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Tournament Story
Louisiana’s Judy Wong Claims Emotional Victory in Women’s Bassmaster
Tour Championship
GREENVILLE, S.C. – (Feb. 23, 2008) – Judy Wong of Many, La.,
coaxed enough fish out of her “hot hole” Saturday on Lake Keowee to
claim the 2008 Women’s Bassmaster Tour Championship by a mere 6
ounces.
Wong, who caught the majority of her fish from the warm-water
outflow of the Oconee Nuclear Station, weighed in a five-fish limit
at 6 pounds, 5 ounces to give her a three-day total of 26-10. Wong’s
catch unseated defending champion Pam Martin-Wells of Bainbridge,
Ga., from the leader’s chair Saturday and the women’s bass fishing
throne. Martin-Wells had one of just two other five-fish limits
during the final round and had a 7-9 bag for a 26-4 total.
“This time of year with the water temperature being as cold as it
is, I knew (the hot hole) was the place I wanted to start,” Wong
said. “That’s what I did all three days. I’d catch my limit and then
try to catch a larger bass. The first day I stayed a little longer
and I did cull, and my partner culled, as well. Today I stayed only
until about 10 o’clock. Then I knew I had to find a largemouth to
make sure I had enough weight to win. I tried that, but it didn’t
pan out for me.”
Wong said she was somewhat surprised the winning weight was less
than 30 pounds.
“I predicted 40 pounds to win this tournament,” she said. “If any of
the women had caught a largemouth – I know one kicker would move you
way up. I was hoping to catch a limit of spots and then one
largemouth kicker. That didn’t happen. I’m fortunate that none of
the other girls caught a kicker, either, or I would have been in
trouble.”
Wong caught her larger spotted bass on a Gary Yamamoto Senko in
watermelon red or silver metal-flake rigged wacky style. She also
caught a few fish on a Fluke, one on a spinnerbait and her largest
fish on a Senko rigged on a ¾-ounce football jig.
“I threw a variety of baits,” she said. “I just picked up what I
thought these fish would hit. Sometimes they would come up and
school, and sometimes they would go down and there wouldn’t be any
activity. I think the reason I was able to catch the fish was bait
choice. There were other anglers in the hot hole with me on the
first day and some of them left there without a fish. I think the
difference was bait choice.”
Wong will take home a fully rigged Triton boat and $10,000 in cash,
a total prize package of $60,000.
“I’m happy to have all that, but the title means so much more to
me,” Wong said. “The women in this group, we all have this passion.
We come out here and give it our all. To win this championship,
getting to this position – it means so much when we do win.”
Martin-Wells knows that feeling after running away with the
inaugural WBT Championship last year in Birmingham, Ala. She also
knew that she started the day too far behind.
“I knew it was going to be close,” she said. “I had a 2-pound
deficit to make up. That was the problem.”
Martin-Wells, who anchored last year’s catch with several
largemouths, couldn’t find them Saturday and had to rely on catching
spots with a watermelon candy trick worm on a 3/16th-ounce Tru-Tungsten
weight.
“The sun just didn’t come out soon enough,” she said. “I needed the
sun to catch the quality of fish. I fished docks and secondary
points, but all the dock fish were small. I didn’t have time for the
quality fish to get positioned where they needed to be.”
The leader going into Saturday’s round, Dianna Clark of Bumpus
Mills, Tenn., struggled with the change from rainy, cold weather to
a bluebird day. She managed only two fish and finished in third
place with 23-15.
“I just couldn’t locate the bait fish,” Clark said. “They left the
area I was fishing. When the bait fish move, the spotted bass move.
I tried moving back into deeper water and moving up. They just moved
on me and I didn’t make the adjustment.”
Clark, the 2006 Toyota WBT Angler of the Year, said it didn’t take
long for her to realize she was in trouble.
“When I showed up there and didn’t have a bite in the first 20
minutes, I said ‘uh-oh,’ she said. “They’re not here, they’re not
feeding, it ain’t happening. And I stayed there a little longer than
I should have.”
On the non-boater side, Karol Whitehurst of Winnsboro, Texas, didn’t
even have to catch a fish Saturday to claim the title. However, she
did manage to put two fish in the boat to add to her three-day
total, which ended up at 15-8.
Story
Courtesy of BASS Inc.
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