“I had an area that I didn’t think would be pressured, and a secondary area that I knew I would be pressured,” said Keith, who notched his first win in FLW competition. “I drew boat No. 3, so I decided to fish the secondary area and I got a limit. I ended up staying there all day because I was catching 3 to 5 pounders.
“I fished a grassy ridge in 2 to 3 feet of water, with a drop off into 10 feet of water right next to it. The fish were in coming out of the deeper water, up over the ridge and in toward spawning flats,” continued Keith. “I would cast toward the ridge and work it toward the deeper water, and other times I’d cast to the middle of the deeper channel and work it back toward me.”
Keith said he used a green-pumpkin with blue flake-colored Z-Man FattyZ worm on a 3/16-ounce Gamakatsu Skip Gap shaky-head with a Daiwa Tatula SV TWS casting reel and a 7-foot, 1-inch Daiwa Tatula casting rod. He credited his Breakline Optics Cahaba sunglasses as being a crucial part of his day, helping him see the deeper grass and fish.
“I caught around 12 keepers and probably culled around 4 times,” said Keith. “During practice they ate everything I threw at them, but during the tournament they were picky. I had to fish super slow – that was the key to the whole deal.”
The top 10 boaters finished the tournament in:
1st: Kelly Keith, Shreveport, La., five bass, 21-3, $3,963
2nd: Michael Andrus, Greenbrier, Ark., five bass, 18-14, $1,981
3rd: Chris Darby, Hot Springs, Ark., five bass, 18-7, $1,522
4th: Shawn Gordon, Russellville, Ark., five bass, 18-2, $1,025
5th: Christopher Jones, Bokoshe, Okla., five bass, 17-8, $793
6th: Von Kinsey, Clarksville, Ark., five bass, 17-0, $727
7th: Brad Morgan, Ashdown, Ark., five bass, 16-14, $660
8th: Josh Ray, Alexander, Ark., five bass, 15-7, $594
9th: Chip Hawkins, Little Rock, Ark., five bass, 15-5, $528
10th: Kevin Brown, Hot Springs, Ark., five bass, 15-4, $989
10th: Charles Williams, Clarksville, Ark., five bass, 15-4, $439
Jason Lieblong of Glasgow, Kentucky, caught a 6-pound, 10-ounce bass – the heaviest of the event in the Boater Division – and earned the day’s Boater Big Bass award of $535. Stan Harris of Searcy, Arkansas, won the Co-angler Division and $2,248 Saturday after catching five bass weighing 14 pounds, 15 ounces.
The top 10 co-anglers were:
1st: Stan Harris, Searcy, Ark., five bass, 14-15, $2,248
2nd: Brian Ray, Hot Springs, Ark., five bass, 13-3, $991
3rd: David Hardin, Bethel, Okla., five bass, 12-7, $662
4th: Elmer McBride, Dierks, Ark., four bass, 12-6, $462
5th: Andrew Wooley, Little Rock, Ark., five bass, 12-3, $379
5th: James Grant, Cherry Valley, Ark., five bass, 12-3, $379
7th: Tony Smith, Bryant, Ark., five bass, 12-1, $430
8th: Jody Jones, Harvey, Ark., three bass, 10-7, $347
9th: Cornelius Branch, Arkadelphia, Ark., five bass, 10-5, $264
10th: Jeff Eckhart, Blevins, Ark., four bass, 10-4, $219
10th: Blake Smith, Benton, Ark., five bass, 10-4, $219
Harris also caught the largest bass in the Co-angler Division, a fish weighing in at 5 pounds, 12 ounces. The catch earned him the day’s Co-angler Big Bass award of $267.