EVENT REGISTER
US Open Details
Pros AAA's

Kerr Won U.S. Open With Single, Super Hole

A lot of times, events at Lake Mead are won by runners – those who gun across the lake's massive expanse and make five or so casts to a point or cut, then move on.

Other times a single cut, bluff-line or creek-arm wins.

But at the most recent WON Bass U.S. Open, winner Justin Kerr of Simi Valley, Calif. focused on a single 20-yard area

that produced three consecutive limits.

He used those limits to edge runner-up Gary Dobyns by a half-pound, and in so doing, banked cash and prizes totaling $150,000. Here's how he did it.

Practice

As a western pro, Kerr's all too familiar with Mead. He'd competed at the lake plenty of times, including last April when he finished 3rd at the WON Bass Southern Pro-Am, and last May when he finished 83rd at the Mead Western FLW Series.

He was able to squeeze in 2 days of pre-practice for the Open, when he camped on the lake to maximize his time.

"I threw a topwater plug the whole time, and saw that they'd bite a topwater," he said of that overnight trip. "And to tell a little story, I got some tackle from a buddy of mine who passed away – he was a real close friend. He had a Spook that was custom-painted in 1996 or '97, and I got that Spook out – the only one he had, for some reason – and threw it.

"They wouldn't leave that Spook alone. I don't know if it was my confidence with it or what, but they ate it really well. It was kind of a blessing – like he gave his Spook to me as a last good-bye."

Kerr spent the entire pre-practice trying to locate schools of fish with the Spook. He didn't set the hook much – his main intent was to pinpoint schools.

During official practice, he checked his fish and one particular area was strongest. It was close to the launch in the lower basin. He also had three other spots with fish.

Competition

> Day 1: 5, 8.89
> Day 2: 5, 9.26
> Day 3: 5, 9.16
> Total = 15, 27.31

Kerr's plan for day 1 was to start on his close spot and spend all his time in the lower basin. He wanted to see where a lower-basin limit put him in the standings, then gauge what to do after that.

"I caught a limit out of the first spot I went to and never upgraded the rest of the day," he said. "For the second day, my gameplan was to hit the limit spot again.

"I went back and Robert Lee was sitting right on it. He moved out, I moved in, and whacked them again until 9:00. I had another limit, and again, never upgraded all day."

He went back to same spot the third day.

"It was the only thing I had," he noted. "I never expected 9 pounds a day to win – more like 11 pounds – but I just figured I could stay in the Top 5 if I went there and caught a limit. So I went back and caught my limit again in that one 20-yard section."

It didn't end there, though. He had enough weight to stay in the Top 5, but destiny called with 10 minutes of fishing left.

"When I was going back to the marina, I pulled into a cut I'd fished in the past and fired a cast to the back. One came out after the Spook, and I reeled in quickly, because I'd rather catch it on a worm (for a better landing percentage). I threw the worm back and caught a 2 1/2-pounder, which culled out a 1 1/2. That's what sealed the deal for me."

Winning Pattern Notes

Kerr threw the custom-painted Spook and a Roboworm all 3 days. He'd switch back and forth between each, and he also switched between a dropshot and splitshot with the worm.

About his winning area, he said: "It was a cove, but it was an outside cove – outside meaning on the main lake. It was protected, and had cover. It was just a real weird spot.

"In back, it had two reefs that came up with grass in the middle. The reefs weren't visible until you got up to them. You could leave the boat in about 30 feet and not disrupt anything up on the bank."



BassFan Store
Photo: BassFan Store

Along with the Spook, Kerr worked a 4 1/2" Straight Tail Roboworm (color shown: hologram shad).

He believes that schools of bass funneled bait up against the reefs each morning, which was why the bite only lasted until 9:00.

"I'd throw the Spook, worm, Spook, worm, and new groups of fish I think were cycling through there. I'd never get a bite after 9:00. It was all timing."

Also notable was he used the spot last year to finish 5th at the U.S. Open.

Winning Gear Notes

> Spook gear: 7'4" medium-action Performance Tackle rod, Shimano Core casting reel, 75-pound Evergreen braid (green), Heddon Super Spook (custom-painted with green back and pearl-white belly).

> He replaced the stock Spook hooks with No. 4 Decoy trebles.

> Dropshot gear: 6'6" medium-light Performance Tackle rod, Shimano Stradic spinning reel, 5-pound Evergreen Bass Seil fluorocarbon, 1/0 Roboworm ReBarb hook, 3/16-ounce Kanji dropshot weight (6" drop), 4 1/2-inch Roboworm Straight Tail worm (oxblood and hologram shad).

> He also threw the worm on a splitshot rig using the same equipment, except with a 3/16-ounce Mojo weight.

The Bottom Line

 

 

Pro Anglers
Event Details Results
Circuit Won Bass
Location Lake Mead
Event Date 2008-08-25
Entries: 76
Total Paid Out: $53,150.00
Co-Anglers
Place Pro Angler Fish Weight Winnings
1 Jonathan Brown 15 25.01 $13,500.00
2 Marvin Gleason 15 24.10 $4,500.00
3 John Krumsiek 15 23.71 $2,750.00
4 Tim Blanchard 14 23.20 $3,500.00
5 Darlene Ferguson 15 22.20 $1,500.00
6 Brent Benish 15 21.84 $1,250.00
7 Tim Compise 13 21.74 $1,100.00
8 Carol Martens 13 21.44 $2,500.00
9 Duane Mierop 15 21.35 $1,000.00
10 Nathan Swanson 15 21.33 $900.00
11 Trevor Young 14 20.97 $725.00
12 Larry Crim 12 20.86 $650.00
13 Joe Leonard 15 20.75 $650.00
14 Klayton Belden 14 20.53 $625.00
15 Dink Mendez 14 20.28 $600.00
16 Mark Snitow 15 20.21 $600.00
17 Dewayne Jackson 14 19.75 $1,550.00
18 Mike Brillhart 13 19.57 $500.00
19 Kurt Walters 13 19.40 $250.00
20 David Grant 12 19.17 $0.00
21 Jason Ohmes 13 19.11 $0.00
22 Roger Nelson 14 18.90 $0.00
23 Robert Cromwell 13 18.78 $0.00
24 Mary Delgado 13 18.68 $0.00
25 Chris Bond 13 18.58 $7,000.00
26 Moe Gray 13 18.51 $0.00
27 Terry Stark 10 18.48 $4,500.00
28 Jeff Hudson 12 18.45 $0.00
29 Paul Aznarez 13 18.01 $0.00
29 Brian Hammond 13 18.01 $0.00
31 Steven Thom 12 17.80 $0.00
32 Neil Smith 13 17.60 $0.00
33 Sam Walker 11 17.53 $0.00
34 Bob Ingersoll 12 17.31 $0.00
35 Bill Snyder 11 17.26 $0.00
36 William Skinner 11 17.00 $1,000.00
37 Greg Valdez 11 16.97 $0.00
38 John Land 12 16.85 $0.00
39 Thomas Yazzie 12 16.84 $1,000.00
40 Shinichi Asano 14 16.80 $0.00
41 Ken Whalen 11 16.72 $0.00
42 Chris Ricci 10 16.24 $0.00
42 Ralph Wells 11 16.24 $0.00
44 Tony Velasco 13 16.22 $0.00
45 Rod Livermore 13 16.18 $0.00
46 Stan Boyd 13 16.15 $0.00
47 Randy Mindoro 13 16.14 $0.00
48 Cory Izaj 11 16.12 $0.00
49 Liz Jones 11 16.08 $0.00
50 Thomas Elliott 13 15.82 $0.00
51 James Nelson 11 15.79 $0.00
52 Gary Robbins 10 15.59 $0.00
53 Norman Santos 11 15.20 $0.00
54 Terry Robertson 11 15.07 $0.00
55 Naoaki Fujimoto 11 14.59 $0.00
56 Laron Porter 10 14.55 $0.00
57 Douglas Minor 10 14.37 $0.00
58 James Weaver 12 14.35 $0.00
59 Mike Lavallee 11 14.33 $0.00
59 Paul A Williams 9 14.33 $0.00
61 Charles J Greco 11 14.32 $0.00
62 Tami Jennings 12 13.72 $0.00
63 Mike Guerra 9 13.47 $1,000.00
63 Ralph Smith 10 13.47 $0.00
65 Wade Strelic 11 13.39 $0.00
66 Yoshikazu Komada 9 13.21 $0.00
67 Delbert Ray Pragnell 10 12.80 $0.00
68 Kurt Palmer 10 12.58 $0.00
69 Thomas Wennerlund 9 12.47 $0.00
70 Damion Battiste 8 12.26 $0.00
71 Chad Villamor 9 12.07 $0.00
72 Howard Thaler 8 10.87 $0.00
73 Chris Bozarth 8 10.59 $0.00
74 Stephen Watte 9 9.99 $0.00
75 Changwon Park 7 9.52 $0.00
76 Rich Halliwill 5 6.72 $0.00
Won Bass
9/2008
Won Bass
7/2008