Lakeland, Florida pro catches 19 bass totaling 56-5 in final day
Championship Round to earn top prize of $150,000
Across a decorated 17-year career that includes a REDCREST
victory, one of the few accomplishments that had eluded Bobby Lane
was a national-tour win in his home state of Florida. He’d come
close – in fact, the last time the Bass Pro Tour visited the Harris
Chain of Lakes, Lane finished second to Ott DeFoe – but had yet to
lift a trophy in his home state.
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Pro Bobby Lane of Lakeland, Florida,
rallied to a comeback win today at the MLF Bass Pro Tour Suzuki
Marine Stage 2 Presented by YETI at Harris Chain of Lakes, catching
19 bass totaling 56-5 to earn the top prize of $150,000. (Photo:
Business Wire)
Midway through the Championship Round at the Major League
Fishing (MLF) Bass Pro Tour Suzuki Marine Stage 2 Presented by YETI
at the Harris Chain of Lakes, it looked like Lane would have to
keep waiting.
Matt Becker and Mark Davis shot out of the starting blocks, both
amassing more than 30 pounds in the first period. Lane, meanwhile,
started on the opposite end of Lake Apopka from where he’d caught
most of his fish due to the strong south wind and struggled to gain
traction. Halfway through Period 2, he’d tallied just 17 pounds, 6
ounces and trailed Davis by more than 20 pounds – and as the wind
continued to increase in intensity, presenting baits and generating
bites became more difficult by the minute.
But while the action slowed for everyone else, Lane used his
Sunshine State savvy to steadily stack weight onto his total. He
boated six bass in an hour, which included a 5-8 and a 4-9, to pull
within one scorable bass of Davis’ lead at the end of the second
period. He took over the top spot on SCORETRACKER® for the first
time all tournament 30 minutes into the final frame. Finally, a
flurry of five fish totaling 16-10 brought his total to 56-5 and
sealed the long-awaited win – and $150,000 prize that comes with it
– for the Lakeland native.
Link to Hi-Res Photo of Suzuki Marine Stage 2 Presented by
YETI Winner Bobby Lane Link to Photo Gallery: Anglers get on
the juice during Stage 2 Championship Round Link to Photo
Gallery: Stage 2 Championship Round underway on the Harris
Chain Link to HD Video of Highlights from Day 4 Championship
Round Competition
“I've been close before,” Lane said of winning in Florida. “I
finished second here last time to Ott DeFoe, and to finally seal
the deal on one in the home state – in a big, national tournament,
not just a team event or something like that, but to get a big
tournament – means the world to me.”
Prior to the start of practice, much of the dock talk centered
on a recent fish kill that occurred on Lake Apopka. That news made
Lane, like most of the field, hesitant to venture into the
southernmost lake on the Harris Chain, especially since doing so
meant a long run from takeoff each morning at Venetian Gardens.
Lane almost didn’t even check Apopka during his two days of
practice. It wasn’t until the second day, when he was in nearby
Lake Beauclair, that he figured he might as well lock through the
Apopka canal and at least check it out.
The first place he stopped, he got six bites without lifting his
Power-Poles. His next spot – the area where he ultimately caught
most of his fish during competition – produced similar action.
“I make maybe 15, 20 flips, and I have five bites in a row, and
two of them were big ones,” Lane said. “And I’m like, oh boy.”
Lane started Day 1 of competition in Lake Harris due to his late
boat number, but after that, he was all-in on Apopka, which wound
up producing six of the Top 10 finishers. He said the key to
finding concentrations of bass was locating hard-bottom areas next
to patches of emergent reeds. He thinks bass were staging on the
hard bottom before spawning on the reeds.
“When you drop your Power-Poles, it sounds like you’re hitting
rocks,” Lane said. “I think with all the grass being eradicated out
of that lake, those fish have nowhere else to go but to swim to
shore, and I think with the full moon we had during practice, all
those fish that wanted to spawn on this moon were moving into that
hard spot that I was on.”
While his area was full of fish, Lane said slow presentations
were the only way to get them to bite. He locked an Abu Garcia
Fantasista X 7-foot, 6-inch, heavy flipping stick in his hands with
an Abu Garcia Premier REVO reel spooled with 50-pound-test
Durabraid. Using a 5/0 Berkley Fusion19 hook and either a 5/16- or
3/8-ounce Epic Tungsten weight, he flipped a 6-inch Berkley
PowerBait MaxScent The General to every reed in the area, slowly
dragging the worm along the bottom.
Even for Lane, that could be painstaking. He joked that he was
“tired of looking at the same 50 or 60-yard stretch of reeds.” But
for an angler born and raised in Florida, wielding a flipping stick
and slowly picking apart cover made for “a breath of fresh
air.”
“Forward-facing sonar has its place, but it did not have its
place on the Harris Chain of Lakes this week,” Lane said. “I live
and breathe on that flipping stick. It usually gets me close
sometimes. I’ve made a lot of money with it. But to actually seal
the deal with it in my hands, there’s nothing sweeter.”
Far from the only accomplished flipper to find the bite in
Apopka, Sunday’s Championship Round set up for an old-school
slugfest. Lane’s first decision of the day almost took him out of
the fight.
Seeing the wind buffeting his prime stretch, Lane decided to
start the morning on the more protected southern end of the lake.
On his third flip, he caught a 5-8, which reinforced his confidence
in the area. But over the next 1 hour, 20 minutes, he would only
get one more bite, a 2-pounder.
Watching his deficit to Becker and Davis balloon, Lane decided
he had no choice but to battle the wind on the north end. The
conditions made it almost impossible to present his bait
accurately, but skillful boat positioning and patience allowed him
to keep stacking up weight when no one else in the field could.
“You really had to get the boat positioned properly when you
find the piece of cover you want to fish, drop your Power-Poles,
and focus on keeping your bait on the bottom no matter what the
wind was doing,” Lane explained. “That was the hardest task today
was trying to keep that bait down there where the fish live.”
Lane committed to fighting the wind for the rest of the day,
figuring the weather system would eventually blow through the area.
With about an hour left before lines out, the gusts finally
relented. Right on cue, he caught a 2-pounder, then a 2-6 (which
Lane dove onto the front deck of his Phoenix to wrangle after it
shook free of his hook). A 5-10, his biggest bass of the day,
followed by a 4-8 five minutes later sealed his victory.
“I decided I was going to stay there until the wind shifted
directions, which it did, and it just got better and better and
better and better,” Lane said. “The minute that wind laid down, it
was just perfect. Big one, big one, big one.”
Lane’s wife, Madeline; his daughter, Lexi; and his son-in-law,
Kenny, cheered from shore as they watched him swing those final few
fish into the boat. When time expired, he trolled over to them to
exchange hugs, the perfect cap to the Florida win he’d been waiting
for.
“That’s one thing you dream of is winning a huge tournament in
your home state,” Lane said. “I’ve had a lot of close calls. They
couldn’t stop me today.”
The top 10 pros at the Suzuki Marine Stage 2 Presented by YETI
on the Harris Chain of Lakes finished:
1st: Bobby Lane, Lakeland, Fla., 19 bass,
56-5, $150,000 2nd: Mark Davis, Mount Ida, Ark., 14 bass, 38-13,
$45,000 3rd: Matt Becker, Ten Mile, Tenn., 15 bass, 36-15, $35,000
4th: Terry Scroggins, San Mateo, Fla., 13 bass, 36-7, $30,000 5th:
Fletcher Shryock, Guntersville, Ala., 11 bass, 27-15, $25,000 6th:
Jacob Wheeler, Harrison, Tenn., eight bass, 23-9, $23,000 7th:
Jacob Wall, New Hope, Ala., seven bass, 16-10, $22,000 8th: James
Elam, Tulsa, Okla., five bass, 10-3, $21,000 9th: Andy Morgan,
Dayton, Tenn., four bass, 7-6, $20,500 10th: Keith Poche, Pike
Road, Ala., one bass, 2-2, $20,000
A complete list of results can be found at
MajorLeagueFishing.com.
Overall there were 97 scorable bass weighing 256 pounds, 5
ounces caught by the final 10 pros on Sunday.
Jacob Wheeler of Harrison, Tennessee, won the Berkley Big Bass
Award on Sunday – his third Big Bass Award of the week – with a
7-pound, 1-ounce largemouth that he caught in the third period.
Berkley awards $1,000 to the angler who weighs the heaviest bass
each day.
A new angler has taken the lead in the Fishing Clash Angler of
the Year competition: pro Jacob Wall of New Hope, Alabama. The
third-year Bass Pro Tour pro finished seventh on the Harris Chain
after a third-place showing at Stage 1 on Lake Conroe.
Wall leads Jacob Wheeler, who has claimed the AOY crown in three
of the past four years, by just one point. The two of them have a
bit of cushion over Stage 1 winner Justin Cooper, who sits 10
points back of Wheeler.
The four-day tournament, hosted by Discover Lake County Florida,
showcased 66 of the top professional anglers in the world,
competing for a purse of $650,000, including a top payout of
$150,000 and valuable Angler of the Year (AOY) points in hopes of
qualifying for the General Tire Heavy Hitters all-star event and
REDCREST 2026, the Bass Pro Tour championship.
Television coverage of the Suzuki Marine Stage 2 at the Harris
Chain of Lakes Presented by YETI will premiere as a two-hour
episode starting at 7 a.m. ET, on Saturday, Sept. 13 on Discovery,
with the Championship Round premiering the following Saturday on
Sept. 20. New MLF episodes premiere each Saturday morning on
Discovery, with re-airings on Outdoor Channel.
The 2025 Bass Pro Tour features a field of 66 of the top
professional anglers in the world, competing across seven
regular-season tournaments around the country, for millions of
dollars and valuable points to qualify for the annual Heavy Hitters
all-star event and the REDCREST 2026 championship.
Proud sponsors of the 2025 MLF Bass Pro Tour include: 7Brew
Coffee, Abu Garcia, Athletic Brewing, Bass Force, B&W Trailer
Hitches, Bass Pro Shops, Berkley, BUBBA, E3 Sports Apparel, Fishing
Clash, Grizzly, Lowrance, Mercury, MillerTech, Mossy Oak Fishing,
NITRO, O’Reilly Auto Parts, Power-Pole, Rapala, Star brite, Suzuki
Marine and Toyota.
For complete details and updated information on Major League
Fishing and the Bass Pro Tour, visit MajorLeagueFishing.com. For
regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow MLF’s
social media outlets at Facebook, X, Instagram and YouTube.
About Major League
Fishing
Major League Fishing (MLF) is the world’s largest
tournament-fishing organization, producing more than 250 events
annually at some of the most prestigious fisheries in the world,
while broadcasting to America’s living rooms on CBS, Discovery
Channel, Outdoor Channel, CBS Sports Network, World Fishing Network
and on demand on MyOutdoorTV (MOTV). Headquartered in Benton,
Kentucky, the MLF roster of bass anglers includes the world’s top
pros and more than 30,000 competitors in all 50 states and 20
countries. Since its founding in 2011, MLF has advanced the sport
of competitive fishing through its premier television broadcasts
and livestreams and is dedicated to improving the quality of life
for bass through research, education, fisheries enhancement and
fish care.
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