Johnston Wins FLW Tounament on Oneida Lake

August 20, 2016
FLW Tour News Archive

BREWERTON, N.Y. (Aug. 20, 2016) – Cory Johnston of Cavan, Ontario, Canada, weighed a five-bass limit totaling 14 pounds, 1 ounce, Saturday to win the FLW Series Northern Division finale tournament on Oneida Lake with a three-day total of 15 bass weighing 50 pounds, 4 ounces. For his win, Johnston took home $77,778, including a new Ranger Z518 with a 200-horsepower Evinrude or Mercury outboard.

“I spent the first two days of the tournament running shallow rock piles,” said Johnston, who was also crowned the 2016 Strike King Angler of the Year in the Costa FLW Series Northern Division. “I started on the east end of the lake and worked my way west, hitting about 20 isolated piles along the way.”

Johnston said he used a bluegill-colored Jackall topwater bait to dissect his piles, but fan-casted a green-pumpkin Strike King Coffee Tube and a 4-inch green-pumpkin Yamamoto Baits Senko when the fish were spooked.

“My day started off kind of slow on Thursday,” said Johnston. “I caught a 3-pounder right off the bat, but had to run around to catch more. Before long, I caught a 4-pound largemouth and then filled out the rest of my limit with some good-sized smallmouth.

“I didn’t have a good fish in the boat until 8 a.m. on Day Two,” continued Johnston. “I caught a key largemouth off of a dock on a Punisher Lures jig, which really helped, and I ended up weighing four smallmouth alongside it.”

On Day Three, Johnston said he switched tactics, opting to fish deeper using an umbrella rig with Electric Shad-colored Keitech Swimbaits.

“The wind picked up and the water was stained so I couldn’t see the rock piles,” said Johnston. “I concentrated on a weed flat, but returned to some piles when I went shallow. I probably hit 15 to 20 different areas throughout the day.”

The Ontario pro went on to say that it was his largemouth catches that were crucial to his success.

“You don’t get a ton of largemouth here on Oneida, but when you do, they’re big ones,” said Johnston.

The top 10 pros on Oneida Lake were:

1st:          Cory Johnston, Cavan, Ontario, Canada, 15 bass, 50-4, $77,778

2nd:         Casey Smith, Macedon, N.Y., 15 bass, 46-1, $12,724

3rd:          Ian Renfrew, Phoenix, N.Y., 14 bass, 44-14, $9,774

4th:          Chris Johnston, Peterborough, Ontario, Canada, 15 bass, 44-12, $8,145

5th:          Lawrence Mazur, East Aurora, N.Y., 14 bass, 44-3, $7,330

6th:          Kyle Weisenburger, Ottawa, Ohio, 13 bass, 41-7, $6,516

7th:          Ed Casey, Whiteford, Md., 13 bass, 41-5, $5,701

8th:          Jim Vitaro, Wooster, Ohio, 13 bass, 38-13, $4,887

9th:          Jason Shipton, Muncy, Pa., 11 bass, 35-12, $4,288

10th:        Lucas McDaniel, Fishers, Ind., 11 bass, 34-3, $3,258

Shipton caught a bass weighing 5 pounds even Thursday – the biggest bass of the tournament in the pro division – that earned him the day’s Big Bass award of $216. Christopher Hall of South Abington Township, Pennsylvania, won the co-angler division and a Ranger Z117 with a 90-horsepower Mercury or Evinrude outboard motor. Hall earned his win with a three-day total catch of 15 bass weighing 46 pounds even. The top 10 co-anglers on Oneida Lake were:

1st:          Christopher Hall, South Abington Township, Pa., 15 bass, 46-0, $27,000

2nd:         Tyler Sheppard, Hermitage, Pa., 14 bass, 45-7, $4,212

3rd:          Paul Kimball Jr., Philadelphia, Pa., 13 bass, 36-5, $3,289

4th:          Tom Stark, Angola, Ind., 13 bass, 31-14, $2,878

5th:          Christy Tiano, Hudson, N.Y., 11 bass, 29-1, $2,517

6th:          Michael Bahnweg, Union Dale, Pa., nine bass, 28-10, $2,200

7th:          Frank Miller, Berwick, Pa., nine bass, 26-13, $1,789

8th:          Somang Kim, Lansdale, Pa., eight bass, 24-9, $1,439

9th:          Alex Antipenko, Brooklyn, N.Y., eight bass, 21-15, $1,234

10th:        Bill Valberg, London, Ontario, Canada, seven bass, 21-13, $1,028

Miller caught the biggest bass of the tournament in the co-angler division Friday, a bass weighing 4 pounds, 2 ounces that earned him the day’s Big Bass award of $144.