BENTON, Ky. (May 13, 2006) - The final round of the $900,000 FLW Tour stop on Kentucky Lake was an all-out battle between two of the hottest sticks in bass fishing - local favorite Terry Bolton of Paducah, Ky., who has earned 25 top-10 finishes on the lake and Steve Kennedy of Auburn, Ala., who has earned four top-five finishes in Bassmaster and FLW Tour competition this season.
Both men specialize in open-water ledge fishing, which turned out to be a crucial advantage this week. In the end, however, it came down to a last-minute catch and a costly penalty that gave Kennedy his second $100,000 FLW Tour victory on the lake.
To claim the win, Kennedy had to overcome a 4-pound, 10-ounce lead that Bolton established Friday. He did just that with a five-bass limit weighing 21 pounds, 6 ounces Saturday that pushed his two-day total weight to 37 pounds, 5 ounces.
He caught all of his fish on ledges in 17 to 23 feet of water using a 3/4-ounce brown and purple football-head jig laced with a Kinami double-tail grub.
"Three of the five fish I weighed came off the same spot this morning," Kennedy said. By the afternoon, I was culling 3 1/2-pound fish. They just kept coming and coming."
His most critical catch of the day was a nearly 5-pound smallmouth that he caught with only five minutes left in the tournament. That fish, combined Bolton's 8-ounce penalty for an expired fish, gave Kennedy the win by a razor thin 4 ounces.
"Knowing (Terry) caught more than I did is a little tough to swallow," Kennedy said. "But when you catch fish deep, sometimes, they don't adjust so well."
Bolton led the tournament Friday with five bass weighing 20 pounds, 9 ounces and then added five more bass weighing 16 pounds, 8 ounces Saturday for a two-day total of 37 pounds, 1 ounce. If not for having an expired fish, his total weight would have been 37 pounds, 9 ounces - good for a 4-ounce victory instead of a 4-ounce defeat.
"That fish was hooked perfectly, right in the top of the mouth, and I did everything I could to keep it alive. It was the only fish I lost all week," said Bolton, who won $36,000 for his second-place finish. "It just wasn't my time to win."
Like Kennedy, Bolton fished jigs. He was also casting spinnerbaits and worms. Using his local knowledge of Kentucky Lake he was able to rotate through a series of holes to pick up solid five-bass limits all week. "Things were going well for me," he said. "What really hurt was losing a 6 1/2- to 7-pound bass right at the boat, but when you use big jigs, it's real easy for the fish to throw them. I guess if you think about it, I lost this tournament twice."
Rounding out the top five pros are Gary Yamamoto of Mineola, Texas (10 bass, 30 pounds, $25,000); David Fritts of Lexington, N.C. (10 bass, 29 pounds, 4 ounces, $20,000) and Curt Lytle of Zuni, Va. (10 bass, 27 pounds, 8 ounces $18,000).
In FLW Tour competition the full field competes in the two-day opening round for one of 10 slots in Friday's competition based on their two-day accumulated weight. Weights are cleared for day three, and co-angler competition concludes following Friday's weigh-in. The top 10 pros continue competition Saturday, with the winner determined by the heaviest accumulated weight from days three and four.