Bass Fishing Feb - Mar 2020 | Page 55

SOUTHERN-FRIED BEDDING BRONZE Where to look when Southern smallmouths head to spawn By Sean Ostruszka ny time a tournament is a spawning beatdown, it’s bound to get anglers’ attention. Well, the 2019 FLW Tour event on Cherokee Lake certainly got the sport’s attention, and perhaps in a way like no tournament before. Sure, the weather conditions lined up perfectly, pushing waves of egg-laden bass to the bank, and the pros commenced a full-on blitzkrieg assault. At times, anglers were catching bass off beds like they were bluegills. There’s one catch that made this event unlike any before it, though: The pros weren’t sight-fishing largemouths, as one might expect on a Southern reservoir. They were focused solely on spawning smallmouths. That’s not to say spawning smallmouths haven’t come into play on Southern reser- voirs before. Many tournaments in the Ozarks, Tennessee and Kentucky have seen anglers contend in tournaments by either focusing on, or at least supplement- ing, their bags with bedding brown fish. But those anglers were almost always in the minority. The sport simply hadn’t seen spawning smallmouths come into play on a Southern reservoir on such a scale as this before. On Northern fisheries, sure. But not in the South. Yet, as Cherokee exposed, many Southern reservoirs have some healthy smallmouth populations, and when condi- tions line up for the spawn, bronze bass can be tournament winners. And even if you’re not fishing tournaments … “When the smallmouth go on beds and you can find them, it can get really, really fun,” says MLF Bass Pro Tour pro Ott DeFoe. The finding them part is the catch. So, here’s where to look. FEBRUARY-MARCH 2020 | MAJORLEAGUEFISHING.COM | FLWFISHING.COM 53