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2000 ARCHIVED NEWS: DIVISION 5


(* Denotes a Class of 23 Team)

Yamaha/Contender Kingfish Classic is Gatorbait!
Smith and Kirby Top Final Event in Division Five
Sam White, Southern Kingfish Association
July 25, 2000

Jacksonville, FL—What do you get when you combine a two-time Angler of the Year and someone that won over $100,000 tournament fishing in a single season? The answer is one heck of a competitive fishing team!

Sandy Smith and Clayton Kirby teamed up on the Gatorbait to compete in the Yamaha/Contender Kingfish Classic at Palm Cove and would walk away with the event's top prize.

The tournament's aggregate format required the competitors to find a good fish for the scales each day, but the Gatorbait team proved they were well up for the challenge. The payoff was a new Yamaha-powered Contender boat and Loadmaster trailer. The team took an early lead on Day One, boating the tournament's largest fish of the weekend at the Captain's House. "Actually, Paul and Marty at Captain Hook's tackle in St. Augustine gave us the information about fishing there," Smith reported to Regional Director John Zalud at dockside. "That's why we decided to give it a shot, and it really paid off." A short while later the fish was in the boat and the Gatorbait was headed for the scales.

Day Two found them again at the Captain's House where they were able to pursuade a 36.04 pounder to join them aboard the Mercury-powered Fountain. That fish would be enough to give them an aggregate total of 77.77 pounds (lucky sevens, anyone?) and the win. Smith also captained the new Gatorbait to a win at the Greater Jacksonville's VIP tournament, and looks to be on a roll in the East this season.

Randy Crabtree, fishing with teammates Chad Branch and Roy Boone, finished second aboard the Yamaha-powered Contender, Vamoose. A Day Two 38.84 pounder propelled them up to the tournament's runner-up spot after they weighed a 29.83 on the first day. He also learned of the hot Captain's House bite from the staff of Capt. Hooks and elected to spend his days there looking for a real smoker. His sportsmanship on Day One would be instantly rewarded the following day as they were able to find another good fish to place well in the money for the weekend. Crabtree is campaigning one of several new triple-engined Contender 36s on the SKA trail this year, proving that the boat is indeed up to the task of catching big kings.

Jake Fulmer's Jr's Dream team finished third overall with an aggregate total of 58.16 pounds. "We decided to head for Cabretta the first day," Fulmer reported. "There was a pretty good bite there early--I think we had a 31, a 20, released an 18 and lost a good one early." Small jacks proved to be the ticket for the team, who had a well full of pogies as well. "We had caught pogies off St. Simons, but once we got there the place was loaded with bait so we jigged up blue runners and jacks and that seemed to be what the fish were feeding on," he reported. The team returned on Day Two and found a respectable26.67 pounder for a total of 58.16 pounds and third place overall.

David Ward's Evinrude-powered ProLine 21, the First Shot, scored well in the tournament. The team won first place in the Class of 23 and fourth overall with a total aggregate score of 57.81 pounds. Their biggest fish of the weekend, a 30.8 pounder, would be enough to qualify them for the SKA National Championships in second place in the Class of 23.

Billy Crabtree and Todd Crawford put the Mercury-powered HydraSports Linewinder into fifth place overall with an aggregate score of 57.07 pounds. The first day, the pair elected to fish the submarine channel off Fernandina, boating a 22.56 pounder right between the channel markers in 81 degree water.Day Two found the team north of the pack at the Captain's House. They decided to fish about three miles north off another productive landmark, the Gate Station. Their biggest fish of the weekend, a 34.51 pounder, hit a ribbonfish in 38 feet of water. "He actually cut off one of the hooks on the rig," Crabtree said, "but luckily the other two hooks held and we were able to boat him. I wish we had gone there the first day--there were lots of fish in the thirties caught there."

Final Aggregate Standings
ONE FISH PER DAY, TWO FISH TOTAL
1. GATORBAIT......................77.77
Fountain/Mercury
Sandy Smith
Clayton Kirby
Anthony Guettler

2. VAMOOSE..............................68.67
Contender/Yamaha
Randy Crabtree
Chad Branch
Roy Boone

3. JR'S DREAM...............58.16
Wellcraft/Johnson
Jake Fulmer, Jr.
Ray Pojukunski
Shawn Tracy
Dave Lenhart
Marcus Whiddon

4. FIRST SHOT..................57.81
ProLine/Evinrude
David Ward
Amy Ward
Charlie Rudeen
Scott Reed

5. LINEWINDER...................................57.07
HydraSports/Mercury
Billy Crabtree
Todd Crawford

6. LAST MINUTE....................................56.89
Yamaha/Contender
Robin Cathey
Chris Cathey

7. HIGH COTTON.....................................56.04
Contender/Yamaha
Ray Dixon, Jr.
Randy Dixon
Greg Baker

8. DEALER'S CHOICE...........................56.02
Contender/Yamaha
Sid Steverson
Robbie Murray
Ike Mauldin
Lee Roddenberry
Gary Ryals

Rebecca Ann Wins Aggregate
Sam White, Southern Kingfish Association
July 17, 2000

Jacksonville, FL—Frank Strickland, Marty Rowland and Tim Short put the Yamaha-powered Fountain into the tournament's Top Aggregate spot with a two-day, two fish total of 62.50 pounds.

Thursday found the consistent Rebecca Ann team fishing in 30 feet of water south of Ponce Inlet. Strickland said the team found a good temp break well off their numbers. "The temp went from 74.6 to 79 in less than a half-mile, and there were Spanish working on glass minnows everywhere, so we decided to give it a shot there."

A short while later, a good strike indicated that there were big kings in the area as well. "We had three good fish in the boat by 11:30 AM," Short reported. "The bite was on pretty soon after we started fishing at 9."

The team's biggest king fell for a double-pogy rig. Strickland angled the fish for about thirty minutes. "We had another strike while Frank was fighting his fish," Short said. "That one turned out to be a big jack, though." The team's biggest fish of the day was long but lacked the substantial girth that makes the difference from a 35 to a forty-plus pounder.

Day Two saw the team in the same area, but the conditions had changed overnight. "After two hours, we moved south about seven or eight miles," Strickland reported. "That fish hit a whitebait on the long line and headed straight for [SKA member Billy Crabtree's] Line Winder. Luckily for us, he was really on the ball. The team cleared their downriggers and immediately powered up to get out of the way," he said. "We really owe those guys a big one, and hope to return the favor one day. Thanks, Line Winder!"

Richard Tipping and his Papa Joe team took second in the aggregate with a grand total of 61.30 pounds. They fish from a Mercury-powered Grady-White. Pete Owens' Jet Lag team finished fourth in the agg behind non-members on the Price's Right. Fred Richardson's Mercury-powered SeaCraft, Wave Dancer, was sixth with 59.40 pounds.

For more information on the GJKT, see the upcoming edition of Angler Magazine, the official publication of the SKA.

Final Aggregate Standings
1. REBECCA ANN.......62.50
Fountain/Yamaha
Frank Strickland
Marty Rowland
Tim Short

2. PAPA JOE.................61.30
Grady-White/Mercury
Richard Tipping
Tim Pugh
Jerry McLean

3. Price's Right....................61.05

4. JET LAG.......................59.85
Contender/Yamaha
Pete Owens
Darryl Thaw

5. Keeper..........................59.55

6. WAVE DANCER........................59.40
SeaCraft/Mercury
Fred Richardson
Jerry Richardson
Bill Richardson
Chuck DeGrove

7. STREAKER.........................58.35
Contender/Yamaha
Roger Walker
Paulette Walker
Greg Fields

8. Sea Bear..........................56.15

9. CREWS N II OUTBOARD.....................54.90
Grady-White/Yamaha
James Crews
Jim Tuten
Billy Roberts
Tommy Tuten

10. PROPWASH.................54.90
Wellcraft/Johnson
Richard Darlington

Early Times has Top Hook at Greater JAX
ZaZa Team Sets Record, Fails to Sign Up
Sam White, Southern Kingfish Association
July 17, 2000

Jacksonville, FL—For the second consecutive year, the tournament record at the Greater Jacksonville Kingfish Tournament has been broken. Last season, Gatorbait's Sandy Smith broke the 13-year record with a 52.55 pound king mackerel. The previous record was set in 1986 by Mike Youngblood at 50.7 pounds, the first fifty ever weighed in during the tournament's competition.

However, 2000 would prove to be a year for the record books. Ross Vilardo's Yamaha-powered Contender, the ZaZa, would be in early to the scales at Sister's Creek Park on Saturday with an even bigger fish aboard. Once the team was allowed to offload their catch to the scales, they stood by anxiously until the big board read 53.30 pounds. This earned the team not only top prize in the tournament, a new OMC-powered HydraSports and Loadmaster trailer, but also an additional $20,000 bounty for breaking the previous year's record. They are members of the SKA but unfortunately failed to sign up for their points for the tournament. This probably cost them an additional $1,000 offered by the SKA to the team catching the largest fish in the division. They literally left $1,000 on the table by not spending $10 to sign up.

The team reported catching their monster king about 2 miles offshore of the Red Tops area on a rigged ribbonfish sent down to 27 feet with the aid of a downrigger. Dr. Quentin White, marine biologist for the tournament, had accurately predicted big fish during this year's GJKT. "With the good weather, there has been an abundance of baitfish," he said, "and those conditions are just right for big kings and other predators." He was referring to Matt Pitman's unusual catch during this year's VIP tournament. The Blue Thunder team was fishing the Red Tops when a 60-plus pound wahoo came calling in the shallow water. "I was already counting the money when he rolled up at the boat," Pitman said. Regardless, there were more fish in the thirty pound class weighed this year than ever before, according to Dr. White (no relation to the author). "Both the overall size and abundance of these fish really points to a very healthy fishery," he said.

This year's tournament fell short of their anticipated goal of 1,000 boats, hosting 849 teams in 2000. But boat No. 1 would lead throughout the first day of fishing, only to fall into second place in the big fish standings. That boat, the Early Times, belonged to Butch Garvin. Garvin elected to fish with his wife Linda during the tournament in their Mercury-powered Fitz 21. Second place would earn them over $15,000 in cash and prizes, not including any of the tournament-within-a-tournament winnings.

Matt Bridgewater's Gemlux, another Yamaha-powered Contender, would be the next SKA boat in the standings at sixth place overall. However, Bridgewater also failed to register for his points in the division.

Seventh place fell to a familiar team--brothers Dave and Don Workman on the C&H Lures, a Mercury-powered Donzi 32. They were able to scale a 39.35, the smallest of the three 39-pound kings weighed in during the two day event.

Marty Lunsford and Bob Foley rounded out the top ten on the Apology None, a 22-foot Wellcraft.

Final Standings
1. ZAZA............................53.30

2. EARLY TIMES.....................45.20
Fitz/Mercury
Butch Garvin
Linda Garvin

3. Miss Melba.............................43.0

4. 2-Kool.............................41.65

5. Pok-A-Dot...............................39.80

6. GEMLUX..................................39.75

7. C&H LURES..........................39.35
Donzi/Mercury
Dave Workman, Jr.
Don Workman

8. Fishinator................................38.35

9. APOLOGY NONE.............................36.25
Wellcraft/Johnson
Marty Lunsford
Bob Foley

10. CAN'T WAIT..............................35.95
Fitz/OMC
Ted Berkstresser
Danny Casino

Garrett Puts a Full Load on the Scale, Wins Fernandina Beach KMT!
Jack Holmes, Southern Kingfish Association
July 3, 2000

Fernandina Beach, FL—Greg Garrett sent Alison Perkins to the scale with a 24 pounder on the first day of the Nassau Sportfishing Association's Fernandina Beach King Mackerel Tournament. It was just one of many of that same size that the 200 boat field was depositing on the dock. It was just for points. Mike Burch had the early lead with his 39.9 until Richard Tipping sealed the first day's leaderboard with a whopping 46.9.

The first day's bite was strong at Nassau Sound, strong enough to entice nearly half the fleet to this popular spot as day two began. "We decided not to fish with the pack," said Garrett and Perkins as they looked over the final standings on the event's leaderboard. Their Full Load was number one with a great 48.2 caught by Garrett. "We counted over 75 boats there so we moved further south." The big king struck a double rigged pogy as Garrett was reeling in the baits. "The baits were tired and needed to be changed. I guess that added movement enticed the king to eat," said Garrett. At first they thought the fish was a jack, but Garrett put the Fountain into forward and chased her down quick. "I saw the fish five times before Alison was able to stick her with the gaff. It was the biggest king we've ever caught in tournament competition," he said.

Richard Tipping runs a 20 foot Grady White called the Papa Joe. Completing his team is Tim Pugh and Jerry McClain. It's a strong team! "We were one of those boats at Nassau on day one," said the winner of the Class of 23 along with the event's $5,000 second place. They too found their big fish around three o'clock. "It hit a pogy in the prop wash right in the middle of that rain storm," said the angler Tim Pugh. "If it wasn't for the Wahoo boat cutting their lines to avoid a certain cut off we'd have never got that king."

Wayne Scarborough Jr. literally owns this tournament. His Mercury powered Contender, Pet Peeve, dominated this event last year and together with Ty Petway and Patrick Lanahan they nailed third this year with a 43.7 caught on day two. They too found their fish at Nassau. "This is the first tournament we made a decision, stuck to it, and it paid off," said Scarbough. "We were in 32 feet of water and like last year caught her on a pogy trolled way, way back." The fish hit at 1:45, just after a storm had passed.

Mike Burch's Last Draw, a Yamaha powered Contender, put together the event's best two day stringer, a 39.9 on day one and a 42.0 on day two. Now that's great fishing. "I caught the 39," said the captain. "It hit a pogy in the prop wash in about 40 feet of water off the Red Tops." Stuart Tikula caught the biggest fish he's ever seen on day two, fishing in virtually the same spot. "I caught her around 1:30 on a pogy down," said Tikula. "We had fought a jack for over an hour and a half and were pretty dejected, but as soon as we got another pattern out the big gal hit." On board with the team was Michael Busch Jr. and Bruce Woodard.

Darrell Smith, Jerry McCoy, Bob Koller, and Jerry Moulton have been fishing together for some time now aboard Smith's Contender, the Papa Styles. They are one of the hardest working teams on the circuit and from time to time it pays off. Like this tournament where the nailed fifth with a 39.3 caught by Moulton on day two. "We had a 17.6 to show for our efforts after the first day. You don't go to the Nationals catching snakes, not in this tough division," said Smith. "We really worked hard on day two. We kept downsizing our tackle and kept fresh baits in the water. It all paid off." They were in Nassau Sound fishing in 35 feet of water.

Second place in the Class of 23 fell to the tournament's ninth place boat, the Clean Sweep, a Mercury powered ProLine with a 36.9. The 18 foot boat with Jim Wormhoudt and Brandon Blackmon on board made catching big fish look easy.

Twisted earned third place in the Class of 23 and 13th in the tournament.

Final Standings
1. FULL LOAD....................48.2
Fountain/Mercury
Greg Garrett
Alison Perkins

2. PAPA JOE....................46.9
Grady White/Mercury
Richard Tipping
Tim Pugh
Jerry McClain

3. PET PEEVE....................43.7
Contender/Mercury
Wayne Scarborough Jr.
Ty Petway
Patrick Lanahan

4. LAST DRAW....................42.0
Contender/Yamaha
Mike Burch
Michael Busch Jr.
Bruce Woodard
Stewart Pikula

5. PAPA STYLES....................39.3
Contender/Yamaha
Darrell Smith
Jerry McCoy
Bob Kollor
Jerry Moulton

6. Reel Addiction....................38.2

7. LINE WINDER....................37.7
Hydra Sports/Mercury
Billy Crabtree
Todd Crawford

8. BARELY LEGAL....................37.6
Contender/Yamaha
Tommy Rady
Paul Charis
Nelson Railey
Andy Seeker

9. CLEAN SWEEP....................36.9
ProLine/Mercury
Jim Wormhoudt
Brandon Blackmon

10. SEAFOOD KITCHEN....................36.3
Fountain/Mercury
Russell Stuart

TFC Win Falls to Smokers Only
Gove Wins Tourney and Tops Class of 23
Sam White, Southern Kingfish Association
June 19, 2000

Conditions: Day One
Winds: South at 15, Gusting to 25 mph.
Seas: 4-6 ft.
Temp: mid to upper 80s

Conditions: Day Two
Same, Scattered PM Thunderstorms

Jacksonville, FL—Once Larry Gove’s 23-foot Mako had pulled into the weigh in dock for the Tournament Fishermen’s Championship, he reached into the fishbox and pulled out a small “teenager” kingfish and laid him on the deck. He reached back into the box and pulled out a very respectable king mackerel next, probably pushing thirty pounds. He laid that one on the deck and reached back into the box for the third time. That’s when I got the camera ready because I knew this was going to be a good fish. And good it was, pulling the scales down to 41.85 pounds. The smoker king would hold up throughout the remainder of the tournament to earn Gove the win and the top prize of a Mercury-powered 19-foot ProLine boat and Loadmaster trailer. “He hit a ribbonfish 20 feet down on the downrigger in 52 feet of water,” Gove said later. “We had several other good kings before we bagged that one. He fought for only about 15 minutes--two short runs and then he just rolled up at the boat and that was it. In fact, the smaller fish ran much stronger than the 40.”

The TFC, held out of Beach Marine in Jacksonville, Florida, is a favorite among the fishermen of the SKA. This year’s prize package included not one but two new ProLine boats, both powered by 90 hp. Mercury outboards and sitting atop Loadmaster trailers. Second place in the event was an aggregate prize for the combined biggest fish from both days one and two. That prize would go to a pair of the most experienced king mackerel fishermen around--Lowell Breeding and Randy Darsey on the PK’s Mistake. Breeding’s inboard-powered Shamrock has been a fixture on the Florida tournament scene for many years now, a tribute to the success this team has had over the years. And it looks like they are off to a strong season in 2000 as well with a second in the TFC. Breeding, Darsey and his junior angler Jacob Darsey bagged a 35.65 on Day One and returned to the scales on Day Two with a 31.45 aboard.

The Papa Styles team of Darrell Smith, Jerry Moulton, Bob Koller and Jerry McCoy won third place in the event. After hearing about the strong bite off Matanzas, the team headed there at top speed on Day Two, hoping to get in on the early bite there. After deploying the spread, however, a nearly disastrous mistake was made. Smith related the tale: “You see, the clicker wasn’t on the top shotgun line. I kept hearing this ‘zzzipp, zzzipp’ sound and I looked up at the reel. About three-quarters of the spool was already gone! So I grabbed the rod and started getting some line back.” After a long initial run, the fish was brought aboard in short order. The team also released seven other kingfish that were a bit smaller than the keeper they had aboard.

The next tournament in the SKA’s Division Five is the Nassau Sportfishing Association’s KMT, to be held June 29-July 2 at Fernandina Harbor Marina. Contact Chuck Tuell at 904-277-8617 for more information. And for a complete recap of the TFC, see the upcoming issue of Angler Magazine--the official publication of the SKA.

Final Standings
IN ORDER OF BIGGEST FISH--PK'S MISTAKE WON SECOND PLACE FOR THE TOURNAMENT, WHICH WAS AN AGGREGATE SCORE OF TWO FISH
1. *SMOKERS ONLY..............................41.85
Mako/Mercury
Larry Gove

2. PAPA STYLES..............................38.25
Contender/Yamaha
Darrell Smith
Jerry Moulton
Jerry McCoy
Bob Koller

3. PK'S MISTAKE..............................35.65
Shamrock/Ford
Lowell Breeding
Randy Darsey
Jacob Darsey

4. DOWN PAT..............................35.50
Fountain/Mercury
Pat Pergason
Judy Pergason
Tony Munoz

5. Magic Carpet..............................34.95

6. PET PEEVE..............................34.15
Contender/Mercury
Wayne Scarborough
Ty Petway
Patrick Lanahan

7. DOUBLE TROUBLE..............................33.45
Proline/Mercury
Johnny Sanders
Lamar O'Steen

8. *INSIDE CHANCE..............................34.10
Mako/OMC
Paul Dozier
AJ Simonetta
David Beam

9. HOOKMUP..............................32.05
Fountain/Mercury
Rick Miller, Jr.
Rusty Miller
Rick Miller III
Shannon Miller

10. MY HONEY 3..............................31.10
Contender/Yamaha
Rusty Russell
Chris Stephens
Rocky McKindles

11. TRIVIAL PURSUIT..............................30.35
Fountain/Mercury
Clay Phillips
Ronnie Worsham

12. *MY YANKEE..............................30.25
Sea Era/Evinrude
Ronnie Liles
Danny Liles
David Nelson
Chris Thireton

13. SNATCH UM..............................29.80
Fountain/Mercury
Billy Patterson
Mark Titus
Carl Titus
Tyler Patterson

14. *SNAGULA..............................29.35
Proline/Yamaha
Daniel Kerr
Jason Arteaga

15. Southern Image..............................29.05

SKA WELLCRAFT JUNIOR ANGLERS
1. Jacob Darsey.....PK's Mistake     2. Tyler Patterson.....Snatch-Um    3. Ricky Raleigh.....Victoria's Secret

River Marine Fishing Team Nails Kingbuster
Sam White, Southern Kingfish Association
June 12, 2000

Conditions: Day One
Sunny, highs in the mid 80s
Seas: 4-6 ft.
Wind: East-northeast and increasing throughout the day

Conditions: Day Two
Partly Cloudy, late afternoon thunderstorms
Seas: 4-6 ft.
Wind: East-northeast 15-20 kts.

St. Augustine, FL—The Donzi/Mercury Kingbuster 400 is one of the premier tournaments on the SKA trail, and this year's event was certainly no different. Up for grabs this year was a 2000 Donzi 23 powered by a Mercury 250 hp. outboard and sitting atop a Loadmaster trailer. That prize would eventually fall into the hands of Charlie Lyons, captain of the River Marine fishing team. And what an amazing story Lyons had to tell at the end of Day Two.

Unfortunately, the northeasterly winds had pushed the normally plentiful schools of pogies off the beach, scattering the bait and making it difficult if not impossible to locate live bait for most everyone. "We had to use what we could come up with," teammate Roy Henderson related. "Ribbonfish and dead Spanish mackerel." As the team was clearing the lines, a big kingfish suddenly took interest in the dead Spanish in the propwash. Lyons said, "I picked up the rod and twitched it twice and there he was."

The fish hit in 20 feet of water, then smoked the drag as he proceeded offshore. Since the lines had already been cleared, the team quickly gave chase and soon their prize was aboard. At the dock, Lyons refused to guess at the fish's weight. "It's kind of a jinx," he said. "After fishing in Biloxi, you lose your ability to judge the size of the fish, I think. He's a nice one, though." Nice, indeed. As the digital scale settled on 44.80 pounds, Lyons and Henderson were in the driver's seat. Only one other team would even come close, giving the River Marine team their first major win of the season and the keys to the new Donzi 23.

Second place in the Kingbuster 400 fell to a member of the Class of 23, proving that small boats can catch fish when the conditions allow. David and Amy Ward, fishing from an Evinrude-powered ProLine 21, managed to bag a 41.60 pounder on the second day of fishing. They were the only other team able to nail a forty-plus in the two days of fishing. Team captain David Ward said, " We decided to fish off Ponce Inlet in about 40-some feet of water."

Victoria's Secret, captained by Ricky Raleigh, placed fourth overall behind non-members on the Pure Heat. Raleigh is campaigning one of the new Contender 36s this year, and he used the boat's range and speed in the ocean to make the long run to the south. "It seemed like there was a late bite," Vicky Raleigh reported. "We already had a decent one in the bag, but we still wanted one better."

The next tournament in Division Five is the Tournament Fishermen's Championship, held out of Beach Marine in Jacksonville, FL. For more information, contact Billy Patterson at 904-463-4391. And for a complete recap of the Kingbuster 400, see the upcoming issue of Angler Magazine, the official publication of the SKA.

Final Standings

1. RIVER MARINE....................44.80
Fountain/Mercury
Charlie Lyons
Roy Henderson
Keith Segars

2. FIRST SHOT....................41.60
ProLine/Evinrude
David Ward
Amy Ward

3. Pure Heat....................38.60

4. VICTORIA'S SECRET....................38.10
Contender/Yamaha
Ricky Raleigh
Vicky Raleigh
Mallory Thrift
Shelly Schmit

5. REBECCA ANN....................37.10
Fountain/Yamaha
Frank Strickland
Marty Rowland
Tim Short

6. MILLER TYME....................33.90
Contender/Yamaha
Joseph Miller
Douglas Miller
Monty Peters

7. Seawatch....................33.60

8. STREAKER....................33.60
Contender/Yamaha
Roger Walker
Paulette Walker
Greg Fields

9. MY YANKEE....................32.20
Sea Era/Evinrude
Ronnie Liles
Daryl Liles
Chris Thierrier
David Nelson
David Nelson, Jr.

10. OCEAN WAVES....................31.90
Dakota/Mercury
Fred Carlson
Tim Shea
John Shea
Bob Parrish
Kevin Carlson
Norm Welter

11. MISS MARY LOU....................31.70
Shoal Cat/Honda
Ken Mecom
Brian Mayfield

12. VAMOOSE....................31.10
Contender/Yamaha
Randy Crabtree
Roy Boone
Chad Branch

13. Seandy....................31.30

14. Riggd Up....................30.50

15. PAP'S REVENGE....................29.60
HydraSports/OMC
Richard Gaddis, Sr.
Vera Gaddis

SKA WELLCRAFT JUNIOR ANGLERS
1. Marcus Rehedden--JR's Dream     2. Jacob Darsey--P.K.'s Mistake    3. Christopher Shoap--Black Cloud

 
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