Carroll Leads Bass Fishing Tournament on Lake Murray

February 9, 2006
FLW Tour News Archive

COLUMBIA, S.C. (Feb. 9, 2006) - Lake Murray didn't disappoint Thursday, as 200 pros and 200 co-anglers representing 37 states, Japan and Canada continued their parade of 7-, 8- and 9-pound bass in front of a huge crowd at Jakes Landing. At the end of the day, however, only 10 pros and 10 co-anglers brought in enough weight to advance to the final round of the Open bass fishing tournament, and Tim Carroll of Owasso, Okla., held on to his lead with an opening-round total of eight bass weighing 44 pounds, 9 ounces.

   The incredible catch is just 5-pounds shy of breaking the 49-8 record set by Castrol pro Darrel Robertson of Jay, Okla., during the tour's last stop on Lake Murray in 2003, and Robertson had 10 bass.

   "I didn't go to my best water, and I struggled a little bit," said Carroll, who caught five bass weighing 28-1 Wednesday and three bass weighing 16-8 Thursday. "But, I found a new spot and it coughed up a 9-10, and I think it will cough up some more."

   That big bass came at about 10 o'clock and was Carroll's first fish of the morning. "The way I'm fishing, I think it's just going to get better," Carroll said. "This pattern has held up for two weeks now."

   So with $200,000 on the line what is the pattern? "Deep with a football head jig," Carroll said. A 3/4-ounce PJ's football head jig fished on 17-pound fluorocarbon to be a bit more specific. Finding the right structure is also a key part of the equation Carroll said.

   Carroll's opening day weight, anchored by a 7-pound, 14-ounce largemouth, tied with another Lake Murray limit, caught by pro Stanley Mitchell of Fitzgerald, Ga., during the tour's last visit, as the fourth heaviest in tour history.

   "This is my first top 10 in the FLW Tour, and it was a goal of mine to do it, if not win," Carroll said. "The place I have the most confidence in I haven't even fished yet."

   Hometown favorite Anthony Gagliardi also posted big numbers in the opening round, advancing as the No. 2 seed with 10 bass weighing 41-14.

   "I felt like I had a good opportunity coming into this tournament, and I'm glad that I didn't disappoint," Gagliardi said. "To be able to do this on your home lake is just great. You don't get to many opportunities like that."

   Like Carroll, Gagliardi is catching deep-water fish on a jig. He is also drop-shotting a 4-inch finesse worm.

   Terry Segraves of Kissimmee, Fla., also broke the 40-pound mark with 10 bas weighing 40-14 that he caught cranking a 1/4-ounce Luhr Jensen Speed Trap. Unlike Carroll and Gagliardi, Segraves fish are coming out of shallow pockets off the main lake. "It's surprising how shallow some of these fish are," he said. "The wind really brought them up."

   Rounding out the top five are Benton, Ark., pros Jeremiah Kindy (10 bass, 39-9); and Brennan Bosley (nine bass, 37-10).

   Also clearing the top-10 cut weight of 34-pounds, 9-ounces in the Pro Division were Katsutoshi Furusawa of Tokyo, Japan; Clifford Pirch of Payson, Ariz.; Matt Herren of Trussville, Ala.; David Smith of Del City, Okla.; and David Wolak of Warrior Run, Pa.

   Ralph Laster Jr of Lees Summit, Mo., landed 34-9 but lost a tiebreaker to Wolak, who had the heavier one-day catch.

   Bosley earned the Energizer Keeps on Going Award of $500 for coming from behind to make the cut after finishing 74th on opening day with four bass weighing 11 pounds, 5 ounces.

   Kelly Jordon of Mineola, Texas, landed the day's Snickers Big Bass award and $750 in the Pro Division with a 9-pound, 14-ounce largemouth. He also earned the tournament's overall Snickers Big Bass award of $1,000 and will likely win the season's big bass award of $5,000.

   Bryan Thrift of Shelby, N.C., leads the Co-angler Division in the chase for a top award of $40,000 with an opening-round total of nine bass weighing 33-6. He caught five bass weighing 19-7 to lead the field Wednesday then added four bass weighing 13-15 to his total Thursday.

   Rounding out the top five co-anglers are David Brunaugh of Carbondale, Ill. (nine bass, 23-12); Mike Devere of Berea, Ky. (eight bass, 23-5); Andy Montgomery of Blacksburg, S.C. (10 bass, 21-10) and Charles Ward of Greer, S.C. (10 bass, 21-6).

   Also clearing the top-10 cut weight of 19 pounds, 4 ounces in the Co-angler Division were Matthew Parker of Whitesburg, Ga.; Judy Israel of Clewiston, Fla.; Sondra Rankin of Paducah, Ky.; Ken Murphy of Meridian, Miss.; and Mark Cummings of Pembroke, N.C.

   Homer Stephens of Noblesville, Ind., caught 19-4 but lost the tiebreaker to Cummings, who had the heavier one-day catch.

   Thrift, a newcomer to the FLW Tour, won the Stren Series season opener on Lake Okeechobee while fishing as a pro. A few weeks later, he fished his first FLW Tour event and finished sixth in the Co-angler Division. Israel is the first woman to ever win an FLW Tour event and the tour's leading female money winner.

   Randy Clark of Mobile, Ala., earned the day's Big Bass award of $375 in the Co-angler Division thanks to a 8-pound, 4-ounce largemouth. Overall, 1,190 bass weighing 2,852 pounds, 3 ounces were caught Thursday, including 143 five-bass limits.

   Anglers competing in the tournament hosted by the Capital City/Lake Murray Country Regional Tourism Board will take off at 7 each morning from Jake's Landing. Friday and Saturday's weigh-ins will be held at the Wal-Mart store located at 2401 Augusta Road in Columbia beginning at 4 p.m.

   The community is invited to attend the free Family Fun Zone Friday and Saturday outside the weigh-in tent in the Wal-Mart parking lot. The Family Fun Zone, which opens at 2 p.m. Friday and noon Saturday, features interactive displays, product samples and games for the entire family to enjoy.

   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.

   In FLW Tour competition, pros and co-anglers are randomly paired each day, with pros supplying the boat, controlling boat movement and competing against other pros. Co-anglers fish from the back deck against other co-anglers.