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Virginia Pierce |
Norman Pierce |
Chicago’s
Sings the Woo’s
For
Classic Winner, Woo Daves
by Norman and Virginia Pierce
"Woo, Woo, Woo ..." is all you could hear from the
crowd as seasoned veteran pro angler, Woo Daves, from Burrowsville, Virginia,
entered Soldier Field stadium in Chicago on the final day of competition to take
the World Championship BASS Masters Classic title with 27 lbs. 13 oz.
"I primarily targeted exclusively smallmouth, using
6 lb. line and a Zoom tubejig around an abandoned seawall in front of
Chicago’s Sears Tower. On a tournament like this, you’ve got to battle
the winds and the odds with no sleep, and there are just so many
things...fishing is such a mental thing, and that’s what so great about
Rick Clunn, he’s a mental man. I fished my first BASS Classic in
1975...back then, we didn’t see the Timmy Horton’s, Kevin VanDam, Aaron
Martens or Michael Iaconelli’s. What I’m talking about is all these
young fishermen out there today....BASS has done an outstanding job over the
years of promoting the sport through television and with BASS MASTERS Magazine,
and it’s because of BASS that we’re seeing so many young anglers. What a
great sport it is when you can tell these young fishermen that you can make
a living doing this....Kids want to know what they can do to become a
professional bass fisherman, that’s the number one question we get asked.
The first thing we always tell them is, get a college education first, then
if it is still your desire, get into professional fishing. Timmy Horton
really had a tough tournament this week...but I told him he had nothing to
be ashamed of, taking the Angler of the Year title in the 1999-2000 season
is a major accomplishment, and something in which he could be very
proud."
In
prior BASS classics, Woo has had a 2nd and a 3rd place finish on his
home waters in Virginia, but the 1st place victory kept slipping past by mere
ounces, but not this year. He goes home with $100,000 as first place prize
money; and, with additional endorsements, his victory in 2000 could easily amass
to over $1,000,000. Not bad for a 25-year BASS veteran who already had two
national championships and 15 classics under his belt. This hard work and
dedication proved his strength and abilities are only getting better every year.
Woo’s sponsors going into this event were: Tracker Marine, Mercury, Zebco,
Quantum, MotorGuide, Hendrick Motor Sports, Flowmaster, Diehard Batteries, Zoom
Bait Co., Stren, Strike Zone Lures, Gator Grip Measuring Boards, Plano, Jack’s
Juice and Striker Jigs. Woo’s final weight of 27 lbs. 13 oz. eased out 2nd
place pro angler, Mark Rizk, from Antelope, California, who finished with 26
lbs. 11 oz.
At 37, Mark Rizk has only fished the BASS Western
Invitationals for three years and has qualified for the Classic twice. Mark said
his usual style of fishing is a very aggressive "assault pattern" but,
due to conditions, he had to switch over to the new "drop-shot"
finesse fishing pattern in order to find his fish. Amazingly, he had only used
the drop-shot rig in one other prior tournament. He had the heaviest five-fish
limit the last day of 10.1 lbs. which propelled him from third place to a second
place finish.
Mark learned to fish from his dad when he was only 8. He gave
up being a marine technician to follow his dream along the tournament trail and
finished 7th in his first Classic. In the ‘99-2000
season,
he finished in the top 25 and placed in the money in each of the BASS events he
fished. His sponsors are: ProCraft Boats, Mercury, Snag Proof Lures,
Worldwaters.com, Revolver Rods, VPR-Pro Team Magic, Wacko Tackle, Assault Lures,
Phil’s Props and Value Plumbing.
Shaw Grigsby, who was in second before the final round of
competition on Saturday, was bumped down into third place, with a total weight
of 24 lbs. 7 oz. Shaw, being another seasoned veteran and truly the showman,
struggled the last day to come in with just four bass, dropping him into third
place. He caught both largemouth and smallmouth bass on a Luck ‘E’ Strike G4
tubejig. Shaw, at 44, has won over $1,000,000 on the BASSMASTER Tournament Trail
and has his own TV Show, One More Cast With Shaw Grigsby. He is no stranger to
the limelight and the promotional end of the business and his sponsors include:
Triton Boats, Mercury, Zebco/Quantum, MotorGuide, Stren, Strike King, Lowrance,
Luck "E" Strike Lures, Ocean Waves, Flowmaster, Hawker Energy, Ford
and Team Joe Smith.
Tied
for fourth place was Rick Clunn and Kotaro Kiriyama with 23 lbs. 14 oz. each.
Rick was also fishing on Lake Calumet in shallow water with broken rocks. He
primarily used a Bill Norman Tiny N and a Balsa BII crankbait. Being the true
sportsman that he is, he admitted to two mistakes during the tournament. The
first was not using enough light line and the second was not spending enough
time on the main lake, obviously, he was disappointed. Rick Clunn is one of the
best anglers to ever compete in BASS tournaments. He has won over $2,000,000 on
the tournament trails, and at age 53 is still going strong. He has won 12
BASSMASTER tournaments and four BASS Masters Classics. He has finished in the
money 71% of the 250 tournaments he has fished with BASS. His sponsors include
Tracker Boats, Bass Pro Shops, Stanley Jigs, Lunker Lure, Costa Del Mar
Sunglasses, Luck "E" Strike Lures, and Rick Clunn Signature Rods and
Reels.
Kotaro Kiriyama is a native of Japan but spends half of his
time in California competing in the Western Invitationals. He has only fished
the BASS circuit for two years. He has earned a paycheck in six of the nine
events he has fished and at 29, he is moving up in the ranks at an amazingly
fast pace. Kotaro also used light 6 lb. line with zipper
worms
in either watermellon or chartreuse colors and he used a popper by Lake Police
and jerkbaits in the main lake. He also used the drop-shot rig on a 6-inch
leader. Kotaro’s sponsors are: Skeeter Boats, Yamaha Outbords, Restaffine
Custom Rods, Zipper Worms, Shimano, Zappu, Varivas Line and Nogales Hooks.
"Winning the Classic is the dream of every bass
fisherman in the world...and my dream came true today," commented Woo Daves.
And during the opening comments following the Classic, Woo went on to say,
"I have a son who is involved in fishing...He is a
super fisherman and I’m really proud of him. Probably one of the most
exciting days of my career, aside from winning this Classic, was when my son
made the Classic. Now, with the help of all this money, I’ll be able to
back my son and get him up here fishing with me. These young anglers come
along and it takes four or five years of hard work on the tournament trail
to make it, and it’s really hard to get sponsors. For some reason, a lot
of company’s in this industry won’t take a chance on young anglers; and,
these young fishermen really have to struggle for years to compete. These
young fishermen look up to us as being old pros, but I look up to them to
come out here and compete against the old pros and do the job that they do.
In my first Classic, in 1975, there was a high-school
band and maybe three people who met us when we got off the airplane. There
probably wasn’t 180 people at weigh-in and 150 of them were kin to me.
BASS has come a long way since those days and taken the Classic to new
levels. Back then, I was one of the youngest competitors, now I’m almost
the oldest. It [the Classic] means a lot more to me now, because I’m no
spring chicken, I’m 54 years old. One thing about it, an old guy can still
catch fish!"