By MLF Communications Staff

For the second time in two years, Alabama is ‘home sweet home’ for Bass Pro Tour angler and 2021 REDCREST champion Dustin Connell of Clanton, who caught a total of 33 bass weighing 71 pounds, 2 ounces during Monday’s Championship Round to take home the trophy and $100,000 at the event on Lewis Smith Lake in Cullman. It was Connell’s second major national win in his home state, the first being REDCREST 2021 on Lake Eufaula.

Monday marked the seventh time Connell has qualified for the Championship Round on the BPT. The MLF NOW! broadcast team coined him “Connell the Conqueror” – a moniker that just may stick after battling it out with a star-studded field of competitors and a headliner list of some of the best in the business.

Connell said he felt blessed to be able to find his honey-hole on Lewis Smith Lake and that everything lined up the way it did on the final day.

“I rolled in here during the afternoon of the Knockout Round. When I saw the fish and the opportunity in here my adrenaline started rushing and I thought, ‘Oh my goodness – this is the winning spot’,” said Connell. “I knew if I could make it into the Championship Round, it could happen. I woke up this morning and told my wife and my camera guy Brett, ‘It could happen today.’''

He attributed his final-round success in large part to the current on Lewis Smith Lake.

“The water has been high on this fishery all week, but they started pulling off two turbines in preparation for the rain today, which is a lot of current,” said Connell. “I could see a lot of spotted bass stacked up on a big rock ridge on my Lowrance ActiveTarget. Any time they got up off the bottom and on bait, I could pitch over to them, and it was an automatic bite.

“I caught a lot of my fish using my ActiveTarget, on Favorite Fishing 6-foot 10-inch and 7-foot 2-inch Hex Series rods, spooled with 15-pound Seaguar Smackdown braided line with a 12-pound Seaguar Gold Label Fluorocarbon Leader.”

He used a Googan Baits Drag N Drop and other shad-imitating baits fished "Damiki-style" on a dropshot rig.

While the numbers looked great at the end of the third period, the final day wasn’t a runaway by any means. Connell had Jordan Lee – a Cullman local who ended the day in second place – on his heels, getting within 12 pounds of him twice throughout the day.

“Kudos to Jordan, man, he caught them good,” said Connell. “I just kept listening to my ScoreTracker updates and thinking, ‘Please don’t break that 10-pound barrier’, because you can easily catch two 5-pounders here and then boom, someone else is leading.

“I caught those last few fish and was thinking ‘I just won the tournament’, but I was still checking with my competition official with three minutes left on the clock,” laughed Connell.

And what a confidence-booster for Connell – to win another major event before going into REDCREST 2022 in just a few short weeks in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

“I felt like I was in a bit of a slump after last season ended because I hadn’t made a top 10, other than REDCREST 2021,” said Connell. “I came close several times, but it just didn’t ever work out.

“The first two events this year were tough for me, so I did not see this week going the way it did. I knew something special could happen, but I’d have to find the right little zone for everything to work out.”

And find it he did, during the Knockout Round with one hour left of competition.

“Outside of the current, I think the biggest key for me this week on Smith Lake was the warm weather, followed by warm rain,” said Connell. “It kind of put all the fish in the creeks in a funk because they are wanting to spawn but weren’t really ready to get up there yet.

“The water throughout most of the fishery was high and muddy all week – but the fish up at the dam where I fished today were hardcore prespawn bass, which was a game-changer. The water temp was 52 degrees there, whereas it’s 62 up in the creeks, and those fish by the dam were all grouped up. I knew if someone could find them in that deep, clear water, they could win the tournament.”

Edwin Evers and Brent Ehrler both caught spotted bass weighing 4-10 in the third period to tie for the final-day $1,000 Berkley Big Bass Award, which will be split between the two pros, with pro Randall Tharp of Port Saint Joe, Florida winning the $3,000 Berkley Big Bass of the tournament with his 6-07 largemouth caught on Friday. Berkley awards $1,000 to the angler who weighs the heaviest bass each day and a $3,000 bonus to the angler who weighs the heaviest bass of the tournament.

The tournament featured anglers competing with a 1-08 minimum weight requirement for a bass to be deemed scorable. Minimum weights are determined individually for each competition waters that the Bass Pro Tour visits, based on the productivity, bass population and anticipated average size of fish in each fishery.



Championship Round

(Figure at far right indicates weight of angler's heaviest fish for the round)

1. Dustin Connell -- 71-02 (33) -- 3-04

2. Jordan Lee -- 56-01 (29) -- 2-13

3. Michael Neal -- 52-02 (24) -- 3-11

4. Jesse Wiggins -- 34-01 (17) -- 4-09

5. Edwin Evers -- 30-02 (13) -- 4-10

6. Wesley Strader -- 27-08 (13) -- 3-09

7. Ott DeFoe -- 25-01 (13) -- 2-12

8. Jacob Wheeler -- 24-05 (12) -- 2-14

9. Brent Ehrler -- 11-15 (5) -- 4-10

10. Randy Howell -- 9-07 (5) -- 2-00