HOT SPRINGS, Ark. (June 4, 2022) – Boater Conner Cunningham, a 30-year-old beverage distributor from Springfield, Missouri, that competes in the Bass Fishing League Ozark Division, made his Whopper Plopper bites pay off in a big way this week by winning the 39th annual All-American Championship tournament on Lake Hamilton in Hot Springs, Arkansas. Cunningham led the event from start to finish and ended the job Saturday with an 11-pound, 10-ounce limit, which gave him the win with a three-day total of 44 pounds, 4 ounces – an 11-pound, 11-ounce margin of victory. Cunningham would have won if he had not even made a cast on Saturday.
“Lake Hamilton fishes a lot like my lakes from back home in Missouri, so I’ve just kind of applied what I know from fishing back home over the years and it worked out well here,” Cunningham said.
While many competitors spent the event offshore targeting the numerous Lake Hamilton brush piles, Cunningham caught all but one of his 15 weigh-in fish in just 2 feet of water or less.
“I fished pretty much the whole entire lake – I ran 30 to 40 spots, and that was easy because this lake is so small,” Cunningham said. “I tried to conserve my fish throughout the week. On Day 1 it took me until around 11:30 (a.m.) to get my weight, then until 12:30 (p.m.) on Day 2. Then I’d go deep and try to help my co-angler out as best as I could. And I knew that I could catch a good one out there, too – I did yesterday.”
Cunningham credited a bone-colored River2Sea Whopper Plopper 110 as being his key bait throughout the week, but he also mixed in a white Crock-O-Gator X-Bite buzzbait with a (Zoom) Horny Toad trailer and a football jig. He caught a key fish Friday deep-cranking a Strike King 6XD crankbait.
“I had been down here in April and knew that I could catch 10 pounds out deep fairly easily,” Cunningham said. “I spent our optional practice day committed to topwater and it didn’t take me long to find a good bite. The key was just covering water.”
Cunningham has aspired of taking his bass-fishing career to the next level – he had planned to compete as a boater in the Toyota Series this season, until a scheduling conflict forced him to scrap those plans and concentrate on the Phoenix Bass Fishing League. Now, with a $120,000 payday, Cunningham says he is ready to make the move up.
“This money means a lot, and it gives me the security as I take that next jump up,” Cunningham said. “This is huge for me in my journey to doing this full-time. I aspire to fish professionally one day and this win certainly helps with that. I’m just speechless and so blessed and honored to be here and win. This is a good group of guys in this field, so to win this one is really special.”
The top 10 boaters at the 2002 Phoenix Bass Fishing League All-American on Lake Hamilton are:
1st: Connor Cunningham, Springfield, Mo., 10 bass, 44-4, $120,000
2nd: Hunter Eubanks, Inman, S.C., 10 bass, 32-9, $20,000
3rd: Sean Wieda, Alexandria, Ky., 15 bass, 31-12, $15,000
4th: Brian Bean, Hot Springs, Ark., 15 bass, 30-12, $14,000
5th: Andy Wicker, Cayce, S.C., 15 bass, 29-12, $13,000
6th: David Lowery, Milledgeville, Ga., 15 bass, 29-6, $12,000
7th: Ryan Powroznik, Hopewell, Va., 15 bass, 28-4, $11,000
8th: Jonathan Crossland, Chapin, S.C., 15 bass, 26-10, $10,000
9th: Justin Kimmel, Athens, Ga., 15 bass, 28-5, $9,000
10th: Mike Reid, Greenville, Texas, 15 bass, 28-9, $8,000
Overall, there were 50 bass weighing 84 pounds, 11 ounces caught by the final 10 boaters Saturday. All of the final 10 boaters caught a five-bass limit. The highest-finishing boater from each Regional Championship (including the Wild Card) at the All-American now advance to the Toyota Series Championship for a shot at winning $235,000.
The eight boaters that finished highest from their region earned an automatic qualification into the 2022 Toyota Series Championship on Lake Guntersville are:
Brian Bean, Hot Springs, Ark.
Connor Cunningham, Springfield, Mo.
Hunter Eubanks, Inman, S.C.
David Lowery, Milledgeville, Ga.
Matthew Marinelli, Salem, Conn.
Ryan Powroznik, Hopewell, Va.
Wade Ramsey, Choctaw Okla .
Sean Wieda, Alexandria, Ky.
Clint Horton of Falkner, Mississippi, won the Strike King Co-angler Division Saturday with a three-day total of 15 bass weighing 21 pounds, 15 ounces to earn the top prize package of $50,000. Co-angler Cory Guinn of Mountain Rest, South Carolina, finished runner up with a three-day total of 12 bass weighing 21 pounds, 5 ounces, good for $10,000.
“This is unbelievable,” an emotional Horton said after learning he’d won. “I never expected to win this in a million years. I’ve been fishing tournaments for the last 10 to 12 years or so, and this is pretty awesome.”
The construction supervisor from Mississippi credited a Zoom Finesse worm – both red bug and green-pumpkin – as being his key bait this week.
“I threw a finesse worm every way that you could rig it this week,” Horton said. “I caught fish from one foot deep to 20 feet deep with my boaters. I used a Carolina rig, a Texas rig, a wacky rig, a drop-shot rig, and on a shaky head.”
Horton said he doesn’t fish BFL events for a chance at turning pro or gaining big sponsorships. He fishes for the love of the sport and the enjoyment it brings him personally.
“Fishing is just fun to me,” Horton said. “I don’t want to turn it into a job. I feel like I wouldn’t love it like I love it now. I’m happy with what I’m doing now and I’m happy that an event like the All-American exists so I can fish it.”
The top 10 co-anglers at the 2022 Bass Fishing League All-American on Lake Hamilton finished:
1st: Clint Horton, Falkner, Miss., 15 bass, 21-15, $50,000
2nd: Cory Guinn, Mountain Rest, S.C., 12 bass, 21-5, $10,000
3rd: Evan Eldred, Gaines, Mich., 13 bass, 18-10, $6,000
4th: Jeffery Johnson, Austin, Ind., 14 bass, 18-2, $5,000
5th: Zachary Verbugge, Lake Havasu, Ariz., 13 bass, 17-4, $4,500
6th: Alan Hill, Ada, Okla., 11 bass, 16-14, $4,000
7th: Hunter Dahnke, Missoula, Mont., 13 bass, 16-12, $3,500
8th: Steven Obester, Palatka, Fla., 10 bass, 16-2, $3,000
9th: Brendan Vinton, Braintree, Vt., 10 bass, 16-0, $2,500
10th: Eric Eden, Hartsville, Tenn., 11 bass, 14-14, $2,000
Overall, there were 29 bass weighing 35 pounds, 4 ounces caught by the final 10 Strike King Co-anglers on Saturday. Horton was the only co-angler to bring a five-bass limit to the scale on Saturday. The highest-finishing Co-angler from each Regional Championship (including the Wild Card) at the All-American advance to the Toyota Series Championship for a shot at winning $33,500.
The eight Co-anglers that finished highest from their region and earned an automatic qualification into the 2022 Toyota Series Championship on Lake Guntersville are:
Randy Allen, Russellville, Ark.
Evan Eldred, Gaines, Mich.
Cory Guinn, Mountain Rest, S.C.
Clint Horton, Falkner, Miss.
Jeffery Johnson, Austin, Ind.
Steven Obester, Palatka, Fla.
Kim Sapetti, Chatham, Ill.
Zachary Verbugge, Lake Havasu, Ariz.
The three-day Bass Fishing League All-American tournament on Lake Hamilton featured the nation’s best weekend grassroots anglers competing for a top prize of up to $120,000, and a top prize of $50,000 for the winning Strike King co-angler.
Television coverage of the 2022 Phoenix Bass Fishing League All-American will premiere in early October on CBS Sports and the Sportsman Channel. The full television air schedule can be found at MajorLeagueFishing.com.
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