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Tournament Story
Michigan’s Kevin VanDam Capitalizes on Big Bite to Take Lead at
Citrus Slam on Kissimmee Chain
LAKE WALES, Fla. - (Mar. 15, 2008) - While a strong wind
frustrated the field Saturday, a familiar face leaped to the top of
the leaderboard with three days of consistent fishing. Kevin VanDam,
of Kalamazoo, Mich., has the advantage going into the final day of
the Bassmaster Elite Series Citrus Slam presented by Longhorn at the
Kissimmee Chain of Lakes with 49 pounds, 1 ounce overall after a
five-fish limit on Day 3 weighing 13 pounds, 6 ounces.
On Saturday, the three-time Toyota Tundra Bassmaster Angler of the
Year changed strategies, as the wind made boat positioning
difficult. He wasn’t able to fish thoroughly in small spots of
isolated offshore grass in 7-10 feet of water on Lake Tohopekaliga,
as he had done Thursday and Friday.
“I’m not a big believer in luck, but I’ve been very fortunate,” said
VanDam, who has 12 career BASS wins. “The first day it was real calm
and slick. The second day was a little bit tougher. I did get a big
bite, and I got a big bite today. Fortunately, I landed both of
those fish, and that’s why I’m in the position that I am right now.”
Fishing fans can catch live, streaming video of the daily weigh-ins
in addition to a real-time leaderboard, analysis, photo galleries
and more on Bassmaster.com. Coverage from the second Elite event of
2008 airs on ESPN2 Saturday, March 22, at 9 a.m. ET.
Scott Rook of Little Rock, Ark., stuck with fishing hydrilla in Lake
Kissimmee in 2-3 feet of water, which proved successful enough to
move him from fifth to second place, also with 13-6 Saturday for a
total of 47 pounds, 0 ounces. Ray Sedgwick, of Cross, S.C., hauled
himself from 20th place to third with a limit of 18-4 for an overall
46-4, and Bill Lowen of North Bend, Ohio, took fourth with 44-12.
Day 2 leader Kelly Jordon of Mineola, Texas, came in Saturday
without a bag, but his solid two-day total of 44-3 put him in fifth
place, well within the cutoff of the top 12 anglers who will fish
Sunday. Day 1 leader Byron Velvick of Del Rio, Texas, fell to 15th
with 39-8.
“I didn’t have as many big bedders,” Jordon said of his luck
Saturday after bags weighing 22-14 and 21-5 the first two days,
respectively. “I had one big one, and I never could see it because
the waves were coming in on it because of the wind. So then I fished
some other ways I had been catching them, and I didn’t have a bite
in an hour, and I thought, ‘Man, I can run down to Kissimmee and
catch a limit.’ ”
Jordon said he ran from Lake Toho to Lake Kissimmee, fished for
three hours and came up empty.
Butch Tucker of Georgia went wire to wire to win the co-angler
division and the top prize of $25,000 with a three-day total of 26
pounds, 10 ounces.
With a victory Sunday, VanDam, the Elite Series’ all-time money
leader, would claim the $100,000 first-place prize, bringing his
BASS career earnings to more than $2.7 million.
Local favorite Bobby Lane of Lakeland, who has remained steady
through three days, is 10th with 41-7. The 2008 Bassmaster Classic
champion, Alton Jones, also made the cut, coming in ninth Saturday
with an overall weight of 41-9, while 2007 Toyota Tundra Bassmaster
Angler of the Year Skeet Reese wound up in 22nd for the tournament
with 37-3.
Elite pros are building points in the Toyota Tundra Bassmaster
Angler of the Year race. The winner of the seasonlong points
competition will earn $250,000 and the standings will determine 36
qualifiers for the 2009 Bassmaster Classic.
The final-day launch is at 8 a.m. Sunday, with the weigh-in at 4
p.m. Both are free and open to the public.
Story
Courtesy of BASS Inc.
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