Fog Cancels Day Three: Lasyone Declared Winner




A dense fog on Sam Rayburn Reservoir forced the cancellation of the final day of competition Saturday at the Costa FLW Series Southwestern Division opener on Sam Rayburn Reservoir presented by YETI.

Dry Prong, Louisiana boater Kevin Lasyone, who led the first two days of competition and was set to start Day Three with a 10½-pound lead, was declared the winner. Lasyone’s two-day total of 10 bass weighing 53 pounds, 1 ounce, earned him the victory and a winner’s check worth $54,200.

The final 10 boaters were in the water for most of the morning, waiting for the fog to dissipate and competition to resume. When the fog did not lift, Tournament Director Ron Lappin and FLW officials made the decision to cancel the final day of competition shortly before 11 a.m., due to safety concerns.

“We didn’t see conditions improving,” Lappin said. “So, we opted on the side of safety.”

Tournament winner Lasyone said he agreed with the decision and was happy to earn his first career FLW Series win, but was still disappointed that he wasn’t going to be able to fish the final day of competition.

“I was really looking forward to fishing all day at my spot,” Lasyone said. “The past few days I’ve left the area early, trying to manage my fish for three days of competition. I was planning to fish there all day today. It’s great to get the win, though. The Good Lord blessed me and when it’s meant to be, it’s meant to be.”

Lasyone said his spot was a 150-yard stretch located in the middle of a community hole. He sat his boat in depths of about 25 feet while he made casts up to depths of 12 to 15 feet, dragging his black, blue and gold-colored ¾-ounce V&M Sneaky Snake jig amid a few isolated stumps.

“The fish that I caught were prespawn – fat and healthy,” Lasyone said. “There was a younger guy near me, but he was fishing shallow. I was making sure to keep my boat out in 25 to 30 feet. The key was really slowing down. I had to fish extremely slow.”

Lasyone said he added in a V&M Wild Thang worm with a ½-ounce weight on Friday.

“On Thursday my co-angler and I put around a dozen keepers in the boat. Friday, we caught 20 to 25. The fish were pulling in and reloading. I knew when I found this big school in practice that it had potential, but I didn’t realize that they were that big.”

When asked about the jig trailer that he had been throwing, Lasyone was coy.

“I don’t mind talking about the Sneaky Snake jig, but I’m going to keep my trailer close to the vest at this point. I will say that I was planning to throw a different one today.”

The top 10 pros on Sam Rayburn finished:
1st: Kevin Lasyone, Dry Prong, La., 10 bass, 53-1, $54,200
2nd: T.J. Goodwyn, Center, Texas, 10 bass, 42-9, $22,600
3rd: Scotty Villines, Ponca, Ark., 10 bass, 41-3, $15,500
4th: Kris Wilson, Montgomery, Texas, 10 bass, 39-5, $13,500
5th: Darold Gleason, Many, La., 10 bass, 37-11, $12,500
6th: Jon Englund, Farwell, Minn., 10 bass, 36-9, $9,750
7th: Billy Billeaud, Lafayette, La., 10 bass, 35-14, $8,400
8th: Garrett Hilton, Beaumont, Texas, 10 bass, 35-12, $7,400
9th: Jason Bonds, Lufkin, Texas, 10 bass, 35-9, $6,400
10th: Christopher Jones, Bokoshe, Okla., 10 bass, 35-6, $5,000
Full results for the entire field can be found at FLWFishing.com.

Jones caught a 9-pound, 5-ounce bass Thursday, the biggest of the tournament in the Pro Division, and earned the day’s Boater Big Bass award of $300.

Louis Ferguson of Woodville, Texas, won the Co-angler Division and a Ranger Z175 with a 90-horsepower outboard motor with a two-day total catch of 10 bass weighing 35 pounds, 14 ounces. Keith Honeycutt of Temple, Texas, finished runner-up with 10 bass weighing 30-11, good for $6,750.

The top 10 Co-anglers on Sam Rayburn finished:
1st: Louis Ferguson, Woodville, Texas, 10 bass, 35-14, Ranger Z175 with a 90-horsepower outboard motor
2nd: Keith Honeycutt, Temple, Texas, 10 bass, 30-11, $6,750
3rd: James Callaghan, DeBerry, Texas, 10 bass, 29-15, $5,600
4th: Michael Allbright, Athens, Texas, 10 bass, 27-13, $4,400
5th: James Allen Pruitt, Houston, Texas, 10 bass, 27-5, $3,700
6th: Zack Freeman, Russellville, Ark., 10 bass, 26-13, $3,250
7th: John Moon, Brookeland, Texas, 10 bass, 26-9, $2,700
8th: Andrew Brandstrom, White Bear Lake, Minn., 10 bass, 26-9, $2,100
9th: Austin Miller, Spring Hill, Kan., 10 bass, 26-5, $1,640
10th: Thomas Preiser, League City, Texas, eight bass, 25-12, $1,390
Ferguson also caught the biggest bass of the tournament in the Co-angler Division Friday, a giant weighing 10 pounds, 5 ounces that earned him the day’s Co-angler Big Bass award of $200.

 




Tell us what you think!

Lake Sam Rayburn Real Estate with Rayburn Realty

Lake Sam Rayburn Email Updates


 

Visit our Lake Sam Rayburn Sponsors!

Lake Sam Rayburn on Social Media

 
       

Lake Sam Rayburn Current Weather Alerts

There are no active watches, warnings or advisories.

 

Lake Sam Rayburn Weather Forecast

Thursday

Mostly Cloudy

Hi: 83

Thursday Night

Mostly Cloudy

Lo: 71

Friday

Slight Chance Thunderstorms

Hi: 82

Friday Night

Slight Chance Thunderstorms

Lo: 70

Saturday

Partly Sunny

Hi: 85

Saturday Night

Breezy

Lo: 73

Sunday

Chance Thunderstorms

Hi: 84

Sunday Night

Thunderstorms Likely

Lo: 70


Lake Sam Rayburn Water Level (last 30 days)


Water Level on 4/25: 161.19 (-3.21)



Lake Sam Rayburn

Fishing Report from TPWD (Apr. 24)

GOOD. Water slightly stained; 70 degrees; 3.49 feet below pool. Navigate with caution to avoid sandbars and stumps. Bass are on points and drains in shallow water spawning, and some are in a post spawn biting crankbaits and Carolina rigs. Some topwater along the grass edges. Crappie are fair in the shallows near stumps and fair on the brush piles. Some crappie are spawning near cypress trees, wade anglers can target these. White bass are schooling on main lake points but not surfacing yet. Catch some with jigs, minnows, crankbaits and jigging spoons. Catfish are slowly moving back to the points. Report by Captain Lynn Atkinson, Reel Um N Guide Service. Shad spawn is in full swing. Bass are good keying on hard clay points, grass edges and flooded timber with swim jigs, chatterbaits, topwater spooks or pop-r’s. Offshore bite is 10-20 feet on hard spots and flats, points and creek channel swings using crankbaits, Carolina rigs, shaky heads and dropshots. Crappie have finished spawning in 12-20 feet of water on brush piles and standing timber. Report by Captain Hank Harrison, Double H Precision Fishing.

More Fishing Reports