Pair Earn Trip to Junior World Bass Fishing Championship on Sylvan Lake

September 9, 2011
B.A.S.S. News - Archived

BURLINGTON, N.J. — Two West Virginia young men did their state proud today by winning both age groups in the 2011 Junior Bassmaster Mid-Atlantic Divisional bass fishing tournament on Sylvan Lake in Burlington, N.J.

 

Interestingly, Sylvan did not live up to all the hype about it being a big bass lake. In fact, just the opposite turned out to be the case, at least for today. All the youth anglers reported catching lots of small bass but also reported having trouble catching the coveted 12-inch ones that they could bring to the scales.

 

In the 11- to 14-year-old age group, Zachary Horrocks managed to land two keeper bass that weighed 1 pound, 15 ounces. That was good enough to claim first place and secure a spot at the Bassmaster Junior World Championship taking place Nov. 5, 2011, on Bayou DeSiard out of Monroe, La.

 

Horrocks’ approach to Sylvan was to fish slow with a Texas rigged Zoom Brush Hog and a wacky rigged Yamamoto Senko. Slow to this young man means drag and stop, drag and stop.

 

“I figured out that the fish were near the bank but a little ways off it,” he explained. “We all caught a lot of short fish. I didn’t try to find bigger bass. I just kept catching them until I caught one that measured. I’m glad it worked.”

 

In the 15- to 18-year-old age group, Henry Schomaker brought four bass to the scales that weighed a total of 3 pounds, 11 ounces. He won his title in a tiebreaker with Virginia’s James Graves.

 

Schomaker caught his fish by swimming a purple Cabin Creek Finesse Weenie Worm rigged to a Slider Head. He credits much of his success to his new Dobyns fishing rod, a 7-foot, 6-inch medium-heavy model.

 

“This was the first time I ever fished with that rod. The sensitivity is amazing,” he said shortly after his win. “I was swimming my bait and shaking it at the same time. I could feel everything that was going on down there.”

 

Both anglers believe that the mentoring programs in West Virginia helped them deal with the unknowns of this tournament. They both said that without the experience and fishing knowledge they received “back home” they never would have been able to win on a 12-acre lake against five other teams, especially considering that they had never seen the water before this morning.

 

They also said they intend to continue fishing Junior events and, when they get old enough, Federation Nation events. But for right now they’re going to concentrate on the Junior World Championship.