2022 Beaver Lake South Secrets / Yaks vs Boats / Heavy Hitters / AOY

Once upon a time, Beaver Lake was being called the Dead Sea – but in the past year or so it has put out some really large winning totals in NSKA NWA kayak tournaments. We’ll see if this continues when NSKA returns for the Crucible in August on Beaver, but once again the winner of the Beaver South event put up a huge stringer.

As the day began for the Capps Men’s Cuts Beaver Lake South tournament, there was hope that it would be a good day of fishing. In pre-fishing a lot of fish were being caught and there was a big warming trend. On the downside however, it was at or below freezing at lines in and we had to also contend with a 160+ boat tournament.

Kyle Long’s Big Bass winner, caught in the dirty water. Source: TourneyX

Tourney Results

Overall it was a great day for fishing, and a lot of fish were caught by the field. Most anglers caught a fish (95%) and a really strong 84% of anglers caught a limit. I don’t have all of the numbers, but that limit percentage has to be close to an all-time high for a full field tournament. Because of the many, many culls, the Fish Per Angler ratio was a robust 5.95, compared to 2.99 in March. The FPA for previous April events on Beaver were 4.66 in 2019 and 6.05 in 20`17. Bottom line is the Dead Sea is pretty good in April.

This event was taken by Kyle Long who won 1st place with 89.75″ and also a 21 Big Bass. Vince Minnick took 2nd with 83.75″ and Dwain Batey 3rd with 80.75″ total.

Here are the top ten finishers:

  1. Kyle Long
  2. Vince Minnick
  3. Dwain Batey
  4. Jason Kincy
  5. Craig Wood
  6. John Evans
  7. Zeke Stevens
  8. Terrill Standifer
  9. Ryan Paskiewicz
  10. Chris Needham

Yaks vs Boats

As mentioned above, there was a 168 boat TEAM tournament (2 anglers) on Beaver Lake on the same day. How did our top five finishers compare to the team boater results? Using the TourneyX weight calculation, here’s how our anglers would have finished in the boat tourney using their estimated weights: Kyle Long 16.78lbs (7th $), Vince Minnick 13.3lbs (14th $), Dwain Batey 12.06lbs (24th $), Jason Kincy 11.23lbs (35th) and Craig Wood 10.85lbs (37th). Pretty good representation by the single yak angler vs a team boat tourney. Good fishing is good fishing!

Angler Roundtable

As is tradition with NSKA, the top finishers gathered to look back at their day on the water and to share some of how they made it happen. Glad to have Kyle Long, Vince Minnick and Dwain Batey in this edition of Angler Roundtable.

What general area of the lake did you go to and why?

Kyle – I went to the river. It’s an area that I have some confidence in early but there are long stretches of unproductive water and it’s not good for me for most of the year. Pre-spawn it seems like there are some big ones here and there and I thought a kicker or two would be key for this event.

Vince – I chose to go to Monte Ne for a couple of reasons. First, I am familiar fishing this arm of the lake and had several spots that I generally can catch some if they are there. Second and most important was I was scheduled to meet my family after the tourney at the Monte Ne Chicken place down the road from the launch for dinner! Dinner was especially good too after being on the water all day.

Dwain – I chose to fish way up the river, I just like that area and it fishes different, it’s hit or miss this time of year, but I enjoy fishing there and was willing to face the consequences if it didn’t pan out.

How did you catch your biggest fish? Anything notable on the catch?

Kyle – My biggest and the only one of my 5 in my final bag came on a black and blue Jackhammer. The water was definitely dirty there. Maybe 8” of visibility. I casted it up to a root ball and on the end of a super shallow point and the bass ate it immediately but it was hung in a stick. Luckily the stick broke off and I got it in but there were a few tense seconds for sure.

Vince – My biggest fish was caught on a Strike King 7in Finesse Worm on a Neko Rig. Several key fish came off this rig along with catching a limit early on the new Strike King Chick Magnet. The water was pretty clean in the area and was a point on the north side had after getting sun on it I had that feeling to hit it and the timing was right because 3 of my largest moved up on it and were hungry. I had to say a few words to a bass boat who just didn’t understand I was fishing this point and had to say it several times before he left. Funny thing was I caught the biggest fish right as he pulled by me to leave!

Dwain – I caught my biggest fish on something I’ve never thrown before, I normally don’t fish anything new in a tournament situation, but I didn’t follow that rule this week. Despite catching fish on it, I think there’s a lot to learn about where and how to fish this thing. I’m not going to say what it was right now, maybe after I figure out the details of fishing it.

What is the fishing technique you are best at? And what’s your worst?

Kyle – I feel like if I can catch them on a spinnerbait or a fluke I’m gonna have a shot. Mostly because I’ve gotten to be a pretty accurate caster with those baits and I pride myself on that part of it. If they want it deep cranking or on a jerkbait…I’m definitely vying for the middle of the pack at best.

Vince – Best technique is finesse fishing so throwing the spinning rod was a technique I am comfortable with. I would say my weakest technique is throwing the crank bait and sticking to it until finding fish that wanted to bite. I learned that positioning the cast was key in catching my limit fairly quick in the morning. I also suck at throwing a jerk bait so I did that for a while and guess what, I still suck at it!

Dwain – My best technique, which could mean many things, but I’m going to say fishing a weightless fluke. My worst would probably just be something I don’t care for using or don’t use very often. I would say maybe that would be a lipless bait.


I finished in 4th place, to see how I caught more than 20 fish during the day on a fluke, A-rig and more – watch the video.


Heavy Hitters Update

We’re now more than 1/3 through the season and the Heavy Hitters race is taking shape, but nobody has put it on lockdown quite yet. Terrill Standifer has a chance to really build a lead if he gets another 20 on Table Rock, for now he’s in the best position.

Things WILL tighten up, and there are many, many anglers still in the running. If someone has at least one yellow or green highlight, they only need four more good fish to win. And, if you have a 20+ already, all the better. For now, Terrill is the one to catch and history says for past winners that it is better to get a lead and hold it than to chase it down from behind.

Angler of the Year Race

Three tournaments in the books and we’re seeing some familiar and some new names in the top ten. More than any other award, the AOY can change the most during the year. Each season event counts, plus points for the end of season Classic Championship.

Right now Terrill Standifer is the only angler with three ‘green’ scores, considered good for AOY points rankings.

Any angler who has at least two in green already is still in excellent shape since you get to drop a couple of scores. For example, below is your top ten if we dropped the lowest current score. This looks a bit different and illustrates that it’s going to be a season-long race! Literally almost everyone is still in the hunt if they go on a hot streak.

Table Rock is up next on April 23, an event that is concurrent with the MoYak and All-American series events. See you on the water!

2022 NSKA Pumpback Recap / Heavy Hitters / AOY Race

I saw one of our anglers compare fishing on Pumpback (Chimney Rock Lake) to fishing on the moon – with craters and rock as the main terrain. Historically Pumpback is a smash-fest where 80 inches might get you into the top 12. On a day like we had on Pumpback, Craig was right, it was like the moon. Not much to be found for 62 registered anglers on a sunny March day with light winds.

Tournament Results

I believe this is the second most difficult tournament in NSKA history, with the numbers to back it up. In 2019 on ‘Snake’ Fort Smith there were only 68 fish caught by 67 anglers and the winner, Cole Sikes, only had four fish. Now…on that day it was chocolate milk, very cold water and cold day. You could argue that a nice March day on fish-factory Pumpback Lake with water 50+ degrees should have been a LOT better – but it wasn’t.

A paltry 107 fish from 62 anglers resulted in a 1.72 fish per angler score – compared to 2.99 FPA from the tough opener on Beaver Lake. Five limits out of 62 is incredibly low (7.6%), but oddly 66% (41) of the field caught a fish, which is a solid number. That early bite I think helped out a lot of anglers get at least one. From a size perspective, it was a strong 15.64″ average, compared to 14.42″ in the opener on Beaver Lake.

Looking at the fish volume based on time, the VAST majority of fish were caught in the first couple of hours, then a steady drop-off the rest of the day. If you look at big bass each hour though, there was a 19+ submitted almost every hour, so the big ones were eating throughout. Tough fishing, resulting in only three anglers culling a bass to upgrade.

Four 20s were caught, including two 20.25″ which tied Vince Minnick and Jacob Simmons, with Jacob winning the prize by going to second largest bass.

The Top Ten from Pumpback:

  1. Levi Schneider
  2. Jamie Shumate
  3. John Evans
  4. Sam McClish
  5. Roy Roberts
  6. Jason Kincy
  7. Andrew Newsom
  8. Terrill Standifer
  9. Devon Esry
  10. James Haeberle
Newbie Jacob Simmons won Big Bass over Vince Minnick (tie) with a 20.25″ largemouth. Congrats! Source: TourneyX

Angler Roundtable

Our top finishers from Pumpback sat down to give a bit of the juice on how they caught ’em on a tough day. Let’s hear from Levi, James and John.

What was your strategy going into the day, and did it work?

Levi – My only strategy really was to fish this one flat I had found on Navionics, but since the lake was so low I knew that wasn’t going to happen so I just went out there and just decided to cover water and fish points and different areas that caught me eye and looked like fish may hold to. Also, whenever I checked the water temp in my graph and saw it going up the further I went back into coves I decided to go to the very back of one that produced 4 of 5 keepers and even lost a giant Smallie that might’ve gone for big bass but hey – with treble hook baits you’re bound to lose fish.

Jamie – Going into the day I didn’t have much of a strategy. With the lake being the size that it was and how many anglers there where I knew I would be fishing behind guys so I just started beating the banks.

John – No real plan, it had been a few years since I fished Pumpback, I just focused on the back of the coves.

Any key baits or techniques that helped you catch your fish?

Levi – My only key bait was Berkley Stunna +1 that I didn’t intend on throwing at first but I saw an Alex Rudd Instagram post of a huge Smallie he caught with the Stunna +1 so I decided to tie it on and sure enough – it produced every single fish I caught.

Jamie – I started out throwing the normal spring time baits – crankbaits, square bills and jerk baits but gave up with in an hour. I tied on the A-rig and within the first 10 minutes I had a 16.25″ smallmouth and an 18″ black bass. I had my limit by 10:00 and when I added it all up and saw what I had I thought ‘dang this is great!’ Everyone I talked to said it was tough…I went from around 10:30 till around 1:15 without a bite. I caught 3 at the end of the day with the last one coming at 2:45 and I upgraded a .25 inch. Congratulations to Levi on the win.

John – It was a mix of crankbaits, shaky heads, and jigs. Didn’t find a set pattern they preferred, they were scattered around for me.

What is your favorite lure to throw in the spring?

Levi – Without a doubt my favorite spring time bait is a finesse jig. It just seems to get a ton of bites and quite a few big ones as well. My PB came off a finesse jig in the middle of April so I’m ready to go whack ’em this April with it.

Jamie – Fishing a crank bait is probably my favorite spring time bait when the bite is on it can be a fun day. I’m still fairly new to kayak fishing and I want to say that this is the best group of guys and gals to fish with everyone is always helpful and fun to be around.

John – I don’t think I have a favorite, but I throw several options to see what they might like.


Recap of my day on Pumpback, good for 6th place. Check it out if you want.

Trash Pot Winner

Chris Needham smoked two drum of the same length (21.75) on a jerkbait to take the big Trash Pot prize!

Needham’s pile of trash that took the prize.

Heavy Hitters

Now we’re getting into it with Heavy Hitters and AOY, and a fantastic championship belt was unveiled at the event, courtesy of Justin Wright and Steadfast Plumbing. That thing is awesome! Here’s a look at the leaders, but there is a looong way to go this season. Anyone with 18s and above is in good shape early, with the top three looking strong!

AOY Race

It’s also very early in the Angler of the Year race for NSKA NWA. Some fresh names at the top for now, can they hang on? Anything 90+ is a good score that could factor in for the winning total. Andrew, James and Terrill are starting out hot! It’s a long road to win, lots of time for anglers to move up.

Back to the friendly confines of South Beaver Lake on April 9 for the next event – presented by Capps Mens Cuts. Know someone that kayak fishes? Invite them to come out and enter. The Dead Sea will be coming alive for spawn, you won’t want to miss it!

2022 NSKA Beaver Lake North Recap / Trash Fish Story / Heavy Hitters

The new year and new season for NWA NSKA is finally here and the first event is in the books. As usual the Dead Sea caused problems for most who were looking for a limit, while at the same time we saw some anglers drop the hammer on the pre-spawn bass. Beaver Lake North, presented by Slow Town Custom Lures, was a great success.

Some changes came to NSKA this year with a membership feature which qualifies anglers for AOY and Heavy Hitters as well as other perks. As such, we’ll keep a close eye on those races, while at the same time we welcome anyone to fish an event regardless of their experience in competitive kayak fishing. Welcome everyone who is new or has been around for a while!

James Haeberle’s Big Bass from the tournament. Source: TourneyX

Beaver North 2022 Recap

Overall, Beaver Lake was a bit stingy this time around but once again allowed a big number at the top. That’s why I love Beaver Lake. It’s not easy, but you can still find some good ones! Looking at the numbers, only a paltry 25% (17 of 67) of the field turned in a five fish limit. This is the lowest limit percentage in a couple of years on Beaver, so if you didn’t catch five…don’t worry about it – it was hard fishing. The FPA (Fish Per Angler) was very low at 2.99, compared to 4.02 in August 2021 on Beaver Lake. Watch for more on FPA and tourney history in a future post.

Ryan Paskiewicz took the top spot with a very strong 87.75″ followed by James Haeberle with 84.50″ and then Cole Sikes with 82.50″ on the day. In a bit of an odd turn of events, there were four 20s caught in this event and James Haeberle took the Big Bass prize with a 21″ tank.

The Top Ten finishers were:

  1. Ryan Paskiewicz
  2. James Haeberle
  3. Cole Sikes
  4. Andrew Newsome
  5. Justin Brewer
  6. David Byrd
  7. Terrill Standifer
  8. Aaron Hinton
  9. Jacob Webber
  10. Kyle Long

Angler Roundtable

What makes kayak fishing way more awesome than boat tournaments is the willingness of top anglers to help others and share a bit more info on how they caught’em. Ryan, James and Cole joined me in a roundtable look back at how it went down:

Roughly what part of the lake did you go to and why?

Ryan – I went to Rambo sort of on a whim. Was going to fish Coose but the wind would have been more than i wanted to deal with, so I decided to try something I hadn’t fished much but has a reputation of producing solid limits.

James – I launched at Ventris because I know that area well and that the wind would be blowing in that direction, keeping the bait moving.

Cole – I chose to go to Big Clifty because I found a pocket that had thousands of shad in it. My fear going into the tournament was that the shad might move out or someone else might have found the same thing. Luckily, the shad were still there and I had it all to myself all day. I was able to catch the bulk of my limit by 7:30 and then my fish must have gotten full off of shad and my bite got tough. Ended up making a move mid-day and made a couple small culls.

Any key techniques or baits you used?

Ryan – I love jig fishing and caught my kicker first thing on one. I came around the corner and it was a flat leading to a point with wind right into it. I picked up a jerkbait but I realized I hate jerkbait fishing in a kayak. Because of this, I then decided to chuck a spinnerbait around the flat and landed three fish pretty quickly. I stuck with that almost exclusively, minus specific jig targets from time to time. The key was rolling it slow on bottom. It’s great to have this start, in the last two years I’ve either zeroed or finished WAY towards the bottom in the first tournament. In those two years I’ve ended up finishing 3rd or 4th in AOY race.

James – I told myself that if I don’t get a bite on an A-Rig in the first hour I was going to put it up and move on. At 5 minutes till 8:00 I got my first bite and 10 minutes later I caught the biggest fish I ever submitted in a tournament. So I locked it in my hand and fished it all day.

Cole – My primary bait was an Alabama Rig. I was just slow rolling it just beneath the shad balls. I could see on my graph that most of the fish were positioned underneath them. I also picked off a fish on a spoon and crankbait as well.

Advice for those who didn’t do well in tourney one for the rest of the season?

Ryan – My advice is out the head down and continue to fish hard regardless of the outcome. Put in the work, fish with confidence and you’ll be fine.

James – In the past I have always stressed about everything in tournaments and always made mistakes that would cost me. My advice is to have fun and don’t stress the outcome. Just go fishing and enjoy the day. Let the cards fall where they may. Learn all you can every tournament and keep building on that knowledge. It won’t take long and you will start seeing a huge improvements.

Cole – We have all been there and have struggled at tournaments, my recommendation is to keep your head up and keep grinding. Whether your preseason goal was to win AOY, qualifying for the Classic, finishing in the money, or finishing in the top ten, there are still many opportunities ahead to reach your goal.


Here’s my video from Beaver North. If you watch it, please give the gift of hitting subscribe.

Trash Fish Pot Winner

New to NSKA events this year is the Trash Fish Pot which rewards the angler who catches the largest non-scorable fish species. We got off to a huge start here when Robert Murphy caught a 32lb striper that was an absolute monster. Robert shared some of his story and how a boater helped weigh it and snag the photo.

“After catching the fish and taking some pictures myself I was about to release it and saw a boat slow-trolling in the little pocket with boat docks in it. So, I asked if they would take a picture for me. With no hesitation they reeled in there lines took a picture and weighed it,” Robert explained. “We tried to let it go but it wouldn’t go back down so they said if you don’t want it we will take it or take it to our dock and ill bring you ice and a cooler to keep it good till you get off the water.”

Robert Murphy’s whale. Source: Mr. Murphy
Murphy’s go-to giant striper bait. Source: Mr. Murphy

How did the bite feel? “When it hit. It hit next to the boat and all I saw was a big flash and line stripping out of the reel. At first I thought please be a bass, but after about 3 seconds of line pulling out with extreme speed I thought oh, that’s a striper. After 10 seconds I was thinking, dang that’s a BIG striper! After about 15 seconds I realized I was in for a ride.”

It took Robert 20-30 minutes to get that striper in because he was using 10lb test line. He hooked it on his hand painted jerkbait and had it hooked well, it wasn’t getting off. What a great first Trash Pot story!

Heavy Hitters Update

This is the third year for the Heavy Hitters title, the recognition that goes to the angler who catches the biggest five fish from various tournaments throughout the year. The Heavy Hitters title is sponsored by Steadfast Plumbing this season – thankful for their support! It’s not too late to get involved in Heavy Hitters if you missed the first event, it’s best five events and all you need is an NSKA NWA membership.

Here is the current top ten, but we’re just getting started. Getting a 20+ on Beaver Lake is a huge advantage, so those anglers are off to a great start. The full list of Heavy Hitter rankings will be posted to the NSKA group facebook page.

Next up is Pumpback, presented by Nightengale Cabinets on March 26, hope to see everyone out there!

2021 Classic Championship Recap / Angler of the Year

The top 25 anglers of the year in NSKA NWA faced a diabolical test in the end of season Classic Championship. Day one to day two stretched from one end of the NSKA region to the other and set up what would be an interesting and challenging event.

Lake Fort Smith, a.k.a. Snake Fort Smith, a.k.a. Dead Sea South, is always a fun time for anglers and presents a tremendous challenge. I’m not saying Lake Fort Smith can be tough, but Jacob Wheeler would keep driving past it on I-540 and won’t take the exit.

The mysterious Lake Fort Smith.

Day one had bluebird skies and little wind for most of the day, and it was a grinder! All except for Cole Sikes who took control on day one with 76.50″ – a huge lead over Sam McClish in 2nd with 67.75″ on the day. Sam did land what has to be a biological freak for that lake and took Big Bass for the event with a 20.75″ largemouth. As day one ended, the Classic was shaping up like last year’s event where the day one leader with a big lead would try to hold on day two.

Top 10 after day one:

  1. Cole Sikes
  2. Sam McClish
  3. Jacob Webber
  4. Tyler Zengerle
  5. Dwain Batey
  6. Jason Kincy
  7. Terrill Standifer
  8. Jason Cowell
  9. James Shumate
  10. Craig Wood

Day two was up on Table Rock, site of two previous events in 2021. Anglers could put in at Holiday Island or Eagle Rock. In stark contrast to day one, anglers really caught’em on the Rock. Jacob Webber made a big move on day two with 87.50″ followed by Craig Wood with 86.50″ on the day. Cole Sikes pulled a very respectable 80.25″ on day two – would it be enough?

Top 10 day two:

  1. Jacob Webber
  2. Craig Wood
  3. Devon Esry
  4. Dwain Batey
  5. Tyler Zengerle
  6. Jason Fields
  7. Terrill Standifer
  8. Kyle Long
  9. Cole Sikes
  10. Justin Brewer

2021 NSKA NWA Classic Champion

2021 Classic Champion – Cole Sikes.

Cole Sikes had the total needed to take the title with 156.75″ for the two days, followed by Jacob Webber with 153.25″ and Tyler Zengerle with a 147.25″ total.

Final Top Ten

  1. Cole Sikes
  2. Jacob Webber
  3. Tyler Zengerle
  4. Dwain Batey
  5. Terrill Standifer
  6. Jason Kincy
  7. Craig Wood
  8. James Shumate
  9. Jason Cowell
  10. Josh Landreth

Angler Roundtable

The grueling two day tournament was challenging and fun. Cole Sikes, Jacob Webber, Tyler Zengerle and I share some of our experiences from the event in this season-ending roundtable discussion:

Overall, how did you attack Lake Fort Smith and what baits were key in your day?

Cole – I knew Lake Fort Smith was going to be tough so I wanted to make sure to get a limit. I knew my best chance of catching a limit would be fishing on the south end where there are more spotted bass. I started on a community hole and caught two keepers and then I moved to steeper banks to fill out my limit. I had a limit in the first hour and it was a huge relief. For the most part I junk fished and caught fish on 5 different baits (popper, jig, deep diving crank bait, spinnerbait and drop shot) but my most consistent bite was fishing a popper on the steeper banks really slow. I ended up catching almost three-limits worth of fish but most were 11” spotted bass.

Jacob – In practice, I tried fishing the north end and the south end. I did much better on the south end as far as numbers go. I threw some big baits in practice in the direction of the dam and had some quality fish show themselves. The plan was to fish a stretch and try to get a small limit early, then head to the dam end and try to catch a couple of those bigger fish. It was pretty much a junk fishing day, but the ones that mattered came on a fluke, pencil popper, and buzz bait.

Tyler – Going into day one, I knew most people would go left from the ramp, towards the creek. To avoid the larger crowd, I made the decision to go straight across from the ramp and fish to the buoys and back, as I fished this section several years ago. My key baits for the day were a wacky worm, a Jewel PeeWee Football Jig, and a shaky head.

Jason – I wasn’t very confident going into the day, pre-fishing was pretty terrible and really struggled. So going into the day I was just going to try to get a limit and stay in the mix. Having turned into a power fishing angler mostly, I put that stuff away for the most part and focused on using a drop shot on some key areas to secure a limit. After that I tried to find a kicker but had no luck. Had to leave early to get up to the Hill for the big game, turned into a fantastic day!

Where did you put in at Table Rock, how did you approach it and what were your key baits on the day?

Cole – I had no idea what to expect on Table Rock so I fished history. I have done well in the past launching at Holiday Island and going down river towards Eagle Rock so that’s what I did. I started my morning by covering a lot of water throwing a buzz bait and whopper plopper. After about an hour of not having much luck, I picked my trusted jig and starting catching a few on bluffs and points. I struggled on day two and couldn’t really figure them out but I was able to grind enough and put together a decent limit. Thank goodness I had a good lead after day one because the guys caught them on day two!

Jacob – I put in at Eagle Rock and went towards Rock Creek. I caught a few good fish right away on a whopper plopper and never got another bite on it the rest of the day. I switched to the chatter bait and every spot I pulled up to they were smashing it.

Tyler – I put in at Holiday Island and went to my normal section that I fish anytime I go there. At first, I attempted to throw a buzzbait and spook with no luck. I eventually got out a fluke and caught my first fish 30 minutes into the tournament. After a few more casts, I put the fluke away. I knew a jig worked well in that area, so I started throwing a Jewel PB&J finesse jig (what I used when I placed 4th during our TR 2.0 tourney). That’s when I really started catching fish. I had a limit by 7:30am and caught 82.75” by 9:00am. I decided to leave early at 1:00pm because I knew I was really competing for 2nd-5th place, since Cole had a commanding 12” lead to start day two.

Jason – Really have not had as much luck historically at Holiday Island so I chose to go to Eagle Rock even though I’d never fished there. Kyle, Ryan and I just pedaled to a creek we’d never fished and started working it over. Eventually started catching a few on a plopper and got things going. Later on I was able to catch a few on a jig and then when the wind picked up was able to catch a few on a spinnerbait. Little disappointed in the day because lots of people wrecked’em so I clearly missed out on the juice.

Of the two day event, talk about the key fish that put you in the money.

Cole – My key fish was the 19.75″ kicker I caught day one on Lake Fort Smith. I knew when I caught that fish I was going to have a chance to win the Classic because how tough the lake was fishing. I caught that fish on a transition spot on the bluff where it went from a vertical bluff to little small rocky point. I threw my popper right up on the bank and popped it a few times and she sucked it under.

Jacob – I think my key fish came on day one. I started out on a small stretch where I thought I was going to get a fast limit and ended up not getting a bite. I was about to switch everything up and go to a new area, but ended up catching my biggest of the day right before moving. That fish made me stick to the game plan and put together an alright limit.

Tyler – The fish that really gave me a chance to be in the money was the 14.75” bass I caught at 2:15pm on Lake Fort Smith. That put me at being one of the four people with limits over 60” and gave me a 5.75” cushion ahead of 5th place.

Jason – I didn’t finish in the money, but that very first drop shot fish I caught on Lake Fort Smith was a confidence booster and I milked an area for about two hours catching several shorts but eventually getting my limit. What a relief.

Did you do anything or think about anything differently for a two day event?

Cole – Like I mentioned above, I knew Lake Fort Smith was going to be the x-factor in determining the classic winner so that’s what I focused 100% on. I did quite a bite of map studying prior to the tournament expecting to be fishing offshore. I prefished and was able to get some confidence in catching a limit but knew it was going to take a kicker to have a chance to win. Other than that I treated the tournament like any other tournament. Hit high-percentage spots even if it meant covering miles of water.

Jacob – Nothing different. I just spent a little more time pre-fishing.

Tyler – I took this tournament one day at a time. I didn’t really treat it much differently than single day tournaments. I went into each day with the same baits tied on and used the ones that I was most confident in. One thing that I normally don’t do is leave early, but I was really craving Whataburger.

Jason – Like Cole said, I had no doubt this would be won or lost on Lake Fort Smith so it was the only place I pre-fished. Kudos to Cole, we both arrived at our starting spot around the same time and we agreed to share the water and it worked out well for us.

What’s your PB Largemouth, Smallie and Spot?

Cole -My personal best Largemouth was a 23.50” on Lake Elmdale in my second kayak tournament ever back in 2017. The largest Smallmouth I have caught was a 20” on Beaver and my largest spotted bass was 18” on beaver as well.

Jacob – PB largemouth was a 6.5lb in a tournament in Bella Vista. No idea for Smallie and Spot.

Tyler – My PB largemouth is a 22.25” from Lincoln. Smallmouth is 18.50, I believe, from Pumpback this year, and my biggest spot is 16.25” caught this year on a section of the Illinois River.

Jason – My personal best Largemouth was a 24″ giant from this year on Possum Kingdom, largest Smallmouth is only 17.50″ from Beaver Lake and largest Spot is 17.25″ on Beaver Lake. Really have a goal this winter into next year to get a 20″ Smallie.

Angler of the Year

The 2021 Angler of the Year race really wasn’t much in doubt halfway through the season. Dwain Batey was a consistent performer all season. Dwain is an exceptional angler and one of the things that makes him so good is he can adapt to any condition and any type of water. His versatility helped him excel all season long to take the crown.

Dwain is not only a great angler, he is a friend and a very giving person. He is always willing to help anyone and has made me a better angler as we’ve talked fishing and I’ve observed how he does things. He’s always willing to teach you a technique – because he knows he’ll still do it better! Really happy for Dwain.

2021 NSKA NWA Angler of the Year – Dwain Batey!

Your 2021 AOY Top Ten:

  1. Dwain Batey
  2. Cole Sikes
  3. Tyler Zengerle
  4. Ryan Paskiewicz
  5. Justin Brewer
  6. Jason Kincy
  7. Kyle Long
  8. Jacob Webber
  9. Devon Esry
  10. Craig Wood

Jacob Webber also took home the Rookie of the Year award and Kyle Long was the 2021 Heavy Hitter Champion. Congratulations to them!

Congratulations to all

Thank you to all anglers who participated in the events, yakpots or just some fun fishing. Hope to see you on the water next year and will be rooting for everyone to catch their personal best!

Next up is the Arkansas State Championship – it’s a fun two-day event and hope many of you can make it.

2021 Beaver Lake Recap / Heavy Hitters Champ / AOY Race

The NSKA NWA regular season finale was the Ace of Blades Beaver Lake Roadrunner in the annual crucible – August on Beaver Lake! This year has seen some bigger than usual winning totals in the various events for NSKA, but the 80″ mark hadn’t been broken yet in August on the Dead Sea. Would it happen this time around?

Pretty much sums up my day on Beaver – a flop.

Tournament Results

A pretty good turnout of 59 anglers took to the water on the heels of a major change in the weather. Super hot and sunny for a couple of week, the day before lines in brought 3-4 inches of rain and thunderstorms to NW Arkansas. A cloudy tournament day on the heels of the storm definitely changed up the fishing.

John Wofford made his return to NWA for this event and went back to central Arkansas with the 1st place trophy by catching 80.50″ on the day. Justin Brewer finished 2nd with 78″ and Dwain Batey took 3rd with 77.25″. The top ten dropped off quickly after the leaders:

  1. John Wofford 80.50″
  2. Justin Brewer 78″
  3. Dwain Batey 77.25″
  4. Cole Sikes 77″
  5. Abraham Garcia 77″
  6. Christa Hibbs 74″
  7. Jacob Webber 73.75″
  8. James Haeberle 72.25″
  9. James Shumate 72″
  10. Ryan Paskiewicz 71.75″

Aly Corp won Big Bass with a 20.25″ Beaver Lake beast.

Angler Roundtable

The top three anglers wrapped up the tourney in this roundtable discussion of how they did it and what happened on the water. Join John Wofford, Justin Brewer and Dwain Batey as they spill the tea:

Where did you go and why?

John – I went to Twin Bridges because I was told fishing was really tough and that is where I feel most comfortable and can fish my strengths. Knowing Beaver in the summer I knew they’d be out suspended or tight in cover so I fished every bit of cover I could get a bait into.

Justin – I chose to put in way up the War Eagle again like in last years’ July Beaver tournament. I chose there because I know there is resident fish in the area and being a more condensed area of water If I keep my head down and fish hard I’ll be able to pick up a few good bites and hopefully more if all goes well.

Dwain – I hadn’t pre-fished but heard it was really tough, thought I would go way up north and try something high-risk with the potential for a high reward.

Any particular baits or patterns that really worked for you?

John – And Xcite baits stick worm with a golden Colorado blade in the tail and my old faithful Xcite baits Xb-1 squarebill in chartreuse black back.

Justin – A Booyah Boss Pop was what did the trick for me. I tried other baits but couldn’t get anything going. The bites were few and far between but if I could trigger one to bite it was a solid fish. No real pattern on the type of structure and cover. A few were just random fish in open water.

Dwain – I was throwing a Skirmish Baits Pendragon topwater all day. I only got a few bites, but I had the opportunity to win the event.

How’d you catch your biggest fish? What’s the story?

John – I was going down a bank picking apart spots when I looked up and saw a tree in the middle-ish of the river and thought to myself there has to be a fish in there. So I bombed a cast with my worm right in the tree and as soon as I pulled it over the first branch she smacked it and wrapped me around a limb, at this point I was questioning whether I had a fish on because it was wrapped up and really stuck. I started pedaling over while keeping my line tight and all of a sudden she popped back around the limb and the fight was on. She went for 18” and then two casts after that I hooked into a 17.5” Smallie, YES a Smallmouth in the White River!

Justin – My biggest which was only 16.75 came real early. I was still throwing a Buzzbait at that time and had one blow up on it but miss it. That’s when I picked up the Boss Pop fired back in the area and two pops later hooked up. I’m assuming it was the same fish but I guess it could have been a different one. That’s also what lead me to start throwing the Boss Pop.

Dwain – My biggest fish was on the Pendragon on my 3rd cast of the morning. I had a hunch about a particular point, and pulled in there instead of my original thoughts for a starting spot, good call on that one.

What’s one useful thing you carry in your yak that most people probably don’t have?

John – I always carry a gallon RTIC jug every time I hit the water. Staying hydrated especially on those hot days is key to staying out there till the last minute is up.

Justin – I don’t carry it all the time but it’s needed when I do and that is a stake out pole. Especially way up a river fish shallow areas it’s great to be able to stake out around a big lay down or log jam and it all apart with out having to keep repositioning or worry about floating too close.

Dwain – I don’t really have anything that stands out as something others wouldn’t have gear wise. I mean I’ve got some really cool storage options from Bass Mafia, like the new Two Bud Bag and Ice Box storage containers, but everyone knows how cool Bass Mafia storage options are. Maybe there are people who don’t think about having a hone to sharpen their hooks? I use the Eagle Claw Deluxe Hook hone to make sure that I keep my hooks sharp despite all the rocks we have trying to dull them constantly. Another one might be the Eagle Claw Wacky Rig Tool for putting O-rings on stick baits?



Heavy Hitters Champ

Pretty much leading the way wire to wire, Kyle Long smashed the big ones this year to become the second annual Heavy Hitter’s Champion. Kyle got a lead early in the season and hung on to take the title with a 95.5″ total (compared to my mark of 95″ in 2020). We took a minute to ask Kyle his secrets for being the Heavy Hitter of the year.

No description available.

What’s the key to catching big fish?

There’s a whole lot of luck involved. But I guess there’s something to throwing the right thing in the right place. This year, two of my Heavy Hitter’s fish came on a fluke, one on a spinnerbait, one on a shaky head and one on a jig. I also caught a few more on a jig and spinnerbait that could have been in my final five fish bag had I not caught one even bigger in that same event. And most of them were in super predictable spots…points, channel swings, the last bush in a line of bushes…that kinda stuff.

Some lose big fish when they hook them, what’s the secret to getting a big bass into the yak?

I use as big a line as I can get away with and I get them in the net as fast as I can. If that fish is still in the water it is on his home turf. It has the upper hand. That playing them stuff is for the birds. Get them dudes in the net as fast as you possibly can. And get a net with a handle that can reach out there and get em. One caveat…if I’m using treble hooked baits I’m a little more careful, but I still try and get them in the net as fast as possible.

Congratulations Kyle Long! We’ll be back next season with a new Heavy Hitters race.

AOY Race Update & Classic Field

The regular season and the Top 25 anglers who will make the Classic are set. Was a close race with several good anglers just barely missing the cut. First year rookies Jacob Webber and Josh Landreth made the championship, along with several other first-time qualifiers. Should be a great battle on Lake Fort Smith and Beavertown/Holiday Island. Time to defend the title!

In addition to the Top 25, the AOY race is winding down with some drama, but not much remaining. Really have not done the math, but maybe if there’s a complete collapse from Dwain and good finishes from Justin or Ryan or others then maybe there’s a chance. Really not sure, but most likely Dwain is in the driver’s seat as he has been all season long.

RankAnglerEvent 8ClassicBest 6 plus Classic
1Dwain Batey98 588
2Justin Brewer99 555
3Ryan Paskiewicz91 551
4Tyler Zengerle88 549
5Cole Sikes97 548
6Kyle Long73 542
7Devon Esry80 529
8Roy Roberts0 527
9Jason Kincy78 527
10Josh King70 519
11Josh Howard89 518
12Craig Wood90 515
13Jacob Webber ®94 509
14Clay Johnson66 496
15Justin Phillips64 495
16Justin Wright69 495
17Josh Landreth ®71 495
18James Shumate92 487
19Terrill Standifer87 487
20Jason Adams59 486
21Jason Fields72 486
22Taylor Frizzell75 484
23Jason Cowell79 464
24Sam McClish53 462
25Zeke Stevens58 462
Your Top 25 for NSKA 2021.

DIY – Hobie Kayak Mods – Front Storage Hatch Hack

Another one of my Hobie Kayak Mods, this time how to perform a simple DIY kayak hack on your Hobie Pro Angler. Get more front storage hatch room and organize tackle and gear more efficiency.

Hobie kayak DIY video is on a Hobie Pro Angler 12 but also works for a Hobie Pro Angler 14.

DIY – Hobie Kayak Mods – Camo Paint for Accessories

New video talking Hobie Kayak Mods, particularly painting your Hobie H Crate and tackle bin to match a camo Pro Angler kayak.

Also includes info on painting Hobie Kayak accessories for a Hobie 360 Pro Angler kayak. Use painting tips for any accessory for your Hobie kayak mods. Used Rustoleum 2X primer spray paint – Army Green, Hunt Club Green, Espresso, Charcoal Gray and Key Lime.

Table Rock 2.0 Tournament Recap / Classic Countdown / Heavy Hitters

The fishing-friendly waters of Table Rock welcomed back NSKA for Table Rock 2.0 for 2021 and it was a wild ride.

As many NSKA tournament anglers know, this was the sixth event that involved rain or thunderstorms this year…and this one was a doozy. As Forrest Gump said, “We been through every kind of rain there is. Little bitty stingin’ rain and big ol’ fat rain, rain that flew in sideways. And sometimes rain even seemed to come straight up from underneath.”

On Saturday a dead calm sunny morning turned into stormaggeddon in the afternoon. In fishing one thing is true, when the weather changes the fishing changes and it was going to help someone catch ’em late.

Tournament Results

As 53 anglers took to the water expectations for catching fish were high. Table Rock put out good numbers in the May event (1.0) and there was some optimism it would be a bit easer than Beaver Lake. Overall a very strong 73% of anglers turned in a limit and with 338 fish caught for a 6.5 average per angler the Rock was on fire again.

Levi Schneider took 1st place in his first NSKA event with 88.00″ on the day (after a 1″ deduction!), followed by Jason Kincy with 84.00″ squeaking by Josh King in a tie-breaker who finished 3rd with 84.00″ on the day. Levi also won Big Bass with a 20.00″ Table Rock tank.

The Table Rock top ten:

  1. Levi Schneider
  2. Jason Kincy
  3. Josh King
  4. Tyler Zengerle
  5. Ryan Paskiewicz
  6. Josh Landreth
  7. Jason Adams
  8. Dwain Batey
  9. Justin Writght
  10. Jason Coleman

Check out the full results on TourneyX.


Please hit subscribe on YouTube if you like the recaps, will keep me going!

Angler Roundtable

Top finishers of the event break down the day in the roundtable discussion. A lot of fish were caught that day by Levi, Jason, Josh and Tyler.

What part of Table Rock did you go to and why?

Levi – After having a horrible practice at the Kings River I looked elsewhere. I found a random ramp just north of Emerald Beach that looked really good with a mix or brush piles, docks, and main lake bluff walls with rock. With multiple main lake points, secondary points, and a couple of coves so I had plenty of options no matter where the fish went.

Jason – Put in at Beavertown because I’d pre-fished a couple of spots on Table Rock and just couldn’t get things going so tried something different for the tournament. Rock Creek and Big M was where I wanted to fish because they are so good.

Josh – I wanted to go to the same spot I did in the first Table Rock tournament, but with the water being down 4’ I didn’t think it would be as good. I got on the internet, looked at some maps and found a spot that wasn’t too far of a drive and had several main points. I ended up fishing Owl Creek arm.

Tyler – I chose to fish at Shell Knob because I figured most of the crowd would be at the Kings River ramp or around Big M area. After doing map study, I noticed that there weren’t a lot of bluff walls, but rather shallower water which best suits my fishing style. I chose to fish behind the island (Lost Hill) and that’s where almost all my fish came from.

Key baits or techniques used to catch keepers?

Levi – I caught ’em early with a Rapala X Rap in a gaudy orange chartreuse color although those fish flopped off the board before I could snap a picture of them. After that all of my fish came of a CJs custom 1/2 oz PB&J football jig with either a green and purple Strike King Rage Craw or a Googan baits Krackin craw.

Jason – I got to power fish all day…pleased to say I didn’t touch a spinning rod one time! Heddon zara spook, War Eagle buzzbait, ZMan chatterbait, Booyah Covert spinnerbait and Slowtown football jig were all contributors.

Josh – I started with a buzzbait and landed one keeper pretty early. I switched to a wacky worm and turned out a small limit. I then put on a 1/2oz football jig, caught several and culled up four fish.

Tyler – All of the fish in my final five came off of a Jewel Finesse jig in PB&J with a Gambler Lures craw in orange/green pumpkin for the trailer. I did catch a few on a shaky head and Ned rig, but nothing of significant size.

Anything notable about catching your biggest fish?

Levi – My biggest fish came off the same main lake point I caught my 5th fish of the day to fill my limit. After I fished the cove by the point with little luck I decided to back out to the point mainly cause the clouds had came back and that’s when I had noticed my biggest bites would happen and sure enough after a few casts and a couple of hops the 20” largie ate my jig and if you saw my picture of him he was a little messed up.

Jason – I’d found a specific pattern by about 10:00 and was running it, catching a fish almost every time I’d find a certain thing. My 19.25″ kicker was cool because I saw it flash a second before it thwanked my bait and the fight was on. Sadly, shortly after this I lost my chance to catch Levi when another biggie pulled off after doing the exact same thing.

Josh – Absolutely, it was in the last five minutes of the game. It was literally going to be my last cast and I was almost back to my vehicle. I’ve never worked so fast and so hard at reeling, catching, unhooking and photographing a fish as I did for that one. I was very nervous it wouldn’t upload before 3:00pm.

Tyler – My biggest catch was 18.50”. I caught him going back through the same stretch of water I already fished about 45 minutes before the hurricane came through. I threw between some chunk rock and wood and pulled him out. He went airborne, and as soon as I had him in the net, the jig popped out. One second later, she probably wouldn’t have been in my final five.

What is one tip on getting good photos you can give new anglers?

Levi – A couple of things are recommend are take your measuring board with you anytime you go fishing and practice taking picture with every single fish you catch. Also if you’re a visual learner like I am, I mostly learned how to from watching many Greg Blanchard videos which is why when I started tournament fishing it was like second nature. Also measure in the lowest part of your kayak to reduce the chance of your fish from flopping out of the kayak.

Jason – Like Levi said, take your board and take photos when not in a tournament. Also like what Josh said about a routine and having everything in its place so you have to think less when in the moment. I’m very superstitious about this and have to put everything back exactly where it goes before starting to fish again, haha.

Josh – What is one tip on getting good photos you can give new anglers? I’m still learning myself and I still make several mistakes, but for me the key is having everything ready and always in the same place and doing the process the same way. Having that muscle memory helps when I have those rushed or excited moments.

Tyler – I recommend practicing at home. I went in the garage, sat in my kayak and moved my board around and figured out the best orientation that is most comfortable for me. After taking a few pics, I found a way that I don’t have to worry about my identifier being cutoff and that my whole board will fit in the picture. I’ve also reached out to other people with the same boat as me and looked at the way they did it. Yes, I know there are more variables when you’re out on the water, but having a plan in place before you hit the water is important. You can tweak some things when you’re actually measuring a fish. Snap a couple pics and always review them before submitting. It’s not fun getting an 18”+ fish DQ’d…I would know.

Classic Standings & AOY Race

Well the season is about over but there are a LOT of anglers in the hunt for a Classic berth. Right now I’d say there are 10-12 spots up for grabs depending on how everyone does in the final event on Beaver Lake. Lots of movement coming for sure.

In the AOY race, Dwain Batey has a chokehold on first that I believe nobody can overcome based on the numbers. (but I’m no mathematician) There is a slight chance for a few…Kyle Long and Tyler Zengerle in particular to catch up if they dominate the last event and the Classic and Dwain stumbles in the Classic. We will see what we see.

Take a moment to check out Dwain’s article about his day on Table Rock, and subscribe to his blog – it is a great read.

Heavy Hitters Not Over?

Was looking pretty early like Kyle Long had his own chokehold on Heavy Hitters, but like last year things tighten up down the stretch. Although he has a good lead, there are some threats to the crown in this last event.

If Kyle does not upgrade…Tyler, Ryan and Jason all have an outside shot at stealing it in the last event. Tyler would need a 21.75″ to win, Ryan needs a 21.75″ to win, and Jason needs a 21.50″ to win. These are not likely on Beaver Lake, but possible!

2021 NSKA Beaver North Recap / Heavy Hitters / AOY

Beaver Lake has been pretty respectable in recent events, giving up lots of bass and a few limits. As summertime comes around it really starts to test anglers in finding decent fish. Leading up to this event pre-fishing was pretty tough, but someone usually finds a way. Shout out to Las Fajitas for sponsoring this event. I’ve eaten there for years and every time it’s the same thing – beef fajita tacos. yum.

Tournament Results

Summertime, vacations and such kept the total number of anglers a bit down on this one, with 43 hitting the water. Out of the 43, a solid 70% turned in a limit, although many of them were in the small category. It seemed that Prairie Creek was the place to be on this one, many of the top 10 caught their fish at PC. Kyle Long took the win with 88.50″ followed by Clay Johnson with 82.75″. Anytime you break 80 in the summer on Beaver is a very good day! Dwain Batey took third with 78.50″ and then the curve dropped down to where 74.25″ put you at 10th place. Check out TourneyX for the rest of the standings.

Dwain Batey caught a solid 20″ largemouth for Big Bass on this event.

Big Bass by Dwain Batey on Beaver Lake North. Source: TourneyX

Angler Roundtable

The top three bass catching dudes of the event shared how they did it in this roundtable. Kyle Long, Clay Johnson and Dwain Batey break it down:

Where did you go and why?

Kyle – I went to Prairie Creek. I pre-fished a couple other places with no real luck so I decided, why not go to the place that’s likely to be the most stained and that “should” have the best population of quality fish in the lake. I was nervous though because I’ve also blanked in there this time of year so I had a backup spot prepared.

Clay – I put in at Prairie Creek. Prairie Creek is not as clear as other parts of the lake and I have more confidence in dirtier water. I knew I could go there and throw a jig all day and get a limit and possibly a good limit.

Dwain – I chose Prairie Creek because it’s my favorite area up North, I only caught a small limit in my bracket match and lost fishing there, and that was all of the pre-fishing I had. I just felt like going in blind that area was my best shot.

Weather changed that week and got cooler and rainy. How does changing weather impact how you fish?

Kyle – Honestly I don’t pay that much attention to what the weather has been doing if it’s in the middle of a season. Early spring and late fall trends I’ll watch it close, but I really pay the most attention on what it’s doing that specific day. If there’s weather in the area, I’ll watch it close and go somewhere that I like to fish close to the launch and I always make sure I’m not in a dangerous wind. The best part about iffy weather though is it holds back the wake boats which means you can fish areas later in the morning that are generally not fishable then. Short answer…I pay a ton of attention to it on the actual day of competition and adjust accordingly.

Clay – I figured the weather change would push them to deeper water. I was sitting in 40ft of water throwing up on the bank and slowly working a jig back to me. I lost several fish but was fortunate to be able to get some good fish to the boat!

Dwain – I really didn’t change for that, the water was high already, so I had an idea of what I would do no matter what the conditions were.

What were your key baits for the day?

Kyle – Shaky head. Caught a few on a couple other baits but four of my five in my final bag were on the shaky head.

Clay – My key bait was a 1/2 ounce football jig.

Dwain – I threw a Taylor Man’s Finesse Jig, a Fluke, and a Taylor Man’s Swing Head with a Yum Spine Craw.

What do you do mentally or physically when you haven’t gotten a bite in a couple of hours during a tournament to adjust?

Kyle – I like to start dissecting what I’ve been doing and why it hasn’t been working. Usually at a macro level and work my way down. My first question is usually…Is it what I’m doing, or is it where I’m at? Then I start fine tuning those questions. If it’s what I’m doing, I probably go to depth/bank type first, types of cover or structure second, then maybe lure third in order of how to change my approach. That said, I change baits often if I haven’t caught anything recently, but a full on reset after hours of nothing will cause me to get out the confidence baits and keep them in my hand and figure out where to throw them to get bit. But if I feel like it’s where I’m at, I’m not afraid to pull the plug on an area and move. Sometimes during the drive it’s like a reset and I can clear my head and start over. But I never give up.

Clay – Last year in the tournaments I would always get discouraged and basically give up if I haven’t gotten a bite in 2 or more hours. I learned a lot from that not to ever give up! You never know when that next cast could be a good one!

Dwain – I had several hours multiple times where I didn’t get a bite, starting off with early that morning, I didn’t get a topwater bite, and it took me a while to find my first fish. Then I had a long stretch after that where I couldn’t find the second fish. I just keep covering water and looking for a good stretch, changing baits some, but still junk fishing, throwing several things as I come to different kinds of banks or cover that requires each bait I have tied on.


Video recap of my day on Beaver North – Not at Prairie Creek, sadly.

AOY Race

Six events in the books and the AOY race is clearing up a bit. There are still some contenders for the top spot with zeroes who can make up ground. Dwain is going to be very hard to catch for the overall AOY, and the top 25 is still going to change a lot before the end. Here’s the Top 25 as of today:

Heavy Hitters Update

The Heavy Hitters race continued in the same direction it has all year with Kyle Long maintaining his lead. As I know from last year though, he’s in a tough spot now where it is hard to cull, while others will gain ground each event. Still think this could be a semi-close finish.

Using the best five, he has 96.5″ total, followed by Tyler Zengerle, Terrill Standifer, Ryan Paskiewicz and Devon Esry.

No description available.

Next Up: Table Rock 2.0

2021 NSKA Pumpback Recap / Heavy Hitters / AOY Race

On a steamy Saturday in early June, the NSKA crew crossed the border into Oklahoma to take on Pumpback (a.k.a. Chimney Rock Lake) for the second year in a row. Pumpback is an interesting place and really seems to be an engineering marvel. Whatever it is, the fish are big and feisty on this lake! Shout out to Ginger Rice & Noodle Bar for sponsoring the event!

Caught this 21 which went 6.9lbs the week before the event. Of course. Source: Kayakfishingfocus.com

Pumpback Results

Of all the places NSKA fishes tournaments, I believe the most unpredictable results and chance for anyone to land a giant is highest at Pumpback. It was great to see some varied names on the leaderboard for this one. Overall, it was a feast or famine day with a skimpy 204 fish caught by the 50 anglers. Of the 50 anglers registered, only 24 (48%) turned in a limit, while seven (14%) didn’t turn in a keeper. Those are pretty tough numbers overall compared to most May/June events. I’ve wondered if the fact they really didn’t drop the water much plus the weather made it tougher than usual.

Ryan Paskiewicz didn’t have any trouble finding the fish, finishing first with 89.25″ in total. Josh King cranked his way late in the day to a 86.25″ total for second, followed by Kyle Long also with 86.25″ (those tiebreakers are heart breakers…). Justin Phillips took fourth with 85.50″ on the day.

Here were your top 10 anglers from Pumpback:

  1. Ryan Paskiewicz 89.25″
  2. Josh King 86.25″
  3. Kyle Long 86.25″
  4. Justin Phillips 85.50″
  5. Clay Johnson 84.50″
  6. Dwain Batey 84.50″
  7. Devon Esry 84.25″
  8. Jacob Webber 83.75″ (I always think, Jacob Wheeler!?!)
  9. Nathan Henthorn 83.50″
  10. Josh Howard 83.00″

Big Bass was won by Justin Brewer with a 20.75″ Smallmouth bass caught on a popper.

Justin Brewer’s 20.75″ Smallmouth took big bass on Pumpback. Source: TourneyX

One note, we had a little post-event judging discussion on a couple of photos. Advice to everyone involved…watch your photos. Take time with them. Taking the picture and submitting is a part of the sport. Staying well within the guidelines avoids any possible deductions or questions around a submission!

Angler Roundtable

The top anglers for the event share how they did it in this roundtable conversation. Ryan, Josh, Kyle and Justin break it down:

What was your overall plan for the day and did it work out as planned?

Ryan – My initial plan was to head to the back of the long arm where I missed a really big fish in practice, but as I started my commute that morning I wasn’t paying attention to my map and went around the wrong point and ended up headed to a totally different part of the lake. LOL! At that point I just committed to the area for an hour or more and when it only produced two small fish I changed my plan and left. I headed to a stretch where I had caught a few in pre-fishing. I love throwing a jig but it was evident that was not going to be the deal. After cranking and trying a few other things, I made myself commit to throwing a fluke for 2 long stretches of bank. I didn’t have a ton of confidence in the fluke personally but noticed the shad spawn was happening and it made sense to throw it. After 30-40 casts I connected with a 17-incher. This made it easier to stick with. A few casts later I hooked a 20.25-incher. From then on I mostly targeted the middle 1/3 of coves and had success.

Josh – Going into Pumpback I only had two other appearances and they didn’t turn out very well. (Dec 2020 29” and Jun 2020 65”). My plan was to fish a different area than the last time, which had been the same areas and to throw what I know and like for this time of year. That plan failed miserably. The first two hours I didn’t catch a fish. Hooked into three, but they all spit the hook. Feeling discouraged I decided to have a little fun and troll for a striper, since I was crossing the main lake to another area. It worked. I hooked into a nice hybrid and he took me for a ride. First striper/hybrid in a kayak. So I was excited…now back to the bass. I finally landed my first bass at 8:45. It took until 12:59 to get a limit. It was a decent limit of 78.00″. It wasn’t a top 10, but I was happy! Ten minutes later I caught my PB Smallie on a crankbait and jumped to 83.75”. Now I felt it was a top 10 limit and started to develop a pattern so I started grinding and found two more culls.

Kyle – My plan was to throw a fluke early and often and the go back over the areas where I caught some with a shaky head or a jig as the water started falling. But best I could tell, the water never really started falling that much and I was able to get bit on the fluke all day. I tried other stuff plenty but couldn’t get bit on anything else.

Justin – My plan was pretty simple.  Get away from everyone and head to the backs and work out from there.  The execution was a bit more complex.  I was betting the farm I’d get a good topwater bite but I wasn’t sure what might trigger the best reaction, so I tied on a multitude of topwater baits.  With all the different rods laying out I remember thinking, “Good grief.  I haven’t made a cast yet and it already looks like I’m lost.”  For the afternoon I was going to try to gauge the mood of the fish and attempt to figure it out from there. 

Key baits you caught them on and anything noteworthy?

Ryan – The weightless fluke as mentioned. I picked up some ultra cheap Walmart flukes and later went and bought a few more packs! I fished them pretty slow and most strikes came on the fluke sinking down about two feet. In the afternoon I think the fish pulled off and I should have fished it further out a bit more.

Josh – I found that fishing deep points with a Crankbait and steep windblown banks with a weightless wacky senko was the pattern for me.

Kyle – As I said the fluke was the only bait I caught fish on but I did notice that around 9:00 my bite kinda died. Around 11:00 I was just kinda watching my fluke as I was fishing it out deeper and slower and got bit. Then I tried the slower deeper retrieve again and got bit again. From then on I caught plenty by switching up my retrieve by fishing it further out and letting it fall deeper.

Justin – Once I got to my starting area I worked through every single topwater bait to no avail until lastly I picked up a homemade buzzbait.  I immediately caught 2 including one that was 19.25”.  I kept it in my hand the rest of the morning which gave me a limit by 8:30 a.m. while also pulling in another over 19”.  As fate often dictates I lost the buzzbait and tied on another one of the same color that was store bought.  Either the fish liked my homemade one a lot better or this bite was waning.  The only interest this buzzbait was generating were total misses (I’ve since made more buzzbaits including backups).  At this point I tried working a jerkbait off points.  No dice.  Then I tried throwing a 3XD crankbait and I caught one that didn’t cull.  This fish clued me into thinking they may not be actively chasing anymore because he barely caught the rear treble hook.  So, I tied on a green pumpkin stick bait and culled twice giving me my daily total. 

Most annoying trash fish at Pumpback, hybrids, drum, or catfish?

Ryan – I caught one hybrid and I did think it was a tank Smallie for a minute. I don’t really find them annoying all that much. Those suckers fight and I enjoy that despite the moment when you realize it won’t help…

Josh – Luckily no trash fish were accidentally caught. I was a bit nervous that my Smallie was a drum at first by the way it acted.

Kyle – I have actually never caught a trash fish on Pumpback. I’m not sorry about that.

Justin – The most annoying fish is, without doubt, a hybrid.  They fool me into thinking I’ve got a black bass on.  Then the disappointment is real once I get them to the yak.

What’s your PB bass, where did you catch it and on what lure?

Ryan – I have 2 22.75”. One on Lake Atkins and one on the asterisk lake, Swepco. Both caught on a Carolina rig. My personal best Smallie is 19.5” with a jig on Beaver Lake. I want to break into that 20” Smallie club really bad.

Josh – I have a hard time with PB. I haven’t weighed many and my longest is like 20.75”. But I think my PB by weight was around a six pounder caught on a private pond with a chatterbait. Last year. Still searching for that 20” and up in a tourney. My longest, a 20.75″ came during practice on Lake Ouachita for the State Championship. Cranking a squarebill right up against the bank.

Kyle – My PB is shrouded in controversy, lol. I caught a 24.25”on a jig on Lake Fork back during the original Tournament of Champions but it was a “mouth open” tourney. However, I do have a pic of that fish touching 25” but for some reason I submitted it at 24.25” with the mouth slightly open. This cost me big bass and a power pole. The only other fish I’ve ever caught that could rival it was an 8-13 I caught behind my house on Swepco and I only got the weight…not the length. So I’m gonna stick with 24.25” since that was what was accepted in that event for length and 8-13 for weight.

Justin – My PB was caught at Lake Windsor in Bella Vista.  It was a spring day with muddy water.  I was throwing a fire-tiger jerkbait in 4’ of water.  She came out, choked it and jumped.  A guy who was watching from his docks starts screaming, “That’s a 10 pounder!  That’s a 10 pounder!”.  Once I got her in we weighed it on the guys dock.  Sadly it wasn’t 10 pounds but it was a beauty of an 8 pounder.                

AOY Race Update

Well, well, the AOY race is taking shape, sorta. Honestly it is a mess and we can’t tell much right now. We have some really good anglers that have a zero which they will drop later on. We have some really good anglers with a low score they will drop later on. We have some who have some medium scores who will struggle to stay in the race. As of today, the Top 25 looks like this. YOU DO NOT WANT TO MISS THE CLASSIC. Keep grinding, tons of people are still in contention to qualify. Word on the street is this year is going to be next level in regard to trophies and swag bags for the Top 25!

As of today, the Top 25 looks like this:

Right now looking at the board, lots of anglers can compete for AOY but it appears that Dwain, Devon, Michael and Roy are in the best spots. Brewer is a dark horse to watch with two 98s.

Heavy Hitters Update

Heavy Hitters is also looking like an interesting race. Kyle Long is maintaining his lead but Devon and Terrill did good things on Pumpback to improve their position.

This time of the season it is important to look at DROPS instead of biggest fish. Who can improve things the most with big fish in the last three events?

Don’t sleep on Paskiewicz or Zengerle. They could steal it at the end.

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