
Blake Sylvester only caught five keeper bass during Wednesday’s first round of the B.A.S.S. Nation Championship, but he made each bite count.
Sylvester, a 29-year-old resident of Plaquemine, La., weighed a limit of five largemouth that totaled 16-10. That gave him an early lead in the 3-day event on Pickwick Lake where $176,800 in cash and prizes is up for grabs, not to mention three precious slots in the 2021 Bassmaster Classic.
Sylvester, the B.A.S.S. Nation champ from the Bayou State, finished 3rd overall in the Central Regional held last month at Toledo Bend Reservoir, and he kept the hot hand on Pickwick. He was the second boat on the water Wednesday (following only last year’s Nation Championship winner Cody Hollen of Beaverton, Ore.), and Sylvester wasted no time getting quality bass in his livewell.
“I caught my two biggest fish first thing this morning,” Sylvester said. “There was a 4 3/4-pounder and another one that was just shy of 4 pounds. I wanted to get something going this morning. You can’t win a tournament on day 1, but you definitely can lose a tournament on day 1.”
Despite the fast start, Sylvester struggled to find a consistent bite. He estimated he only caught 10 bass, and half of those were undersized. He said he pounded two particular areas but didn’t boat his fifth keeper until 1:30 p.m., only minutes before he needed to scramble back to McFarland Park for weigh-in.
“I’m from Louisiana, so you know I’m looking for grass,” Sylvester said. “It wasn’t hard to find it, but I couldn’t find many fish to go with that grass. Nothing was easy today. It was a grind.”
Still, Sylvester has had momentum on his side recently, and it’s showing in his recent results. He said he can stay atop the leaderboard at Pickwick if he has a little luck Thursday.
“A couple more 4-pounders would be nice,” he said with a laugh. “But it’s gonna be tough again. I was the No. 2 boat out today, but the area I’m on isn’t (a time-sensitive bite) and I haven’t seen anybody else fishing it. I’m confident, but I just don’t know what I have left there. I’ve got a couple of other spots I think I can get bit on if I need it.”
Eddie Levin of Westerville, Ohio, is in 2nd place with 16-01. The 27-year-old firefighter caught his best bass before the wind picked up midmorning.
“My first fish was about a 5-pounder or so, but I lost it,” Levin said. “I had all my weight by 9 o’clock, but my area got blown out and I kind of went pre-fishing. I caught a lot more fish doing that. I really hope the wind lays down tomorrow. If it does, I think you’re going to see a really big bag.”
Josh Ray of Alexander, Ark., is 3rd in the boater division (15-15), followed by Richard Lindgren of Lakeville, Minn., (15-04) and Josh Hubbard of Braidwood, Ill., (15-01).
B.A.S.S. Nation champions from 46 states are competing, with only North Dakota, Connecticut, Hawaii and Alaska not represented. Hollen, who received an automatic berth as the defending champ, and Paralyzed Veterans of American Angler of the Year Ken Carter bumped the boater division to 48 total competitors.
The Top 10 anglers following Thursday’s weigh-in will survive the cut and fish Friday’s championship round, as will the leading two anglers from each of the five B.A.S.S. Nation regions (Southeast, Northeast, Northern, Western and Central) if they aren’t among the overall Top 10.
The top co-angler, who will win $10,000 in paid entries to 2021 Bassmaster Opens, will also fish Friday, and so will any co-angler whose two-day total exceeds the 10th-place total in the boater division.