Erie. Until Byle placed his last fish in the tank on the weigh-in stage, his victory was very much in doubt. Takasaki had wowed the crowd with a 30-pound, 12-ounce sack, the heaviest of the day, and had taken over first place. Byle needed more than 27 pounds to make up the difference, and with a surprisingly tough bite prevailing on day three, he wasn’t sure he had it.
One by one he placed his fish in the tank. When the weight came up at 28 pounds, 6 ounces – bringing his three-day total to 92 pounds, 9 ounces – Byle seemed stunned. His face went blank. Then he leaped forward and shouted “Yes! Yes! Yes!” in one of the more dramatic displays of emotion in the history of FLW walleye tournaments.
Byle has fished the FLW since its start. His previous best finish was a third at the inaugural event on Green Bay in 2000. Between then and now, he had six top-10s, but never a victory.
Saturday the big day finally came.
“I just got a huge monkey off my back,” said Byle, who took over first place from Steve Vandemark after day two. “And it had to come here on Lake Erie. I worked so long and so hard for this. I was due.”
The big lake had treated Byle rudely in the past. In 2003 he led this tournament after two days and then swamped his boat on Gull Island shoal. He began pulling his fish from the livewell, but two swam over the transom, taking victory with them. He weighed 15 pounds that day and finished sixth.
When Pat Byle loaded this walleye onto the scale Ted Takasaki (right) knew that his chance of winning was over. Saturday, Byle started fishing in a pack of boats – it’s the weekend, after all, on the world’s most famous walleye lake – and found he couldn’t maneuver as freely as he trolled. He lost three of the first four fish he hooked, and the one he landed weighed 4 pounds, hardly the stuff with which Eerie tournaments are won.
“I hadn’t lost any fish until then,” Byle said. “And when I saw that 4-pounder I thought, ‘Oh great, and now they’re small, too.’”
He moved five miles and caught another 4-pounder. That was the last fish he caught until 2 p.m. ButA good crowd turned out for the final weigh-in at the Walmart in Port Clinton. with an hour to go until weigh-in, the fish started feeding again, and he upgraded four of his five fish, and the biggest one was the last one.
“It was a miracle,” said Byle, whose first-place check totaled $82,667.
Speed was critical to the winning presentation. Byle trolled with pink, purple and white Reef Runners, using bright colors in the morning when the sky was sunny and darker colors in the afternoon when the sky clouded over.
Onstage at the weigh-in, he cradled the first-place trophy in his arm and recounted some of his past: “This one’s for my grandpa, who passed away when I was a teenager. I grew up in the city, and we didn’t have any lakes. Had he not taken me fishing, I don’t know where I’d be today. A lot of my old neighborhood friends are gone. We buried one just a couple years ago.”

Ted Takasaki and His Co-Angler with their 2nd Place Catch
Takasaki is second again
No. 2 is getting to be a real downer for veteran walleye pro Ted Takasaki, who doubles as president of Lindy/Little Joe Tackle Company in Brainerd, Minn.
This tournament marks the third second-place finish in his career, the others coming at Lake Sharpe last year and Green Bay in 2006. Last year he finished – you guessed it – second in the tour’s overall points standings.
“I’m starting to wonder what it’s going to take,” he said after Saturday’s weigh-in, where he earned a runner-up check for $16,533. “This was a tough day. I didn’t get a good fish until two hours into the day.”
Ted Takasaki and his co-angler, Bruce Frevert, show off the catch that landed Takasaki in second place with 91 pounds, 4 ounces. Frevert finished third in the co-angler division with 92 pounds, 15 ouncesBut then a 9-pounder hit, raising his spirits. With about 15 minutes left, he added a 5-pounder to his five-fish limit. He brought in 30 pounds, 12 ounces and had a three-day total of 91 pounds, 4 ounces.
Takasaki caught all of his fish on Reef Runners in 15 to 20 feet.
“The key,” he said, “was a slower speed, about 1.1 to 1.4 mph. That and making a lot of S-turns. It stalls and stops the baits and speeds them up. When trolling, it’s important to not go straight all the time.”
Franklin finished third
On Saturday Rick Franklin caught his lightest limit of the tournament, 28 pounds, 2 ounces, dropping him from second place to third place with a three-day total of 84 pounds, 5 ounces worth $16,946.
“We just couldn’t get the big bites today,” said the Bemidji, Minn., pro, who limited out pulling spinners at depths ranging from 5 feet to 30 feet, a substantially wider range than what most pros explored. “I kept rigs at every depth all day long, and they all worked.”
Vandemark marks his way to fourth
Like everybody else in the top 10, Steve Vandemark of Linwood, Mich., found a lot more boats on the water Saturday. So he tried something new: He went shallower than he had fished the entire tournament.
“Inside the pack we found the big ones,” he said. “We popped a few and then just kept going to placesSteve Vandemark, who led after day one, finished fourth with 84 pounds, 5 ounces where nobody else was.”
Purple and yellow Reef Runners keyed Vandemark’s payday of $13,227.
Schiefelbein finishes fifth
Scott Schiefelbein of Birchwood, Wis., knows walleyes can use their tails, so he went to where he caught fish the previous two days and found they were gone. Yet he scrounged a five-fish limit that weighed 23 pounds, 2 ounces, bringing his three-day total to 81 pounds, 15 ounces, good for $10,747.
Unlike most others, Schiefelbein caught his fish on spinner rigs.
“A lot of the stuff that worked for me last year worked again this year,” he said.
In total, the top 10 pros on day three caught 41 walleyes. Limits were taken by Byle, Takasaki, Franklin, Vandemark, Schiefelbein and John Gillman. Four-fish bags were weighed by Dave Kraft and Ross Grothe. Perry Good brought three fish to the scales. Rick McLaughlin did not weigh a fish.
Rest of the best
- 6. Perry Good, Brainerd, Minn., 78 pounds, 7 ounces
- 7. John Gillman, Freeland, Mich., 77 pounds, 10 ounces
- 8. Dave Kraft, Bismarck, N.D., 74 pounds, 5 ounces
- 9. Ross Grothe, Northfield, Minn., 69 pounds, 3 ounces
- 10. Rick McLaughlin, Glenrock, Wy. 56 pounds, 11 ounces
About:
Since Irwin L. Jacobs first sought to change the tournament-fishing landscape in 1996, FLW Outdoors has become the only tournament organization to serve bass, walleye, kingfish, redfish and striped bass anglers of all skill levels from coast to coast. The company is the world’s leading tournament-fishing organization with 90,000 entries, 240 events, 12 tournament trails and total purses exceeding $42.6 million, including more than $6 million awarded in no-entry-fee championships, in 2007. In fact, 17 of the sport’s top 18 bass-fishing tournaments (those offering awards of $1 million or more) are FLW Outdoors events, including the biggest tournament in bass fishing — the $2 million Forrest Wood Cup.
FLW Outdoors also offers the largest cash awards for fans — $7.3 million to be exact — through FLW Fantasy FishingTM, which pays $100,000 to the top fantasy player at every FLW Tour stop and the Forrest Wood Cup plus $1 million to the overall top fantasy player for the year. No other fantasy sports league even comes close.
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