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Lucky Craft's Skeet Reese Wins
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Skeet Reese, 1st Place |
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The
California resident and long-time Lucky Craft pro staff member won
the 2009 Bassmaster Classic Championship on the Red River in Shreveport/Bossier
City, Louisiana this past weekend. Not only had this been a dream
for years, but no one, not even the media, picked Reese as a Classic
contender. Proving otherwise made the victory especially sweet. "I
loved how no one picked me as a favorite for the Red River,"
Reese said.
"I was the last person on everyone's list. It's so good, so good."
Reese
didn't take the conventional approach coming into the Classic this
year. He didn't practice in the fall, he didn't ask for help and he
spent very little time on the water during pre-fishing. "Basically,
I looked at a map and that was it," Reese said. "I looked
on the Internet for about an hour one day, but when you look at a
map, it's self-explanatory. There are not a whole lot of key areas
on this river, so I put myself in two areas I thought had the potential
to win this tournament. I didn't spend a lot of time on the water,
and I didn't look in every nook and cranny. I knew I had two areas
and I knew how I was going to fish. I just had to get in there and
go to work." And
go to work he did, deciding early to maximize his fishing time in
pool five and avoid the gamble of locking down to the other pools.
Reese had two main baits - a soft plastic in black and gold, and the
Lucky Craft
Redemption,
the new spinnerbait from Lucky Craft designed by Reese. "I
used the 3/8-ounce Redemption
spinnerbait in the shad pattern," Reese said. "It has nickel blades and
a tandem combination. I fished with 50-pound spiderwire on a 7-foot
extra fast rod. Fishing up in the pad stems like I was, monofilament
gets tangled to easily. The spiderwire allowed me to cut through those
pad stems much easier."
After
weighing in
The
winning fish, and also the last fish Reese was able to bring in on
day three, came around 1 p.m. as Reese fished a channel swing stretch
with lily pad stems and stumps all around. "I
worked about three hundred yards of the stretch and come up to one
large stump," Reese explained. "I had just caught a big
one on another tree, and as I came up to this final stump, I knew
it looked like a place where a big one should be. I threw my soft
plastic to the back side of the stump and crack - I knew it was a
big one."
Reese
was more than excited to have this final fish. He knew it wasn't the
type of fish that would put him over the 18-pound mark, but he also
knew it would put him in contention. He still felt like he needed
one more big bite to seal the deal, but that bite never came. As Reese
made his way back to the marina, he was a bundle of nerves.
"I
was an absolute mess," Reese admitted. "I held it together
pretty good on the stage. I had confidence that I had the weight to
win, but I wasn't 100 percent sure. It was so uncertain. There was
so much anxiety. That final moment, when I saw I had 16-12, I knew
it was game over." With
an 11-ounce lead over Mike Iaconelli and a total three-day weight
of
"This
is such validation for me," Reese said, still in a state of semi-disbelief.
"I never honestly knew if I'd ever be able to achieve my goal
of winning a Classic. Every bass fisherman dreams of winning
it [the Classic], but whether it actually happens or not is a whole
different story. Once you achieve something like this, it's like an
addiction. Now that I have this title, I'm definitely going to want
to do it again.
"I'm so passionate about what I do,"
Reese concluded. "I have determination; I've set goals; I want
to be the best. You have to beat the best to be the best. I didn't
come here to be second place."
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Kelly Jordon, 10th |
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Finishing 10th was Lucky Craft pro Kelly Jordon.
After a respectable performance, Jordon was happy with his finish
and even happier for his fellow Lucky Craft pro staff member. "I think it's awesome that Skeet won,"
Jordon said. "I knew he had it. I bet him a dollar on the stage,
so I better get one signed on a plaque or something." All joking aside, Jordon believes the 2009
Bassmaster Classic was a great event. After bringing in
"I was fishing with a soft plastic jerkbait
all weekend," Jordon said. "Yesterday it was warmer and
I fished a secluded duck pond with the soft plastic jerkbait. I also
flipped a creature bait by Lake Fork Tackle to catch some of my fish
on day two."
A cold front came in overnight, before the
final day of competition. Jordon went back to the same spot he had
been fishing previously and was able to weigh in
"It worked out pretty well this weekend,"
Jordon said. "I had some bad breaks today [Sunday], but I was
fishing really well."
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Casey Ashley, 13th |
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After
a rough day one, Lucky Craft's Casey Ashley had some ground to make
up. The "I
made a bad decision on day one and fished in one area with too many
other boats," Ashley admitted. "It was like a merry-go-round
- throwing at stumps the guy in front of me had just thrown at 30
seconds before. I can't fish like that, but I stayed there too long.
Then I didn't have enough time to run around and do anything else."
Day
two was a very different story for Ashley. His practice had shown
him some really productive areas, so he decided to try one out Saturday
morning. He only thought he'd be able to catch 10 to
"It
was just an old duck pond with pad stems in it," Ashley explained.
"There was a 2-foot ridge at the mouth and then clear water as
you moved further back. There were stems and stumps around, and it
dropped off to about Ashley
weighed in "It
was 28 or 29 degrees on Sunday, and I knew the fish probably weren't
going to hit a spinnerbait," Ashley said. "But after you
catch After
moving on to new water, Noon came and went and Ashley didn't have
a fish in his live well. He went to one small area he found by accident
on the second day of the tournament and decided to throw a jig. "It
was a bank with a channel swing that had brush piles under the water
about 6-feet deep," Ashley said. "I was just casting to
the brush piles with the jig and was able to bring in five fish." With
"I
feel good about coming from behind after the first day," Ashley
said. "Anytime you can fish the Classic, it's a big deal. And
fishing the final day of the tournament was great. I took myself out
of the win with my mistake on the first day, but the rest of the weekend
went about as good as it could have. I'm ready to get the season started,
get Lake Amistad under my belt, and work towards my goal of being
able to fish the Classic again next year."
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Article
& Photo Provided
by Cox Group |
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Copyright
2009 LUCKY CRAFT, INC. All Rights Reserved.