Please select your home edition
Edition
Maritimo S Series

Newcomb holds on to win at Grand Lake

by Major League Fishing 15 Apr 2021 09:50 UTC
Andy Newcomb wins Phoenix Bass Fishing League © Tanner Lyons

At just 33 years old, Andy Newcomb has seen success at the Phoenix Bass Fishing League level. From a Toyota Series Presented by A.R.E. perspective, he's only fished events whenever they swung by his home lake - Lake of the Ozarks - and made a few top 10s.

This year, however, he decided it was time to fish the full Plains Division and see if he could qualify for the Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit and maybe win Angler of the Year or get a win along the way.

Well, Newcomb is certainly off to a great start in all of those categories.

Finishing second on Lake of the Ozarks back in March, Newcomb dropped 17 pounds, 13 ounces on Day 1 of the Plains Division event on Grand Lake presented by Fenwick to sit in ninth and keep the momentum rolling. He backed it up yesterday with 19-5 to take the lead and after weighing 15-11 today, he's now a Toyota Series champion. With 52-13 overall, Newcomb was able to hold off the charge from a stacked top 10 to bring home the big trophy and over $76,000 thanks in part to the Phoenix Bonus money.

"It's incredible," Newcomb says of his win. "I haven't really had a chance to think about it, but just the fact that I was able to edge out Chris (Jones). Chris is the man. Eric Olliverson is a buddy of mine and he catches them everywhere. I've worked hard at it and I've never felt I was truly at that level. So, to win one, I feel a little better about it. It feels really, really good."

From a fishing standpoint, Newcomb has experience on Grand, so even with limited practice he wasn't behind the ball. Not one to fish "the way everyone else does" on a lake, Newcomb spent some time looking for something off the wall before throwing in the towel and grabbing a spinnerbait.

"I always try to find something different and Monday was horrible," he says. "At that point I thought I just might have to do what everyone else was doing and catch them better. Tuesday I went out a threw that spinnerbait and caught them pretty good.

"Thursday I caught all of my fish off chunky gravel, not pea gravel, it's a little bigger is the best way I can describe it. All of my good ones came halfway back in pockets. If I went back further I could catch small keepers and towards the main lake I couldn't catch anything."

With no wind, warmer temperatures and clear skies on Day 2, things changed and Newcomb tried to force his "chunky gravel" pattern. He eventually scrapped it and thanks to a bathroom break, he found a new pattern.

"I tried for a long time to make that pattern from Day 1 work," he says of Day 2. "Finally, I rolled up to a bluff and you know, nature was calling, and I thought that it looked like a place I could catch one.

"I threw out there and had one hit it and not get it and that changed my whole tournament. Just that fish biting and not getting it made me think, 'there's fish here.' I went a little further down and had one slack that spinnerbait and not get it. I looked at my co-angler and said we were going to camp there. In the last hour and a half of the day, they turned on. I went from 9 pounds to over 19 in a hurry."

Today, with clouds, wind and cooler temps, his bigger fish didn't set up right on his bluff bank in the Elk River.

"I milked that spot today and it didn't really pan out like I thought it would. I knew I couldn't die there, so I ran to another bluff I saw on Google Maps and caught my big one and caught a couple more that culled. I stopped by my honey hole on my way back and culled again and I think that did it for me."

As far as baits go, Newcomb stuck with Grand Lake staples ­- a jig and a spinnerbait.

He threw a BOOYAH Covert Spinnerbait with a small, gold Colorado blade and bigger, silver willow blade in cleaner water or a chartreuse War Eagle spinnerbait that he swapped the painted blades on for smaller willow blades. The reason for swapping the painted blades was so that he could fish it a little faster and when he'd do that the fish would go from "getting the bait" to "swallowing it". He also added a BioSpawn ExoSwim (Feider shad) to his spinnerbait for extra bulk and dyed the tail chartreuse. He threw his blades on a 7-4 Daiwa Tatula Elite vibrating jig rod with an 8.1:1 Daiwa Tatula reel spooled with 17-pound-test Vicious Pro Elite fluorocarbon.

A half-ounce Apex Tackle Company Dirk's Jig got a key bite on Day 2 but did all of the heavy lifting today. He put a Zoom Ultravibe Speed Craw on the back and pitched it to any rock or wood he could along the bank. His jig tackle consisted of a 7-foot, 1-inch Tatula Elite rod, with the same Tatula reel as the spinnerbait and he ran 20-pound Vicious Pro Elite fluorocarbon on it.

"It's a very small jig, with just a few strands of skirt," he says. "Color didn't seem to matter. If you got it in front of one they would bite, but they just ate funny. I think I weighed every fish today on the jig and most everything the first two days on a spinnerbait."

With the trophy in hand, Newcomb is happy that his fish-to-win mentality finally paid off on the big stage. He's also hoping it may lead to an even bigger stage sooner than later.

"At the end of the day, whether I win or lose, I know I did everything I could to win," he says. "Sometimes it doesn't work out, but when it does, boy it feels really, really good.

"I want to win everything that I'm in, but at the end of the year if I'm in the top five in points it'll be a dream come true. I want to do this for a living but haven't really had the financial means to pursue it. So, if I could [qualify for the Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit] first try and not have to go through the grind and come up with the money, I think it would change my life."

Top 10 Pros:

1. Andy Newcomb - 52 - 13 (15) - $76,500 (includes $35,000 Phoenix Bonus)
2. Chris Jones - 52 - 02 (15) - $15,500
3. Kyle Minke - 51 - 15 (15) - $12,000
4. Joey Cantrell - 51 - 08 (15) - $10,000
5. TJ Martin - 49 - 04 (15) - $9,000
6. Brent Algeo - 48 - 12 (15) - $8,000
7. James Watson - 48 - 09 (15) - $7,150
8. Eric Olliverson - 48 - 00 (15) - $6,000
9. Kyle Weisenburger - 46 - 08 (15) - $5,000
10. Toby Hartsell - 45 - 13 (15) - $4,000

See complete results here...

Related Articles

Top 10 baits from Lake Guntersville
Classic, main-river ledge fishing was good, pros slurped fish up off shallower places The Toyota Series Presented by Phoenix Boats Central Division event on Lake Guntersville was a great tournament, where all sorts of patterns worked. Posted on 21 May
Top 10 baits from the Harris Chain
While many anglers didn't rely on whole tackle box, a lot of different baits worked for the field The Toyota Series Presented by Phoenix Boats Southern Division event at the Harris Chain on March 27-29 was dominated by two things: Dylan Quilatan and Lake Apopka. Posted on 3 Apr
Top 10 baits from Lake Chickamauga
Minnows were the name of the game at Chick, but there were other big players The Toyota Series Presented by Phoenix Boats Central Division tournament on Lake Chickamauga was a big success, with heavy weights and lots of fish caught. Posted on 26 Mar
Top 10 baits from the Lake of the Ozarks
Breeden's consistency triumphs in Toyota Series Presented by Phoenix Boats The Toyota Series Presented by Phoenix Boats Plains Division event at Lake of the Ozarks was one of the toughest events seen in a long time. Across the field, limits were almost impossible to come by - even the Top 10 couldn't guarantee full stringers. Posted on 6 Mar
Top 10 baits from season opener on Sam Rayburn
A variety of baits worked in frigid wintertime temperatures As usual, the season-opener of the Toyota Series Presented by Phoenix Boats Southwestern Division on Sam Rayburn Reservoir was a good event. Posted on 30 Jan
Best baits for wintertime bass fishing in Florida
There's no such thing as wasted money when it comes to fishing Browsing your local shelves or the internet for tackle is always an enjoyable and rewarding task, with no downsides. There's no such thing as wasted money when it comes to fishing - at worst, you're "eliminating water." Posted on 9 Jan
Wheeler's cranking approach for fall and winter
It can feel impossible to talk about bass fishing without also talking about forward-facing sonar These days, it can feel impossible to talk about bass fishing without also talking about forward-facing sonar and soft-plastic minnows rigged on jigheads. Posted on 4 Dec 2024
Top 10 baits from Toyota Series Championship
The jighead minnow accounted for yet another big win While the infamous jighead minnow proved to be the winning lure for rising star Hayden Marbut at the Toyota Series Championship Presented by Bass Boat Technologies, it was far from the only way to catch bass on Wheeler Lake. Posted on 13 Nov 2024
Top 10 baits from Lake of the Ozarks
What you were doing really didn't matter, just so long as you were fishing docks with a jig or worm If you want old-school fishing, there might not be a better place for it than Lake of the Ozarks late in the summer. Posted on 2 Oct 2024
Top 10 baits from Santee Cooper
An interesting variety of baits and techniques worked The Toyota Series Presented by Phoenix Boats Southern Division event was not a catchfest, but there were still some highlights to be had in the Santee Cooper showdown. Posted on 25 Sep 2024
Maritimo M600Palm Beach Motor Yachts