BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Boyd Duckett accomplished Sunday what no Bassmaster Classic angler had been able to in the 37-year history of the marquee event. The Demopolis, Ala., Bassmaster Elite Series pro became the first home-state angler to win the Classic and the $500,000 top prize.
The 46-year-old brought in the final round’s biggest five-bass limit — 17 pounds, 13 ounces — to climb from fourth place. His three-day total of 48-10 was enough to hold off California Bassmaster Elite Series angler Skeet Reese by 6 ounces after finish of the three-day event at Alabama’s Lay Lake.
Reese, who was participating in his seventh Classic, brought in a limit of 15-14, but it wasn’t enough to secure his first Classic championship. He finished with 48-4.
Second-round leader and two-time Classic champion Kevin VanDam of Kalamazoo, Mich,, fell to third with 45-4. Indiana’s Terry McWilliams, a representative of the BASS Federation Nation, the grassroots organization of BASS, finished fourth with 45-3. Texan Gary Klein rounded out the top five with 44-5.
Jason Quinn of Lake Wylie, S.C., was the highest-finishing Carolinas’ angler, ending in 9th place with 15 bass weighing 38 pounds, 1 ounces, and collected $20,500.
Randy Howell, a Littleton native and former Lake Gaston guide who lives in Springville, Ala., ended 13th after catching 15 bass weighing 36-15 and won $14,250.
Brent Long of Catawba, who qualified after fishing for the South Carolina Federation team, finished 49th and earned $10,000.
Duckett sealed his dramatic victory with the Purolator Big Bass of the Day for which he earned a $1,000 premium — a 6-pound, 9-ounce largemouth — caught at 2 p.m.
“I’m so proud I brought the Classic title to my home state,” he said. “It’s every angler’s dream to be able to get here and to win it is just fantastic.”
Duckett was among a contingent of nine Alabama pros in the Classic this week and was one of the pre-Classic favorites because of his extensive experiences at Lay Lake. He used a lipless crankbait and flipped a Berkley Powerbait Chigger Craw into grass.
Reese, competing in his eighth Classic, was disappointed at his second-place finish.
“Second hurts; it really does,” said Reese, who also caught his limit of bass with a Berkley Chigger Craw. “You don’t get that many opportunities to win a Bassmaster Classic. This was a golden opportunity this week. But I won’t say I let it slip away because I fished the best I could.”
With the third-place finish, VanDam, a three-time Toyota Tundra Bassmaster Angler of the Year, opened up a larger lead in the BASS all-time money earnings race over Missourri’s Denny Brauer. VanDam, 39, has amassed more than $2 million in winnings but lamented the lost opportunity.
“I’ll be honest with you; I’m definitely disappointed,” he said. “But I didn’t leave anything out there. I fished my guts out.”
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