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Tournament News Powered By Lake Drive MarineTournament News Powered By Lake Drive Marine


(Provided by R&B Circuit)

Gipson/Noe Bed Fish Their Way to R&B Win at WawaseeGipson/Noe Bed Fish Their Way to R&B Win at Wawasee

John Gipson, Jr., (Battle Creek) and Tom Noe (Benton Harbor) have set the pace for the R&B Circuit West Division. They won the Wawasee event April 29th with 14.35 pounds and pocketed $731.

Friday during pre-practice they spent hours moving through the many channels on Lake Wawasee looking for bedding fish. The found the bigger fisher in channels with dark water and had 30 waypoints.

During the tournament, conditions were not ideal and many of their best fish were directly in the wind. However, this turned into an advantage.

"If you could see the fish, they would not bite. The wind made us less visible and the fish less wary," Noe explained.

They made long casts with swim jigs matched with Missile Baits Shockwave trailers to the beds and had a limit by 9 a.m. They covered four different channels and caught 12 legal sized fish.

Denny Cook (Auburn) and Rick Sawyer (Albion) rotated through three spots on Lake Wawasee to finish second ($443) with 12.45 pounds. All three spots were weed edges on flats between 6-8 feet of water. It was a slow bite as they boated just 7 keepers, with three of those coming in the last hour. One of those fish was the Native Pride Tackle Big Bass - a 4.20-pound largemouth that earned them another $336.

Ken Plencner (South Bend) and Neil Vanderbeizen (Otsego, MI) brought in 11.24 pounds of fish to finish third ($332). Without practice to develop a game plan, they began fishing traditional smallmouth spawning grounds. They rotated through three areas and dragged tube baits. When they came across a bed, they set up camp and slung tubes at them.

With seven keepers that were all identical in size, they left the lake and explored channels looking for a bigger largemouth where they found their biggest fish, 3.27 pounds, and worked it for 10 minutes before it fell to a drop shot rig. They made another critical cull by flipping a jig under a dock in the same channel.

More information can be found at www.randbbasscircuit.com.