Bass Pro Shops
The Rivers Edge

  HomeSubmit NewsArticlesSubscriptionsAbout UsAdvertise

Scheide Wins Walmart FLW Tour Walmart Open On Beaver Lake

Monday, May 18th, 2009 at 12:19 PM

Scheide Wins Walmart FLW Tour Walmart Open On Beaver Lake
Scheide Earns First FLW Outdoors Victory In Five Years
Ray Sheide, Walmart Open WinnerRogers, Ark. -(FishNLand.com)- Team BP pro Ray Scheide of Dover, Ark., caught a final-round total of 10 bass weighing 21 pounds, 1 ounce to win $200,000 in the $1.1 million Walmart FLW Tour Walmart Open presented by Kellogg’s on Beaver Lake. Scheide topped his closest rival, Mark Rose of Marion, Ark., by one pound, four ounces to earn the win and 200 points toward qualifying for the $2 million Forrest Wood Cup presented by Castrol and BP, which will be held July 30-Aug. 2 on the Three Rivers in Pittsburgh, Pa., where they could win as much as $1 million – the sport’s biggest award.

walmart-flw-logo3“It really feels good today to have a little redemption,” said Scheide, who won his first event with FLW Outdoors in more than five years. “Yesterday I missed some opportunities, but actually today I only had five bites. I caught the big one about 11 o’clock, but didn’t get my limit until after one.

“I had some options to go out and catch spots. But there was only one way to come back and try to make a run at this thing and that was to fish for largemouths.

Scheide said the fish were relocating each day. “One day they would be in real shallow water, the next they would be under trees. Today I actually got my first two bites in about eight to 10 foot of water. I just started running through new water and caught a majority of my fish on banks I had not even fished.”

“It was slow out there today,” said Scheide, who fished from Prairie Creek down to Coppermine. “I got my first bite around nine and another about 10. I was throwing a chigger craw and a big profile bait, alternating between them. That just shows my confidence in flipping baits right there.”

Scheide opened the tournament Thursday in 13th place with five bass weighing 11-7. He moved to seventh place Friday on the strength of a five-bass catch weighing 10 pounds, 9 ounces to advance into the final round of 10 pros with a two-day total of 10 bass weighing 22 pounds even. On Saturday, weights were cleared, and Scheide caught five bass weighing 8-13 to advance to the final day of competition in fourth place. Scheide added another five bass weighing 12-4 to his final-round total Sunday.

Rose caught a final-round total of 10 bass weighing 19-13 to claim second place and $55,000.

“I started off catching the same fish today as I had been, they were just smaller,” said Rose, who would catch his limit early and then move on to new water searching for bigger fish. “I stayed there too long. I caught about 15 keepers, but I was still trying to get to seven or eight pounds.

“I was running out of time to go flip and when it got down to it, I only had about an hour and forty-five minutes to go fishing and I culled three times. Had I done that three hours earlier, who knows?”

Rose was using a topwater bait early in the week, but on the final day said he had to slow down using a shaky head. “I weighed in every fish today on that except one right at the end. I flipped in a trash pocket where I had to put it in four-wheel drive and go get it.

Rose, who said it was hard to feel bittersweet about finishing second, said “I wish I could finish second in every one of these. I have been at this 11 years and it would feel great to win one. I have finished everywhere from second to 200th and every place in between in those 11 years and I haven’t won one. How can you be upset with second place?”

Rounding out the top 10 pros were Team Kellogg’s pro Clark Wendlandt of Leander, Texas (nine bass, 19-12, $45,000); Jason Christie of Park Hill, Okla. (eight bass, 18-11, $35,000); Keith Combs of Del Rio, Texas (10 bass, 16-14, $30,000); Team Chevy pro Jay Yelas of Corvallis, Ore. (eight bass, 16-4, $28,000); Team Pringles pro Gabe Bolivar of Ramona, Calif. (eight bass, 16-1, $26,000); Team Berkley pro Glenn Browne of Ocala, Fla. (nine bass, 13-10, $24,000); Rob Kilby of Hot Springs, Ark. (10 bass, 13-6, $22,000); and Team National Guard pro and current Land O’Lakes Angler of the Year Brent Ehrler of Redlands, Calif. (eight bass, 12-3, $20,000).

Overall there were 43 bass weighing 84 pounds, 14 ounces caught in the Pro Division Sunday. The catch included six five-bass limits.

Brent Bridgeman of Elkmont, Ala., won the Co-angler Division and $40,000 Saturday with a five-bass limit weighing 7 pounds, 5 ounces followed by Zac Cassill of Fairfax, Iowa, in second place with five bass weighing 7-3 worth $15,000.

Bridgeman opened the tournament in second place Thursday with five bass weighing 9-14 while fishing with Bobby McMullin of Pevely, Mo. On Friday he slipped to third place with a five-bass catch weighing 6-0 while fishing with Team Febreze pro Craig Powers of Rockwood, Tenn. He wrapped up his win while fishing with Team Berkley pro Glenn Browne of Ocala, Fla.

“I didn’t even practice for this event,” said Bridgeman, who is fishing his rookie season of the FLW Tour. “I showed up barely in time for the meeting.

“My first cast on Beaver lake I caught my first keeper fish,” Bridgeman added. “First cast, first fish, first time on the lake. That’s a lot of coincidences.”

A custom airbrush artist for 21 years, Bridgeman decided to relocate from the west coast to fish the FLW Tour in 2009. Bridgeman grew up fishing tournaments with his father and won his first at age seven.

Bridgeman got the idea to fish the FLW Tour after researching Fantasy Fishing online. He had competed in a tournament at one point against angler Gary Yamamoto and had success and decided he could fish at the sport’s top level. Once he was verified to fish the Tour, Bridgeman packed his bags and moved to Alabama. That turned out to be a profitable move for Bridgeman.

“I figured I was in the top six or five,” Bridgeman said. “I thought it would take nine or 10 pounds to win it. I knew I had seven to eight pounds, and I’m glad it held up. I used a balance beam, and I bet that balance beam saved me.”

Bridgeman said he caught all of his fish on a green pumpkin with green and purple flake 6-inch Gary Yamamoto Swimming Senko rigged on a shaky head jig head.

“The fish would catch it on the fall,” Bridgeman said. “If they didn’t catch it on the fall, I’d just reel it in.”

Rounding out the top 10 co-anglers are Todd Lee of Jasper, Ala. (three bass, 6-3, $7,500); T.R. Fuller of Auburn, Ala. (four bass, 4-13, $5,000); Moo Bae of West Friendship, Md. (two bass, 2-10, $4,000); Eddie Laster of Morton, Miss. (one bass, 2-2, $3,500); Dirk Davenport of Delaware, Ohio (one bass, 2-1, $3,000); Shane Lehew of Charlotte, N.C. (two bass, 2-0, $2,500); Kevin Hawk of Ramona, Calif. (one bass, 1-15, $2,000) and David Hudson of Jasper, Ala. (one bass, 1-4, $1,750).

The total purse for the Walmart Open event on Beaver Lake was more than $1.1 million, including $10,000 through 50th place in the Pro Division.

Coverage of the Beaver Lake tournament, hosted by the Rogers Convention & Visitors Bureau and the Bentonville Convention & Visitors Bureau, will be broadcast in high-definition (HD) on VERSUS, the network which brings anglers the best fishing programming on television featuring the most-trusted authorities on the water. The Emmy-nominated “FLW Outdoors,” will air June 14 from 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. ET. “FLW Outdoors,” hosted by Jason Harper, is broadcast to approximately 500 million households worldwide, including internationally through agreements with WFN (World Fishing Network) and Matchroom Sport to such countries as Canada, Germany, China, South Africa, Australia, Malaysia, Russia, Hungary and the United Kingdom, making it the most widely distributed weekly outdoor-sports television show in the world.

The FLW Tour will award more than $8 million cash to the world’s top bass anglers in 2009. Regular season competition includes three qualifiers and three opens. Each event takes anglers a step closer to the $2 million Forrest Wood Cup presented by Castrol, which will be held July 30-Aug. 2 on the Three Rivers in Pittsburgh, Pa. The prestigious championship and outdoor show hosted by Visit Pittsburgh will feature 77 pros, 77 co-anglers and bass fishing’s largest cash award – a potential $1 million first-place prize for the winning pro.

About

FLW Outdoors, named after Forrest L. Wood, the legendary founder of Ranger Boats, is the largest fishing tournament organization in the world. FLW Outdoors also is taking fishing mainstream with FLW Fantasy Fishing, offering the largest awards possible in the history of fantasy sports, $10 million in cash and prizes. Sign up for Player’s Advantage for only $10 to get your edge and win.

For more information about FLW Outdoors and its tournaments, visit FLWOutdoors.com or call (270) 252-1000. For more information about FLW Fantasy Fishing and Player’s Advantage, visit FantasyFishing.com.

The Rivers Edge

Ehrler Leads Walmart FLW Tour Walmart Open On Beaver Lake

Saturday, May 16th, 2009 at 11:33 AM

Ehrler Leads Walmart FLW Tour Walmart Open On Beaver Lake
Hawk leads co-anglers
walmart-flw-logo2ROGERS, Ark
.- (FishNLand.com)- Team National Guard pro Brent Ehrler of Redlands, Calif., caught a five-bass limit weighing 13 pounds, 9 ounces Friday to capture the lead in the Walmart FLW Tour’s $1.1 million Walmart Open presented by Kellogg’s on Beaver Lake with a two-day catch of 10 bass weighing 24-6. He now holds a 1-pound, 2-ounce lead in the tournament featuring 155 pros and 155 co-anglers from across the United States, Mexico, Canada and Japan.

“I’m just junk fishing,” said Ehrler, who has won more than $1,126,000 in FLW Outdoors events. “I’m fishing shallow and running the bank and running new water. Today was kind of an interesting day.

“I didn’t really have much and just kind of chipped away and started getting on them a little more and they started biting and I started catching them more and more,” Ehrler added. “The problem is I’m catching small ones, so I may catch seven pounds tomorrow and I may not catch anything. Or I could catch 12 or 13 pounds again.”

Ehrler said he was fishing slowly by flipping as well as throwing a shaky-head rig. He said the fish came from both open water as well as heavy cover, where he has to use heavier baits and equipment.

“I actually ran a lot of different water today and I pulled into a few areas today that I hadn’t been to before and caught a couple of keepers,” Ehrler said. “I’m just going to run that, and hopefully it will work.

“I was real nervous about the end of the year points, and I had caught 10 pounds by 12 o’clock and I was real happy because I knew that weight would stay up there, and the next thing I know I caught a 2 ½ (pound fish) and a 3 ½ (pound fish) and I thought, ‘Wow. I just made the cut.’ It’s going my way, for sure. Everything’s going right.”

Jason Christie of Park Hill, Okla., advanced to the final round of 10 pros in the No. 2 spot with a two-day total of nine bass weighing 23-4.

“It was really, really, really extremely difficult,” Christie said. “I only had four fish. I lost two in real thick stuff.”

Christie said he had one fish at 12:30 p.m., but said he had an area that had been producing for him later in the day. He went to that area and caught solid fish to land him in the top 10.

“What hurt me today was not being able to fish as late as I did yesterday,” Christie said. “I had to be in at 3 o’clock.”

Christie said he caught his fish flipping a black neon YUM soft-plastic tube on 25-pound Silver Thread line paired with a Falcon rod.

“That’s changing day-to-day, but today that was the deal,” Christie said. “Yesterday I caught 20 to 25 keepers. Yesterday you could just go down the bank and catch the fish in bushes that didn’t have any shade. Of course, yesterday it was overcast.

“What changed today was the high, bright sun,” Christie added. “The fish would not bite in that type of bush. You had to get back in the shade … the dark shade. That’s where I caught all of my fish.”

Christie said he has only two small areas that hold fish that he feels confident in and will look for new water to sustain him through the weekend.

Rounding out the top five pros who will continue competition Saturday and Sunday are Team Berkley pro Glenn Browne of Ocala, Fla. (10 bass, 23-3); Team Kellogg’s pro Clark Wendlandt of Leander, Texas (10 bass, 22-14); and Mark Rose of Marion, Ark. (10 bass, 22-11).

Also clearing the top-10 cut weight of 21 pounds, 4 ounces and adding to this already power-packed top-10 field are Team Chevy pro Jay Yelas of Corvallis, Ore.; Team BP pro Ray Scheide of Dover, Ark.; Rob Kilby of Hot Springs, Ark.; Keith Combs of Del Rio, Texas; and Team Pringles pro Gabe Bolivar of Ramona, Calif.

Wendlandt earned the day’s $1,000 Folgers Big Bass award in the Pro Division thanks to a 5-pound, 1-ounce bass.

Pros are competing for a top award of $200,000 this week plus valuable points in the hope of qualifying for $2 million Forrest Wood Cup presented by BP and Castrol, which will be held July 30-Aug. 2 on the Three Rivers in Pittsburgh, Pa., where they could win as much as $1 million – the sport’s biggest award.

Kevin Hawk of Ramona, Calif., leads the Co-angler Division with an opening-round total of 10 bass weighing 18 pounds, 6 ounces, followed by Moo Bae of West Friendship, Md., in second place with 10 bass weighing 17-8.

Hawk said he caught every fish Friday on a green pumpkin trick worm rigged on a 1/8-ounce shaky-head jig head. He threw the rig on a 7-foot medium-heavy action rod using 10-pound braid and an 8-pound-test fluorocarbon leader. He said the rig gave him the muscle he needed to get fish out of heavy cover.

“That’s the only bait I threw in practice, so I decided not to change anything and use that in the tournament, and so far it’s paid off for me,” Hawk said. “I’m excited to go out and go fishing again.”

Rounding out the top five co-anglers are Brent Bridgeman of Elkmont, Ala. (10 bass, 15-14); Shane Lehew of Charlotte, N.C. (10 bass, 15-12) and Zac Cassill of Fairfax, Iowa (nine bass, 15-11).

Also clearing the top-10 cut weight of 13 pounds, 6 ounces in the Co-angler Division are David Hudson of Jasper, Ala.; Todd Lee of Jasper, Ala.; T.R. Fuller of Auburn, Ala.; Eddie Laster of Morton, Miss.; and Dirk Davenport of Delaware, Ohio.

Earl Bennett of Mt. Vernon, Ill., earned $500 for the day’s Folgers Big Bass award in the Co-angler Division thanks to a 3-pound, 7-ounce bass he caught while fishing with Jason Reyes of Huffman, Texas.

Co-anglers are fishing for a top award of $40,000 this week.

Anglers will take off at 6:30 a.m. Saturday and Sunday from Prairie Creek Marina located at 1 Prairie Creek Marina Drive in Rogers. Saturday and Sunday’s weigh-ins will be held at the John Q. Hammons Center located at 3303 Pinnacle Hills Pkwy. in Rogers, beginning at 4 p.m.

In conjunction with the weigh-ins Saturday and Sunday, FLW Outdoors will host a free Family Fun Zone and outdoor show at the John Q. Hammons Center from noon to 4 p.m. each day. The Family Fun Zone offers fans a chance to meet their Fantasy Fishing team anglers face-to-face and review the latest products from Berkley, Lowrance, Ranger, Evinrude, Yamaha and other sponsors while children are treated to giveaways, fishing themed games and rides like the Ranger Boat simulator. Children 14 and under visiting the Family Fun Zone on Sunday will receive a free rod and reel combo while supplies last. One lucky member of the audience will even win a new Ranger boat courtesy of The Morning News during the final 4 p.m. weigh-in Sunday, May 17. Admission is free, and you must be present to win.

In FLW Tour competition, pros and co-anglers are randomly paired each day, with pros supplying the boat, controlling boat movement and competing against other pros. Co-anglers fish from the back deck against other co-anglers. The full field competes in the two-day opening round for one of 10 slots in Saturday’s competition based on their two-day accumulated weight. Weights are cleared for day three, and co-angler competition concludes following Saturday’s weigh-in. The top 10 pros continue competition Sunday, with the winner determined by the heaviest accumulated weight from days three and four.

The total purse for the Walmart Open event at Beaver Lake is more than $1.1 million, including $10,000 through 50th place in the Pro Division.

Coverage of the Beaver Lake tournament, hosted by the Rogers Convention & Visitors Bureau and the Bentonville Convention & Visitors Bureau, will be broadcast in high-definition (HD) on VERSUS, the network which brings anglers the best fishing programming on television featuring the most-trusted authorities on the water. The Emmy-nominated “FLW Outdoors,” will air June 14 from 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. ET. “FLW Outdoors,” hosted by Jason Harper, is broadcast to approximately 500 million households worldwide, including internationally through agreements with WFN (World Fishing Network) and Matchroom Sport to such countries as Canada, Germany, China, South Africa, Australia, Malaysia, Russia, Hungary and the United Kingdom, making it the most widely distributed weekly outdoor-sports television show in the world.

The FLW Tour will award more than $8 million cash to the world’s top bass anglers in 2009. Regular season competition includes three qualifiers and three opens. Each event takes anglers a step closer to the $2 million Forrest Wood Cup presented by Castrol, which will be held July 30-Aug. 2 on the Three Rivers in Pittsburgh, Pa. The prestigious championship and outdoor show hosted by Visit Pittsburgh will feature 77 pros, 77 co-anglers and bass fishing’s largest cash award – a potential $1 million first-place prize for the winning pro.

About:
FLW Outdoors, named after Forrest L. Wood, the legendary founder of Ranger Boats, is the largest fishing tournament organization in the world. FLW Outdoors also is taking fishing mainstream with FLW Fantasy Fishing, offering the largest awards possible in the history of fantasy sports, $10 million in cash and prizes. Sign up for Player’s Advantage for only $10 to get your edge and win.

For more information about FLW Outdoors and its tournaments, visit FLWOutdoors.com or call (270) 252-1000. For more information about FLW Fantasy Fishing and Player’s Advantage, visit FantasyFishing.com.

Amid Storms, Ellis Retains Stren Lead On Kentucky Lake

Saturday, May 9th, 2009 at 10:27 AM

Amid Storms, Ellis Retains Stren Lead On Kentucky Lake
Co-angler Somrek on top of his game and his division

Tommy Ellis, Pro Leader

Tommy Ellis, Pro Leader

Gilbertsville, Ky. –(FishNLand.com)- Nature threw several rounds of high wind and heavy rain at Stren Central Division anglers on Kentucky-Barkley lakes, but these fertile waters still yielded good catches.

Rain clouds started building shortly after the launch and by late morning, isolated thunderstorms started unleashing their fury over the lakes. Most were short lived, but a fierce system ripped through the area around midday, lashing mostly across the lake’s lower end, but pruning trees throughout western Kentucky.

Missouri pro Ken Young said the rough weather gave him and his co-angler a wild ride. “When that Flipping a Strike King Rodent remained productive for Tommy Ellis.storm came through, it spun us around and pushed us up against the shore. A tree fell on my boat and when we went to turn around, another tree fell on the other end of the boat.” (The trees did not severely damage Young’s boat and neither competitor was injured.)

As was the case for day one, the second round of competition saw anglers weeding through loads of small fish to find something competitive. Tennessee pro Ben Parker described his day: “My co-angler and I probably caught 100 fish, but it was just 2-pounder, 2-pounder, 2-pounder.”

Kentucky pro Luke Smith weighed only one fish in two days, but his 8-pounder won Big Bass honors for day two.Paris, Tenn. pro Tommy Ellis entered the second round in the top spot with a 24-pound, 4-ounce day one weight. He retained his lead on day two, but with a limit weighing 10 pounds less than his initial effort. Posting a 2-day total of 38-8, Ellis holds a 15-ounce margin over second place pro, Mike Ward.

Focusing on bedding fish, Ellis flipped a Strike King Rodent in the Okeechobee Craw color on a 4/0 hook with a 3/8-ounce Tru-Tungsten flipping weight and Smart Peg. He surmised that the day’s lower light conditions had a negative impact on his productivity.

“We didn’t have any sun at any time today,” Ellis said. “Yesterday, when the sun came out, I’d catch aMike Ward gained seven spots and moved into second with 37-9. different grade of fish. I think the cloud cover was the difference today. The fish bit all throughout the day. I probably caught more fish today than I did yesterday, but most of them were not keepers.”

Ellis said he found his fish holding tight to cover. “It surprised me – I kept thinking they were going to move out from the bushes and roam with this cloud cover, but they were suspended in the bushes. I (spotted) several fish and they wouldn’t run off. As soon as my bait hit the water, they were on it.”

Ward toughs it out for second place

Kentucky pro David Young caught another limit and maintained his third place spot.Ward endured heartbreak and hardship, but improved seven spots to second. He paired his 19-5 from day one with another limit weighing 17-10 for a 37-9 total.

Flipping a Texas-rigged Strike King Rodent in the Bama Bug color, Ward got a triple dose of tragedy right off the bat. Nevertheless, he persevered and put together a solid limit.

“I lost three 4-pounders in a 10-yard stretch on my first pass early this morning,” he said. “They were not biting aggressively, plus they were right in the middle of a bush. They were getting wrapped up, my shirt was wet because I laid in the water and dug fish out, I broke rods trying to get fish out.”

Fishing far south, Ward worked multiple spots within a half-mile-square area. Cary Bever matched his day one weight of 18-6 with the same on day two for a fourth place finish.

David Young of Mayfield, Ky. placed third with 36-14. In fourth place, Rhinelander, Wisc. pro Cary Bever duplicated his day one total of 18-6 for a 36-12 total. Ramie Colson, Jr. of Cadiz, Ky. finished fifth with 36-10.

Best of the rest

Rounding out the top-10 pro leaders at the Stren Series Lake Roosevelt event:

6th: Larry Sisk of Evansville, Ind., 36-5
7th: Craig Powers of Rockwood, Tenn., 36-2
8th: Patrick Hailstones of Cincinnati, Ohio, 35-8
9th: Mark Rose of Marion, Ark., 34-13
10th: Phil Cannady of Waverly, Tenn., 34-12

Luke Smith won Big Bass honors for his 8-pound largemouth.

Somrek’s early success keeps him in co-angler lead

After leading his division by a pound and one ounce on day one, Brian Somrek of Calvert City, Ky., expanded his margin by another five ounces with a 32-pound, 13-ounce total. He bolstered his 18-pound, 1-ounce weight from day one with another limit weighing 14-12.

Much to his delight, Somrek secured his first 5 fish less than an hour after the 6:30 launch. “I was throwing a Rat-L-Trap first thing this morning and had my limit by 7:30. I culled fish all day. We literally caught 100 fish in the first three hours.”

Somrek caught most of his fish over creek mouth rocks in about five feet of water. He also caught fish on a crankbait, a football head jig with a tube and a Texas-rigged Packer Craw.

Brian Futch of Goreville, Ill. placed second with 31-7 as Dennis Marcinek of Chicago, Ill. took third at 26-14. William Campbell of Middlesboro, Ky. was fourth with 26-11 and Logan Fulks of Hendersonville, Tenn. ended in fifth with 23-15.

Best of the rest

Rounding out the top-10 co-angler leaders at the Stren Series Lake Roosevelt event:

6th: Bill Coffey or Union City, Tenn., 22-10
7th: Kyle Weisenburger of Findlay, Ohio, 22-7
8th: Kevin Hawk of Ramona, Calif., 22-6
9th: Ronnie Critcheloe of Kuttawa, Ky., 22-1
10th: Jeremy Estes of Hawesville, Ky., 21-7

Coffey won Big Bass honors for his 6-pound, 13-ounce largemouth.

Day three of Stren Series action on Kentucky-Barkley lakes continues at Saturday’s takeoff, scheduled to take place at 6:30 a.m. (Central) at Moors Marina located at 570 Moors Rd. in Gilbertsville, Ky


Bass Pro Shops