California, Arizona qualify teams for High School Championship
Apr 30th, 2017 by OutdoorsFIRST
Modified Apr 30th, 2017 at 12:00 AM
California and Arizona will both be sending teams to the 2017 Costa Bassmaster High School National Championship presented by DICK’S Sporting Goods this summer in Tennessee.
Adrian Murar and Zachary Featherston of California and Tyler Derman and Marlin Paschal of Arizona earned berths in the championship today in the first-ever Costa Bassmaster High School Western Open on California’s Lake Oroville.
Murar and Featherston won the one-day event with 11.23 pounds.
“I had never seen this lake until today,” said Murar, 18. “We fished the bridge pilings right near launch, and we caught more than 100 fish there today.”
The biggest of the hundred they caught weighed in at 2.77 pounds, which shows how hard it was to catch fish of any size. Most anglers who crossed the stage said catching fish was no problem; it was catching big fish that was the issue.
The biggest bass weighed in was 3.77 pounds, caught by the second-place team of Derman and Paschal from Arizona.
Murar and Featherston said they never slowed down all day.
“We caught fish all day long,” said Featherston, 16, who fishes Oroville a lot. “We were in the right place. The lake is dropping, so fish went to the bridge pilings where they know there’s always structure.”
The bass were suspended on the pilings in 10 feet of water, in a spot that’s more than 100 feet deep.
The teammates used an underspin setup with a BladeRunner in black shad and a 3.8-inch Keitech swimbait in pro blue as their primary lure. They also used a 6-inch Huddleston swimbait in hitch color and switched to Senkos and darter heads later in the morning looking for a bigger bite.
“It was fish after fish after fish,” said Murar. “It was fun.”
For Arizona’s Derman and Paschal, it was drop shotting that led them to 10.39 pounds.
“Drop shots nailed it,” said Paschal.
Drop shots, underspins, spinnerbaits and shaky heads were the main lures for most of the field. All 16 high school teams managed a five-bass limit.
“We were thrilled to be able to offer a High School Open out here in the West,” said Mike Landy, youth director for the California B.A.S.S. Nation. “We only expect this to grow over time. We’re already excited about next year.”
Neither of the four championship qualifiers – Murar, Featherston, Derman or Paschal – have ever been to Tennessee. Both teams are looking forward to representing the West on Kentucky Lake, June 22-24.