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 The Kansas Angler Online
 and Swim Tail Lures
 |  BASS Returns to Kentucky Lake
      for Pivotal Bassmaster Central Open September 15, 2008 - Competing for a first-place
      prize of $45,000 as well as for points to qualify for the 2009
      Bassmaster Classic and Elite Series, Bassmaster Central Open
      pros will be on Kentucky Lake Sept. 25-27 out of Paris, Tenn. As the second of three events on the 2008 Central
      Open circuit, the Tennessee tournament will be pivotal in the
      season-long points race. The tournament's outcome will establish
      the points race front-runners going into 2008 season-ender at
      Texas' Lake Texoma, set for Oct. 30  Nov. 1 out of Denison,
      Texas. The three pros who finish at the top of the points
      standings after Texoma will qualify for the 2009 Classic, Feb.
      20-22 on the Red River out of Shreveport-Bossier City, La. The
      top 10 Central Open pros will be invited to advance to the Bassmaster
      Elite Series. Fishing fans will be able to track the Kentucky
      Lake competition at http://www.Bassmaster.com. Live video and
      real-time leaderboards will be online at 2:30 p.m. CT, Sept.
      25-27. Bassmaster.com also will post photo galleries and daily
      results. The public is invited to attend the daily launches
      at 6:30 a.m. CT, and weigh-ins at 2:30 p.m., at Paris Landing
      State Park, 16055 Highway 79 N., Buchanan, Tenn. All events are
      free and open to the public. Through the past 30 years, Kentucky Lake has hosted
      nine BASS pro-level events. The most recent was an Elite tournament
      in June, when Kevin VanDam of Kalamazoo, Mich., posted a four-day
      weight of 84 pounds, 13 ounces. The haul gave him his fourth
      Elite victory - more than any other pro in history - and jumped
      him to the top of the Elite points standings. Two months later,
      he won the points race to claim his fourth Toyota Tundra Bassmaster
      Angler of the Year title. The Kentucky Lake pattern that VanDam and other
      Elite anglers milked in June - cranking on deep-water ledges
      - might not be as sweet for the Open pros in September. It's
      more likely that the Open anglers will find more success in not
      camping out on the ledges - and not getting stuck on any other
      one game plan, according to Open competitor Sammy Burks of Joplin,
      Mo.  "It's
      going to be hard to find any one pattern that's going to work
      for three consecutive days," Burks said. "I think 'junk
      fishing' is going to play a big role in this tournament."
 Burks said he's monitoring the lake's surface temperature
      to gauge if the shad, the main forage for bass, are on the move. "The shad and bass have been on the ledges
      all summer long. It's that surface temperature that dictates
      when the shad disperse," Burks said. "When they do,
      they're going to scatter all over the lake. We might find balls
      of shad in 40 feet of water and 2 feet of water, on the flats,
      in the backs of coves and in the middle of the lake. "And where there's shad, there's going to
      be bass," he said. Burks is in seventh place in the Central Open standings
      and in contention for the 2009 Classic and Elite Series qualification.
      He likes his chances to advance in points at Kentucky Lake, where
      he finished 19th in a field of 109 at a 2006 Bassmaster Open. "I have a lot of confidence going into this
      one," he said. Burks is one of about 175 pros entered in next
      week's Open. All are gunning for the prized top spots in the
      standings, now led by Billy McCaghren Jr. of Mayflower, Ark.,
      who won the season opener on the Red River in Louisiana.  Another pro
      shooting for top honors is Jamie Laiche of Gonzales, La., who
      is in a three-way tie for 10th place in the points race. During
      a recent scouting trip to Kentucky Lake, he found 40 to 50 fish
      a day, many of them keeper largemouths, he said.
 "There's a lot of big bass in Kentucky. It's
      going to be a good tournament," he said. Also during the Central Open, co-anglers will compete
      for a first-place prize of a $32,000 boat rig. Hosts of the Kentucky Lake event include Henry
      County Alliance; the city of Paris, Tenn.; and Buchanan Resort.
      Those planning to attend the Open event can go to http://www.VisitHenryCo.com
      for information on accommodations, restaurants, activities and
      area attractions, such as a 60-foot replica of the Eiffel Tower.
 
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