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Archive For August 2008

One last chance

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Ernest Hemingway, who caught a fish or two in his lifetime, once described bankruptcy as happening “gradually, then suddenly.”

Similarly, while every one of the 11 regular season tournaments counts equally during the course of the Elite Series schedule, what looked like a marathon back in March now resembles a sprint. Storylines that have been building on the Elite Series all season long are set for a sudden resolution at the Champion’s Choice Presented by Ramada Worldwide. But angling solvency means different things to different anglers.

As the 106 pros and their co-angler partners jockeyed for position along the shores of Oneida Lake this morning, for those on the various bubbles, this will be their last chance to influence the immediate future of their angling careers.

While Todd Faircloth and Kevin VanDam command many of the headlines as they slug it out for the Toyota Tundra Bassmaster Angler of the Year title, each of their peers has something else to battle for: whether it’s a berth in the 2009 Bassmaster Classic, an opportunity to remain on the Elite Series trail or just personal pride.

There are 106 individual stories on the Elite Series trail and each of them will be resolved by the end of this event.

Some will go home happy, others will just go home.

For those who currently sit just inside the Classic bubble, the next few days will punctuate their season, determining whether it is remembered fondly or instead with disappointment.

“This is my whole season,” said Ish Monroe, who is currently in 30th in the overall standings. “But that will allow me to fish more relaxed than I usually do. If the cards play in my favor, they play in my favor. I’m usually stressed on the first day and end up having a bad day, so today I’m just going to see how it plays out.”

http://sports.espn.go.com/outdoors/tournaments/elite/news/story?id=3523411

A fight to the finish

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — For the past month, Todd Faircloth and Kevin VanDam have felt like the members of the two NFL Super Bowl teams during that seemingly never-ending series of press conferences leading up to the big game. They’ve been asked — over and over — every question imaginable about the Toyota Tundra Bassmaster Angler of the Year race.

Finally, it’s time to play the game. The first quarter, uh, make that Day One of the aptly named Champion’s Choice presented by Ramada Worldwide begins on Oneida Lake at 8 a.m. ET Thursday. The four-day tournament concludes Sunday.

Both Faircloth and VanDam are ready to quit talking and start fishing.

“I’m ready to go,” said VanDam, who already owns three Angler of the Year titles, but the last one came in 1999. “I know what I need to do. It’s going to be fun.”

“I just want to fish,” Faircloth said. “And, hopefully, I’ll be able to get it done.”

With a 21-point lead over VanDam in AOY points, Faircloth would be the equivalent of a one-point Super Bowl favorite. This is only the third year for the current AOY points structure, which places a premium on high finishes.

http://sports.espn.go.com/outdoors/tournaments/elite/news/story?id=3522700

Oneida Lake Preview — Syracuse, N.Y.

The Bassmaster Elite Series will bring its 11th tournament of the season — the Champion’s Choice presented by Ramada Worldwide — to Oneida Lake out of Syracuse, N.Y., as the 2008 Bassmaster Elite Series season comes to a close.

As part of the celebration of crowning the Toyota Tundra Bassmaster Angler of the Year, BASS’ outdoors expo Saturday and Sunday at the season finale will include performances by national recording artist Heartland and local musical group The Custom Taylor Band. At the conclusion of the final weigh-in Sunday night, BASS will host a fireworks display at Oneida Shores, set for approximately 8:40 p.m ET.

Along with the Angler of the Year, the Advance Auto Parts Rookie of the Year and the Junior Bassmaster World Championship winners will be crowned. In the race to qualify for the 2009 Bassmaster Classic, set for Feb. 20-22 on the Red River out of Shreveport-Bossier City, La., anglers will be looking for valuable point on Oneida to give themselves one last chance to move up in the points standings. The top 36 in the AOY standings qualify for the Classic. The top 84 in the AOY standings receive berths into the 2009 Bassmaster Elite Series.

Fishing fans can watch the on-the-water action from the Aug. 7-10 Champion’s Choice on The Bassmasters, which airs Saturday, Aug. 16, at 9 a.m. ET on ESPN2. Additionally, fans can check into Bassmaster.com for live, streaming video of the weigh-ins, real-time leaderboards, analysis, photo galleries and more.

While the pros angle for the first-place prize of $100,000 at the Champion’s Choice, the climactic Trail to the Trophy will come to a conclusion on Oneida Lake. Heading into the Champion’s Choice, Todd Faircloth of Jasper, Texas is leading the 2008 Toyota Tundra Bassmaster Angler of the Year points race. Others among the top pros in the heated race for the title and the $250,000 top prize include Kevin VanDam, Mike McClelland and 2007 Angler of the Year Skeet Reese.

http://sports.espn.go.com/outdoors/tournaments/elite/news/story?page=b_Oneida_Preview_2008

Kiriyama’s victory makes terminally ill dad proud

BUFFALO, N.Y. — As he stood backstage Sunday afternoon, all Kotaro Kiriyama could think about was his terminally ill father as he waited to weigh-in on the final day of the Bassmaster Elite Series Empire Chase presented by Farmer’s Insurance.

It was 18 years ago Takashi Kiriyama told his then 18-year-old son he needed to leave Japan, because Kotaro was just going to stay in trouble, should he remain in his native country.

“He told me to go to America and see what you want to do with your life,” Kiriyama recalled, after his four-day total of smallmouth bass from Lake Erie totaled 93 pounds, 6 ounces — and made him the Empire Chase champion.

“This is what I want to do.”

Kiriyama proved to be amazingly good at catching Lake Erie’s smallmouth this week. After a runner-up finish to Edwin Evers a year ago here, the 37-year-old Moody, Ala., resident came back, determined to expand on what he did last year.

And, most important, to do it before time ran out on his father. Kiriyama’s father, Takashi, now 65, is terminally ill in Narita, Japan, with stage four kidney cancer.

“This means everything,” Kiriyama said of Sunday’s victory, his first in eight years on the BASS tour, where he has recorded four second-place finishes.

Kiriyama turned what had been a close race Friday into a runaway Sunday by winning the $100,000 first-place check. On Day Two, he was fourth among five anglers bunched within 1 pound, 10 ounces at the top of the leaderboard.

He began to separate himself from the field Saturday with a five-bass limit weighing 25 pounds. It was the heaviest limit over the last two years of Bassmaster Elite Series competition on Lake Erie.

http://sports.espn.go.com/outdoors/tournaments/elite/news/story?id=3517801

Kiriyama makes major statement at Lake Erie

BUFFALO, N.Y. — Kotaro Kiriyama left Lake Erie last year with more than just a second-place check in the Bassmaster Elite Series Empire Chase. He proved that Saturday with a five-bass limit weighing 25 pounds. It gave him the lead going into the final day of this year’s Empire Chase presented by Farmer’s Insurance.

That 5-pound average of smallmouth bass represents the biggest bag in the seven days of Elite Series competition on Lake Erie in the last two years.

“I learned from last year,” said the 37-year-old Japanese angler, who now resides in Moody, Ala. “I tried to save some fish (for the next day) last year. This year, I’m catching everything I can.”

Friday the Empire Chase was a race, with the top five anglers grouped within 1 pound, 10 ounces of each other. Saturday the race turned into a chase, as the rest of the top 12 for Sunday’s finale will be chasing Kiriyama.

With a three-day total of 67-13, Kiriyama opened a 3-pound, 8-ounce lead over second-place Aaron Martens. Day One leader and defending champion Edwin Evers is 1 ounce back of Martens, at 64-4.

Mike Iaconelli, who held the Day Two lead, dropped to fourth place with 62-1, almost 6 pounds behind the leader. And he acknowledged Kiriyama’s margin is bigger than it appears on paper.

http://sports.espn.go.com/outdoors/tournaments/elite/news/story?id=3516751

THE NINJA STRIKES…

Buffalo, NY – The Empire Chase on Lake Erie has, for the most part, looked like a gigantic wave pool since the pros pulled into Buffalo last Monday. Saturday’s launch, however, greeted the anglers with conditions resembling a child’s wading pool. With barely a whisper of a breeze, the remaining 50 pros experienced a smooth morning run after early-morning thunderstorms swept through the area.

The calm conditions at launch was a welcomed sight for many, considering the additional fishing time most would receive through shortened run times and the likelihood of increased catches. That being said, the anglers who had prepared for wind feared that without the windy companion, their creel could suffer as a result.

For some in the field, the balance of the season largely rested on today. Both from a spot in February’s Classic and the Toyota Tundra Angler of the Year race. There’s a lot at stake beyond the $100,000 first-place prize money available and no one in the remaining field of 50 could understand this better than the two who are still battling for the TTAOY prize.

Todd Faircloth, the only remaining TTAOY contenders inside the Top 12 at Saturday’s end, has already fished well enough the first three days to have a small cushion heading into the final event of the season at Oneida. Kevin VanDam, who started the tournament as the Race leader, stumbled the first day but rebounded to finish the event in 18th.

By the time weigh-in came around, the cloudy skies had opened up and rain was once again falling. Despite the day’s weather change, Kota Kiriyama came from fourth place by boxing the heaviest limit of the week weighing 25-0 to secure the top spot in Sunday’s final round with a three-day total weight of 67-13.

Over three pounds behind in second place was Aaron Martens with 64-5 overall after weighing 21-10 Saturday. Defending Empire winner, Edwin Evers, ended the third round with a total weight of 64-4 after bringing in 21-6 Saturday to move into the third-place slot.

In fourth heading to Sunday is Day Two leader, Mike Iaconelli, who brought his lightest limit of the week to the scales weighing 17-12 to give him 62-1 over three days. Big John Murray is in the fifth-place position with a total weight of 60-11 after placing 19-3 on the scales Saturday, and Rick Morris jumped from 12th place to round out the Super Six with 59-6 overall after weighing 21-4.

Kota Brings in 25
Kotaro Kiriyama rode a single spot to second place in last year’s Empire Chase. This year, he’s leveraging the same hole and seining it for all he can. Each day is a gamble, and if the wind blows too hard he knows that he’s out of chips. “It’s the same thing every day,” he said.

“If I can get to my area, I feel sure that I can catch them. But I never know if I’ll be able to get there or not until that day.”

http://www.basszone.com/2008eliteseries/erie/day3/story.htm

Ike Overtakes Reed On Day 2, KVD moves up to 14th

Lake Erie’s the type of fishery where a hot hump or reef can keep kicking fish out for 4 straight days. It’s also the type of place where it can be hard to mount a comeback if you didn’t discover that right hump or reef in practice. There’s just too much water to start over.

So it’s no surprise at all that those who caught ‘em on day 1 did so again today, under conditions that were overall calm at times and not rough until the ride back in. In fact, the water was so calm at Dunkirk, several pros pushed their fishing time down there and barely made it back when they encountered a blow halfway home.

That’s because Dunkirk’s fine in a southwest wind like the one today, but halfway to Buffalo the shoreline juts north and a southwest wind kicks things up. Aaron Martens fished Dunkirk and made it back with 6 minutes to spare. Kota Kiriyama made it back in the nick of time. Terry Butcher was 3 minutes late.

Mike Iaconelli had the best day today. He weighed 22-15 (call it 23 pounds), and moved up from 3rd yesterday to lead after 2 days with a 44-05 total.

Less than a pound behind Ike is day-1 leader Matt Reed, who followed up with 20-03 today. Reed’s not running all the way to Dunkirk – he’s likely fishing in the vicinity of Silver Creek – and his day might have been a lot better, but he was stuck with a dead 2 1/2-pounder and the culling of dead fish is against BASS rules.

http://www.bassfan.com/news_article.asp?id=2990

Iaconelli leads top-five pack grouped within 2 pounds

BUFFALO, N.Y. — Mike Iaconelli’s goal this week was simply to make the top 50 at the Bassmaster Elite Series Empire Chase presented by Farmer’s Insurance. He knew that would be enough to solidify his place among the qualifiers for the 2009 Bassmaster Classic and allow him to fish worry-free in the final event of the season next week at New York’s Oneida Lake.

Iaconelli was the last of the 106 Elite Series anglers to weigh-in Friday. When his five-bass limit of 22 pounds, 15 ounces gave him the lead in the tournament, the 36-year-old Runnemede, N.J., angler left the stage with much bigger goals than when he started the week.

“It’s going to be a race,” said Iaconelli, who has a two-day total of 44-5. “I’m excited.”

Yes, the Empire Chase is definitely going to be a race. The winds calmed somewhat Friday, but for the second straight day, Lake Erie showed why it’s considered among the best smallmouth bass fisheries in the world — wind or no wind.

Iaconelli was among a group of seven anglers who caught 20-plus pounds of smallmouth bass for the second day in a row. Five of them are bunched at the top of the leaderboard — within 1 pound, 10 ounces of the lead.

Day One leader Matt Reed is second with 43-6, 15 ounces behind Iaconelli. Defending Empire Chase champion Edwin Evers is third with 42-14, 1-7 off the lead. Defending Empire Chase runnerup Kotaro Kiriyama is fourth, only 1 ounce behind Evers. Aaron Martens is fifth with 42-11, only 3 ounces behind Evers.

“Honestly, that was my mindset coming in, to make the top 50,” Iaconelli said. “This is turning out a lot better than I expected.”

http://sports.espn.go.com/outdoors/tournaments/elite/news/story?id=3515546