www.ProAnglers.com:
“Living the WBT Dream”
By the time you read this column the
WBT Championship on Lake Hamilton,
in Hot Springs Arkansas will have
crowned it’s reining 2008 Champion.
Besides all of the quickly growing
opportunities blossoming from the
three-year old WBT trail, the 2008
WBT Champion will have earned a
berth into the coveted BASSMASTER
CLASSIC! GEICO Power Sports (www.Geico.com)
Professional Bass Angler Christiana
Bradley of Bealeton, VA has been
competing on the Women’s Bassmaster
Tour since it’s inception in 2006,
rates the WBT competitive spirit
second to none. “Simply log unto (www.Bassmaster.com
) and click on ‘WBT’, the
home page alone mirrors that of the
Bassmaster Elite Series Anglers! Add
to the equation only 20% of the
100-Boat field quality for the
Championship and we have some
serious Pit-Bull attitudes when we
cast-for cash,” laughs Bradley. (www.ChristianaBradley.com)
Don’t let Christie Bradley’s
beautiful smile mislead you.
Mentored by her older brother Gary,
Christiana started competing on
Virginia’s local and regional bass
circuits back in 1998. Having been
molded with attributes framed with
versatility and persistence this
Triton/Mercury
(www.MercuryMarine.com) sponsored
anglers strength is Flipping and
Pitching in heavy cover.“My best
finish this year came on Lake
Lewisville, Texas where I finished
4th”, recalls Bradley. No
doubt………..Christiana flipped her way
to a $4,000.00 payday, scored the
only five-bass limit of the final
day and anchored her 26.11lb creel
with a five pound bass, only to lose
the Lake Lewisville title to Kim
Bain by a mere 1.01lbs. The
difference in dollars and cents
however was approximately
$47,000.00! With the final
qualifying tournament of 2008 on
Clark’s Hill Lake in Evans, GA and a
shot to qualify for the 2008
Championship at Lake Hamilton on the
line, Bradley knew she needed a
strong consistent pattern and a
Top-20 finish if her Championship
Contender Dream were to become a
reality. “For two weekends in a roll
my husband Mike and I traveled
nine-hours to Clarks Hill before the
official off-limits period, then I
added four good days of
official-practice prior to the
tournament,” says Bradley.
WBT rules call for all anglers to
compete the first two-days, but only
advance the Top-20
Anglers/Co-Anglers into Day #3,
where each of the competing anglers
will collect tournament checks and
higher points based on their final
day performance. For Bradley there
was no options, Christie had to
produce or her 2008 WBT Tour was
over.
“I felt really confident going into
this tournament, although the lake
conditions had changed drastically
and the water level was fifteen feet
below normal pool, I was totally
focused and ready for competition.”
Equipped with an arsenal of G-Loomis
rods matched with Shimano reels,
Christiana Bradley’s TR 21X Triton’s
front deck revealed her baits of
choice. Harvesting a one-two-three
rotation covering the entire water
column, Christie scanned the surface
with a Fish Belly soft plastic
popper (www.FishBelly.com),
scratched the bottom with a Hot-Shot
Lures 1/8 oz Shakey Head (www.HotShotLures.com
) tied to 12lb Seaguar
Fluorocarbon (www.Seaguar.com),
but her go-to-bait was a 3/8oz
double-willow leaf Baby Bass pattern
spinnerbait. “The spinnerbait
allowed me the versatility to vary
my retrieve speeds and cover a
variety of depths.” Concentrating on
specific areas where clay banks made
a transition with scattered patches
of Hydrillia vegetation, Christiana
Bradley continued to load her
G-Loomis rod making long cast as she
maneuvered her Baby Bass spinnerbait
in and out of isolated pockets of
Hydrillia. Her efforts paid
dividends at the scales as Bradley
found herself idling in 19th place
going into Day#2. “I was definitely
in the zone and prepared to stick
with my spinnerbait pattern for
Competition Day#2, in fact I tried
to duplicate the Baby Bass skirt by
hand tying two extra spinnerbaits
the night before,” reflected
Bradley. Jumping on plane her
Mercury 250 Opti Max ProXS outboard
powered her back to the isolated
patches of Hydrillia along a barren
clay bank point. “These scattered
pods of Hydrillia formed pockets and
ditches making for excellent ambush
points for largemouth bass.” Holding
her Triton Boat in 25 feet of water
Christie proceeded to work her
spinnerbait through her bass
targets. “On my third cast I set the
hook on a largemouth bass in the
2.5lb range, but before I could land
it the bass made a strong run and
broke-off swimming away with my best
spinnerbait!” Devastated by the lost
of her Baby Bass spinnerbait,
coupled with her inability to
produce keeper size bass on her
duplicates, the GIECO Pro Angler
continued effortlessly making
cast-after-cast, knowing that a
single keeper size bass could very
well be her ticket to the
Championship.
When the scales were closed on
Day #2 at Clark’s Hill Lake,
Christiana Bradley dropped to 39th
place, ending her 2008 WBT tour with
an overall WBT 27th Place finish.
Christie missed qualifying for the
2008 WBT Championship by seven
places. Then with a look of
enthusiasm in her eyes, while
wearing a huge patented Christie
Bradley smile she stated positively,
“Hey, I’m living my dream, I
finished 18th in my Rookie year, and
then 15th last year. B.A.S.S. has
blessed us with the Women’s
Bassmaster Tour, and every year it
gets bigger and better with
additional incentives! Besides, the
2009 WBT schedule has two locations
I have fished previously and the
trail next year lends itself to
anglers familiar with river systems,
and I consider rivers one of my
strengths!”
Pennsylvania’s Bridget Allen is
quick to agree with Bradley.
“Christiana is absolutely correct, I
too am excited with the 2009 WBT
schedule. Returning to both
Alabama’s Lake Neely Henry in April
and then making our final stop at
Tennessee’s Old Hickory in September
has certainly been a major boost in
my confidence level!” Competing in
her first year as a Professional
Bass Angler on the Women’s
Bassmaster Tour, Bridget Allen may
not have won any tournaments nor did
she qualify for the WBT
Championship! (Final overall 2008
standings for Allen, 33rd Place.)
However, this Philadelphia Police
Officer (Bridget’s full time job,
when not competing professionally on
the WBT.) definitely turned some
heads and made her presence known.
“I competed as a Co-Angler in 2007,
and although I drew some wonderful
Pro partners, I learned that my
goals and angling abilities were
limited competing from the back
deck,” says Allen. After a 22nd
finish on Lake Guntersville, Alabama
in 2007, and an overall standing
finish of 45th Place, Triton Boats (www.TritonBoats.com)
Professional Angler Bridget Allen
made her transitional plans to
switch her angling status.
Recapping her 2008 Rookie Year,
competing on bodies of water Bridget
had never fished before, and the
thrill of standing in the WBT
weigh-in line side-by-side with
Legendary female anglers like Penny
Berryman, Lucy Mize, Pam-Martin
Wells, Diana Clark and list goes on,
Bridget Allen knew in her heart she
was now living her dream.
“My best angling performance this
year came on Old Hickory Lake in
Tennessee,” echoes the Mercury
(www.MercuryMarine.com) sponsored
WBT Rookie. Continuing, “I finished
12th in this event, collected my
first WBT B.A.S.S. check ($1,100.00)
as a professional angler,
catapulting me into the final event
at Clarks Hill with the opportunity
to qualify for the WBT
Championship.” Banking on her
angling strengths Bridget Allen’s
arsenal consisted of ALL Star
Buzzbait Rods (www.AllStarrods.com),
saddled to Pflueger President Series
Baitcaster Reels (www.PfluegerFishing.com)
spooled with 20lb Berkley
monofilament line, tied to 1/2oz
Gold-on-Gold Buzzbaits. “I
concentrated on points with clay
banks, and varied my retrieve speed
as the bite dictated,” said Allen.
The WBT Rookie came out swinging for
the fences, narrowly missing
qualifying for the WBT Championship
with a 28th place finish on Clarks
Hill. “I only practice two days, due
to mechanical problems. However,
during those two days I felt I
assembled a very strong topwater
pattern with my buzzbait. In fact I
landed several bass in the 5lb range
rotating through my milk-run.” Then
with a bass-eating grin Allen gave
me a wry smile, “Sometimes I think
it’s easier to catch criminals than
it is bass!”
“To actually be able to say I can
compete with the best female anglers
in the world, is a dream come true!”
With a highly competitive positive
attitude Yamamoto Baits Bridget
Allen is one WBT Pro Angler to
follow come 2009! (www.Baits.com)
God Bless and Best Bass’n
Bill Decoteau is an outdoor
journalist with a strong passion for
pursuing the Black Bass. His
activities include covering and
photographing professional bass
trails, the New England Paralyzed
Veterans of America Bass Trail, as
well as emceeing benefit tournaments
such as Maine’s Special Olympics.
Bill may also be found on the water
filming his television show The Bass
Bureau…………Where the Road meets the
Water or in the classroom holding
bass seminars, sharing winning
techniques utilized by some of the
nationals Top-Bass Pro’s.
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