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Author Topic: Bassmaster Angler a Da Yr  (Read 1756 times)

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Offline Lee Borgersen

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                       Palaniuk caps magical season with angler of year title! :Clap:

By Bassmastermedia.com Today at 6:00 a.m.

 :coffee: ......
Bassmastermedia.com Brandon Palaniuk won the 2017 Toyota Bassmaster Angler of the Year title Sunday on Mille Lacs Lake.

Last-Minute Big Fish Helps Palaniuk Hold On To Lead In AOY Race At Mille Lacs
ONAMIA, Minn. —
After two days of the Toyota Bassmaster Angler of the Year Championship, Brandon Palaniuk is still clinging to his lead in the race for the AOY season title.



But it’s been anything but easy.  :doah:

The noted smallmouth specialist from Hayden, Idaho, caught just 10 smallies from Mille Lacs Lake Friday — and if hadn’t been for a 6-pounder that bit extremely late, he might have actually fallen out of the AOY lead.

“I just struggled to get bit,” Palaniuk said. “I was just catching one here, one there — and I wasn’t really catching any big ones. But then at 3:14 (p.m.), I made one final drop and caught a 6-pounder.”

That fish helped Palaniuk weigh in 21 pounds 1 ounce, which was good for 20th place in the daily standings and enough to keep him in the AOY lead. With 902 total points, Palaniuk leads Jason Christie (890) and Jacob Wheeler (885) by margins that can still be made up if things go wild in the final round.

Palaniuk’s big fish came so late Friday that he barely made it back to the check-in on time.

“I caught the fish at 3:14, check-in was 3:20 and I was 3 miles away,” Palaniuk said. “On top of that, I still had to cull.

“I ended up making it back with 40 seconds to spare. But that fish was a 3-pound cull. Without it, who knows where I would be?”

Since Palaniuk came into this event with a 15-point lead in the AOY standings, the ideal situation would have been for him to pile up the weight while his closest competitors — Christie and Wheeler — struggled.

That hasn’t happened.

After catching 20-8 Thursday, Christie caught 22-9 Friday and jumped from 26th place to 17th. That helped him move to within 12 points of Palaniuk in the standings, meaning another fantastic day — coupled with a tough day for Palaniuk — could land Christie his first career AOY title.

Christie said Thursday that he hoped for a weather change that might mess up other people’s patterns — presumably Palaniuk’s and Wheeler’s — and he regretted it today. “I got what I wanted,” he said, “but it just made those fish bite for them.

“Today, at 8 o’clock, I was kind of wishing I hadn’t said that.”

The higher winds and larger waves made it hard for Christie to keep his trolling motor in the water and to see the fish on the Garmin Panoptix unit he relies on. He said most of his bass came out of one school he felt fortunate to find.

“Luckily, I came across one group and I caught 22 pounds in probably 10 to 15 minutes,” he said. “The rest of the day, I caught one here and one there, but I never caught a big one.”

While Palaniuk and Christie had it tough, Wheeler said “fun would be an understatement” to describe the day he had on Mille Lacs. The first-year pro from Tennessee caught 24-5 and moved into fourth place in the daily standings.

He still trails Christie by five points and Palaniuk by 17 in the AOY race.

“It was flat-out awesome,” Wheeler said. “It was probably one of the best days of smallmouth fishing I’ve ever had. I probably caught 30-plus smallmouth — and there were a lot of times when I would be disappointed to realize it was ‘just another 4-pounder’ when I set the hook.”

New York angler Jamie Hartman, whose stated goal was to win the Bassmaster Rookie of the Year award when the season began, took the lead in that race by weighing in 23-10 Friday and jumping from 48th to 36th place in the daily standings. That gives him a 776 to 770 lead over Alabamian Dustin Connell in the ROY race.

Texas angler Keith Combs is threatening to run away with the daily standings after landing 24-15 for the second straight day. His two-day mark of 49-14 is more than 2 pounds better than that of second-place angler James Elam (47-4).

Combs stands to win $25,000 if he retains the lead through the end of competition, but the rest of the $1 million purse will go to him and the rest of the field based on their final standings in AOY points.

The full field will fish again Sunday to determine the AOY Championship and the event winner. Takeoff will be at 6:50 a.m. CT from Eddy's Resort, and the final weigh-in will be held at 3:45 p.m. at Grand Casino Mille Lacs.

The field will take a break Saturday for Bassmaster University. Anglers will be conducting seminars and greeting fans near the weigh-in stand at Grand Casino Mille Lacs in conjunction with the Bassmaster Elite Series Outdoors Expo. Companies such as Toyota, Huk, Power-Pole and Berkley will be onsite featuring their latest products. Fans will be able to enjoy free boat and motor demo rides from Skeeter, Yamaha, Nitro, Triton and Mercury. There will also be arts and crafts and food vendors and activities for kids.

All venues are free and open to the public. The expo will begin at 11 a.m. CT. For more information and a full list of activities, visit Bassmaster.com/news/attend-toyota-bassmaster-angler-year-championship.

The championship is hosted by Grand Casino Mille Lacs.


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Offline Steve-o

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All those season points are way to confusing.

How about just handing out a prize for the first fish and the biggest fish...

...like we always do.

Online mike89

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a bad day of fishing is still better than a good day at work!!

Offline gophergunner

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In my younger days I fished a lot of tournaments, but certainly not at the level these guys compete.  Lots of fun, lots of work, and lots of memories.  I remember being a young gun, cocky, and thinking I had this bass fishing thing all figured out.  It's pretty humbling to sit the in the back seat and watch the guy you've been paired with pull in one fish after another while you're not getting bit, or not feeling the bites.  I started out with club tournaments eventually moved on to some state and regional stuff.  Met a lot of good guys, and a fair number of jerks too.  My best performance was on Alum Creek Reservoir in Ohio.  I placed 6th in a one day tournament when I found a limit of fish in a submerged stump field.  I think I weighed in 11 lbs.-all 2 lbs. plus fish.  Pretty good for a young punk in his first year on the circuit.  I finished third in the the Rookie of the Year race and ended up as the first alternate in the Tournament of Champions at the end of the year.  I chose not to drive 6 hours to possibly not get to fish that tournament and made the wrong choice.  Two guys dropped out and I could have fished for the championship.   Lesson learned-never pass up a chance like that, and a chance to learn more from others.