By B.A.S.S. Communications Staff
COLUMBIA, S.C. — A Top 10 lake in the country.
That's how Patrick Walters views Lake Murray in his home state of South Carolina.
With spring in full swing, Walters believes the Bassmaster Elite Series event at Murray will showcase just how good the central the fishery can be.
Competition days are scheduled today through Sundaywith takeoffs from Dreher Island State Park each day at 7 a.m. ET and weigh-ins back at the park each day at 3 p.m. A full field of 104 anglers will compete the first two days, with the Top 50 anglers advancing to Day 3. The Top 10 remaining pros will compete for the blue trophy and a $100,000 first-place prize on Sunday.
It’s been nearly 12 years since the Elite Series visited Columbia, S.C. In that event, Casey Ashley caught 61 pounds, 3 ounces to take home the victory. Since then, Murray has grown into an incredibly healthy bass fishery, yet it has flown largely under the radar in terms of national acclaim.
“It has been fishing good for two or three years now,” Walters said. “In the BFL there this year, 20 pounds barely got you paid. It has been fishing really well. You aren’t going to bust 35 pounds, but there is an abundant amount of 25- to 29-pound bags. It won’t be quite like that when we are there, but it has a lot of 3- to 5-pounders in it.”
Walters said he expects the bass to be in multiple stages. They have been spawning for the past several weeks, but the Summerville, S.C., native hopes a brief cold snap last weekend will have pushed some of the remaining spawners back a little.
“I think it will set up really well with the little bit of cold weather,” Walters said. “A lot of fish were starting to spawn and the cold front will hopefully elongate it more. There will still be some fish spawning, but there are a good bit of fish already done. The postspawn bite is going to be good. It is going to be a good tournament.”
With the bass being in the spawn and postspawn phase, the weights may not be as heavy as they would be in a full-blown prespawn event. But 6-, 7- and even 8-pounders won’t be an uncommon sight. With the water level near full pool, it should remain stable throughout the event.
The competitors will be able to spread out and catch bass in a variety of ways. Walters believes the entire lake will play, from the east side all the way west to the Saluda and Little Saluda rivers.
“It’s not like one creek turns on,” Walters said. “The whole lake will play. Someone is going to catch them upriver. One or two people will [make the] Top 10 up there. Downlake will play. Midlake will play. It will eat a 100-boat field. The cool thing about this lake is not everyone has to be doing the same thing to make the Top 10.”
The entire fishery features plenty of docks as well as rocky banks and wood. It also has a little bit of vegetation that includes gator and willow grass, among others. Up the rivers and on the west side of the lake, shad are the predominant baitfish.
“There are big creeks and pockets up there,” Walters said. “You’ll be fishing the shad spawn and shad-eaters in general. It is typically dirtier water. There are a lot of tournaments won up that way.”
As you move downlake, blueback herring start to show up and, depending on how the weather trends between now and tournament time, those herring may start their spawning rituals – and that could be the X-factor of the event.
“Midlake and down is where the herring deal starts going down. It is more open, deeper water and deeper pockets. It has more of a Hartwell feel to it,” Walters said. “I think they will be starting to kick off their spawn. I think there were some up there already.”
While many of the herring lakes feature spotted bass, largemouth dominate Murray, and Walters says they go after herring exactly like spotted bass do. If the herring spawn starts, topwater baits may come heavily into play.
“It has 97 percent largemouth in it,” Walters said. “They act the same way (as spotted bass), you just catch bigger fish. If they start spawning, they will spawn on shallow points and in the dirt. It’s like a normal shad spawn except they won’t spawn on grass like the shad do.”
Walters anticipated big bags will be caught, but consistency will be the key to taking home a win. If an angler can average 18 to 19 pounds a day, he believes that will put them in contention.