Ultimately, Jim Davis of Knoxville, Tenn., was announced the winner and received his trophy in front of thousands of cheering Classic fans. He won $10,000.
This suspense was made possible by the B.A.S.S. Nation Kayak Seriesâ âcatch-photograph-releaseâ method of recording the catch. Anglers use their phone to take a picture of their bass on an approved measuring board and submit it to TourneyX.com, which tallies all the catches and standings. Anglers and the general public can view the standings in real time â typically until an hour before the fishing period ends and the standings go offline.
While many anglers struggled (55 anglers submitted no fish, while 58 anglers posted five-fish limits), Davis said he caught around 40 fish. His five biggest (three largemouth and two spots) totaled 87.5 inches, providing a comfortable margin over second-place Mark Edwards of West Virginia, with 84.75 inches. Third-place finisher Jonathan Lessman of Alabama caught 84.75 inches on a white spinnerbait, but Edwards had a bigger bass in his virtual livewell to break the tie.
Davis caught his fish on a Storm Arashi Spinbait, a spybait and a lure type usually associated with deeper, suspended fish. Yet Davis used it in shallow water along a rocky section of Logan Martinâs Clear Creek.
âIâm a one-hook guy and usually throw a Senko,â said Davis, who fished from an Old Town Predator PDL. âThe spybait was the only kind of lure I had that was the size of the baitfish the bass were eating.â
The tournament was hosted by the Pell City Chamber of Commerce.