Bishop stems the tide at Ross Barnett

Gene Bishop of Ridgeland, Miss., stumbled the first day with less than 9 pounds, only to rocket to the winner’s circle.

RIDGELAND, Miss. — Some of the top bass pros in the nation crashed and burned after making epic catches during the Bass Pro Shops Central Open presented by Allstate at Ross Barnett Reservoir. Gene Bishop of Ridgeland, Miss., stumbled the first day with less than 9 pounds, only to rocket to the winner’s circle.

Bishop’s stunning 26-pound, 1-ounce limit the second day vaulted him to the lead. He slammed the door on the other anglers that made the Top 12 cut on Saturday with a limit that weighed 21 pounds for a total of 55 pounds, 14 ounces.

Local knowledge worked for and against Bishop during the tournament. He stumbled the first day by fishing one of his offshore sweet spots with a Carolina rig.

On the following two days, he fished the shallow pad stems that produced his heavy limits.

“I was fishing a Barnett Special,” Bishop said. “Everybody around here knows about it.”

The Barnett Special is an 8-inch Junebug Zoom Lizard. He Texas-rigged it with a 4/0 hook and a ¼ ounce bullet sinker.

“I was barely crawling it back over the pad stems lying on the bottom in 2 feet of water,” Bishop said.

If Bishop fishes the final two Central Opens this year, his Ross Barnett victory will earn him a ticket to the 2016 Bassmaster Classic at Oklahoma’s Grand Lake.

Meanwhile, Bishop is happy to pocket $8,405.00 and take possession of a Triton 19TrX rigged with a Mercury 200 Pro XS and prop, a Triton tandem axle trailer, a MotorGuide X3 70#/45” 24v trolling motor and a Lowrance Elite 5 graph.

Jay Brainard of Vinita, Okla., fishing his first Bassmaster Open at age 28, finished a close second with 54 pounds, 8 ounces. While all the other anglers that made the top 12 cut plied shallow pad stems and reeds, Brainard skipped a 3/8-ounce Strike King spinnerbait under boat docks.

He swapped the original No. 4 blade for a bigger No. 4 ½ gold blade and slow-rolled the spinnerbait 4 to 5 feet deep.

“If I got a hard strike, I couldn’t hook them,” he said. “Even a trailer hook didn’t help. I missed a lot of fish.”

The ones that stayed hooked felt like heavy weight when they inhaled the spinnerbait, he added.

“I love skipping and flipping docks,” he said. “It’s my favorite thing to do.”

Doing his favorite thing earned Brainard $19,963.00 and 199 points toward qualifying for the Bassmaster Elite Series.

Oklahoma Elite Series pro Tommy Biffle collected $14,972.00 for nabbing third place with 52 pounds, 9 ounces. Most anglers would have been tickled with that. However, Biffle had his heart set on winning at Ross Barnett and punching his ticket early to the 2016 Classic on a lake that he knows well.

Although Biffle is famous for working his magic with a Quantum flippin’ stick, he caught his bass this time around with casting presentations. His primary bait was a Carolina-rigged Gene Larew Biffle-O Lizard, which he dragged through pad stems.

“I just couldn’t catch them flippin’ in practice,” Biffle said. “They weren’t on the bank.”

On the final day, Biffle moved closer to the bank to catch his 21-pound, 10-ounce limit. The water had warmed to 65 degrees and the bass were more accommodating near the shoreline than they had been in practice.

Bill Mccoun of Amarillo, Texas, who will be 70 years old in a few months, was the first co-angler to weigh in Saturday. His three-day total of 25 pounds, 7 ounces was never bested.

Mccoun literally sweated out the weigh-in while sitting in the hot seat in bright, warm sunlight. Sunshine was a rare commodity this week. When he accepted his trophy, Mccoun suggested that an air conditioner be installed in the hot seat corner.

After thanking his wife of 50 years, Mccoun praised the pro partners he had fished with throughout the three-day event. He also recommended that anyone that has thought about fishing a Bassmaster Open should do so.

“My partner the first day was Wes Rogers,” Mccoun said. “He gave me the baits that I caught all my fish with. After he caught his limit, he stayed on his fish until I caught mine.”

That bait was a Texas-rigged Zoom Brush Hog.

“You had to drag it,” Mccoun said. “They didn’t want it hopping.”

Beside the hefty trophy that Mccoun carried off the stage, he was given the keys to a brand new Triton 179 TrX with a Mercury 115 Pro XS and prop, a Triton single axle trailer, a MotorGuide X3 45#/45” 12v trolling motor and a Lowrance Mark 5 graph.

Arkansas Elite Series pro Kevin Short weighed an 8-pounder on the first day of the Ross Barnett Open. It proved to be the BASS PRO SHOPS BIG BASS, which was worth $750.00.

The BASS PRO SHOPS BIG BASS on the co-angler side was a 7-pound, 3-ounce largemouth caught by Gary Sullivan of Woodson, Texas. That heavyweight earned Sullivan $250.00.