Hutchins Wins EverStart Series Bass Fishing Tournament On Potomac River

September 8, 2012
Rayovac-EverStart Series News Archive

MARBURY, Md. (Sept. 8, 2012) – John Hutchins of Warrenton, Va., weighed a five-bass limit totaling 11 pounds, 3 ounces Saturday to lead wire-to-wire and win the EverStart Series Northern Division bass fishing tournament on the Potomac River with a three-day total of 15 bass weighing 46 pounds, 12 ounces. For his victory, Hutchins earned $31,695.

     “I have seven years of tournament fishing experience,” said Hutchins. “This is definitely the biggest event that I have ever fished. I really had to stay focused out there. I came in with the mindset that I was not competing against any other anglers, but against the fish. I told my wife before the tournament that if I could boat the fish that would I knew would bite for me, I would have a real good shot at winning.”

     The weather conditions were brutal Saturday – heavy winds, rain and severe thunderstorm watches and warnings. Hutchins decided that his best strategy was to return to the same areas that he had fished on day 1, and headed north into the wind-protected bays. Hutchins methodically fished hard cover, throwing a shaky-head trailered with a plum apple-colored Yamamoto Senko.

     “I fished as shallow as 2 feet and the deepest I fished all day was 8 feet,” Hutchins went on to say. “I only lost three fish throughout the tournament, and two of them were right away this morning on my first two casts. And they were big. I knew I just had to stay calm, and fish. I just kept grinding and was able to get a fish about every two hours. I ended up with eight bites and a limit, so it still worked out.

     Hutchins said his experience on the Potomac River has been a huge key to his tournament success. He now has two tournament wins on the Washington, D.C. fishery, as he tied for first place at a Walmart BFL Shenandoah division event earlier this year.

     The top 10 pros finished the tournament in:

          1st:    John Hutchins, Warrenton, Va., 15 bass, 46-12, $31,695

          2nd:   Cory Johnston, Peterborough, Ont., 15 bass, 44-11, $10,867

          3rd:   Walter (Mike) Snider, Mount Airy, Md., 14 bass, 44-3, $9,056

          4th:    Jimmy Kennedy, Plainfield, Vt., 15 bass, 39-11, $8,150

          5th:    Micah Frazier, Newnan, Ga., 15 bass, 37-9, $7,245

          6th:    Matt Greenblatt, Port St. Lucie, Fla., 15 bass, 37-6, $6,339

          7th:    William Shelton III, La Crosse, Va., 14 bass, 36-4, $5,433

          8th:    Christiana Bradley, Bealeton, Va., 14 bass, 35-10, $4,528

          9th:    Chris Dillow, Waynesboro, Va., 13 bass, 34-14, $3,622

          10th: William Kramer, North Potomac, Md., 12 bass, 32-7, $2,717

     Hutchins also caught the biggest bass of the tournament in the Pro Division Thursday – a 5-pound, 7-ounce bass – that earned him the day’s EverStart Series Big Bass award of $258.               

     Marvin Reese of Gwynn Oak, Md., won the Co-angler Division and a Ranger Z117 with a 90-horsepower Evinrude or Mercury outboard motor with a three-day total of 15 bass weighing 35 pounds, 8 ounces.

     The top 10 co-anglers were:

          1st:    Marvin Reese, Gwynn Oak, Md., 15 bass, 35-8, Ranger Z117 with 90-horsepower outboard

          2nd:   Russ Hamilton Jr., Manassas, Va., 15 bass, 33-4, $4,163

          3rd:   Robert Wedding, Welcome, Md., 15 bass, 32-15, $3,700

          4th:    Ben Dziwulski, Woodbine, Md., 14 bass, 29-1, $3,238

          5th:    Safulla Rana, Warrenton, Va., 14 bass, 28-1, $2,775

          6th:    Thomas Shafer, Pine City, N.Y., 12 bass, 26-15, $2,313

          7th:    Kermit Crowder, Matoaca, Va., 10 bass, 26-1, $1,850

          8th:    David Williams, Fredericksburg, Va., 12 bass, 26-6, $1,388

          9th:    Richard McRory, North Hero, Vt., 12 bass, 25-0, $925

          10th: Bob Tickell, Germantown, Md., eight bass, 20-14, $740

     Stephen Semelsberger Jr.of Mount Airy, Md., caught the biggest bass of the tournament in the Co-angler Division Thursday – a 5-pound, 5-ounce bass – that earned him the day’s EverStart Series Big Bass award of $172.