HOT SPRINGS, Ark. (July 13, 2005) - Matt Herren of Trussville, Ala., the No. 4 seed in the FLW Tour Forrest L. Wood Bass Fishing Championship on Lake Hamilton in Hot Springs, brought in the heaviest catch on day one in the quest to win the largest award in professional bass fishing - $500,000. Herren's catch, a five-bass limit weighing 12 pounds, 15 ounces, was anchored by two solid bass - a 4-pounder and a 5-pounder he caught from deep-water brush piles.
Temperatures in the 90s and heavy humidity greeted anglers Wednesday. With very tough fishing conditions during practice, many anglers were less than confident heading into the tournament. As evidenced by the day-one weights, the bass did not make it easier for the pros. Most of the pros brought relatively small catches to the scales, although a few anglers broke the 12-pound mark.
"I got fortunate. I had a strong pattern during practice," Herren said. "I've been getting two or three good bites each day."
Herren said the key to hooking up with a hefty Lake Hamilton bass is just a matter of being in the right place with the right lure at the right time. In this case, the right time proved to be during the searing heat of midday, as Herren reported catching most of his bass between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Herren is facing No. 45 seed Tom Monsoor of La Crosse, Wis., who caught a respectable limit of five bass weighing 8 pounds. With another day left before the first cut in the bracket, however, Monsoor cannot be counted out of the competition.
"There's lots of pressure," Herren said. "I have some water that I haven't fished yet, so I'll just have to go out tomorrow and do my best."
The brush-pile bite was the predominant pattern among the pros during the first day of competition, although a few anglers reported catching some schooling, early morning bass on topwater lures.
The four-day tournament will conclude Saturday with the winning pro walking away $500,000 richer. The top 48 anglers from the six-event 2005 FLW Tour advanced to the championship. Anglers were seeded according to their year-end ranking, with the No. 1 pro fishing head-to-head against the No. 48 seed, the No. 2 seed fishing against the No. 47 seed, and so on.
Six pros in the event are from Arkansas, but only two carried their brackets on day one. Most notably was Larry Nixon of Bee Branch - the No. 24 seed - who caught a five-bass limit weighing 9 pounds, giving him close to a 4-pound lead over rookie sensation, No. 25 seed Bobby Lane of Lakeland, Fla. Nixon said he had been on an early morning, shallow-water bite during practice, but that patterned waned, as the morning's takeoff wasn't until well after daybreak.
"I've caught some shallow and some deep," Nixon said. "I caught five keepers total and one small fish." The heavy haze that hung in the air on the first day hurt his fishing, but Nixon added that some cloud cover could help the bass bite.
No. 1 seed and 2005 Angler of the Year Greg Hackney of Gonzales, La., brought in four bass weighing 4 pounds, 7 ounces, giving him a comfortable lead over his competitor, No. 48 seed and Sam Newby of Pocola, Okla. Newby caught one keeper weighing 1 pound, 11 ounces.
Upsetting No. 2 pro Toshinari Namiki of Hachioji-City, Japan, was No. 47 seed Vic Vatalaro of Kent, Ohio. Namiki, who's had a fantastic season with four top-10 finishes, brought one bass weighing 2 pounds, 1 ounce to the scale, while Vatalaro weighed in 5 pounds, 1 ounce.
Vatalaro also caught his fish from deep-water brush piles, and he caught numerous bass during the course of the day few were keepers. Vatalaro targeted shallow-water bass with topwater lures early in the day, but that bite didn't pan out. Eventually, he moved out to deeper water and turned to fishing with spinning tackle - his favorite method of fishing.
Slipping under the radar was a shoot-out between two Western pros - No. 31 seed John Murray of Phoenix, Ariz., and No. 18 seed Ken Wick of Star, Idaho. Wick landed a respectable catch weighing 7 pounds, 11 ounces, but Murray boated a limit weighing 12 pounds, 10 ounces - one of only three catches to break the 10-pound mark during day one.
"I'm probably doing stuff that no one else is doing," Murray said. "The daytime bite can be really tough in Arizona, so I adapted some of the things I use out there to this lake. I flipped some shallow docks, but for the most part, I fished a drop-shot with a 5 1/2-inch curly-tail worm."
On the co-angler side, Russell Burroughs of Jacksonville, Ala., topped the field with a day-one catch of three bass weighing 6 pounds, 14 ounces. Co-anglers had a particularly tough competition on the first day, as only the top 32 anglers caught enough bass to break the 1-pound mark. The 48 co-anglers compete against thee entire field, with the top 24 advancing after day two. Co-angler competition concludes Friday with the winner taking home $25,000 cash.