
All captions: Steve Wright



Moynaghâs key bait was a wacky-rigged worm. While the bulk of the spawn was over on Lake Norman, there were still enough spawning beds to make it a successful pattern.


Stephens was in 38th place after Day 1 at Lake Norman, but shot up to fourth place with a 13-14 limit on Day 2. He had a one-two combination punch working for him.


Lane, who was coming off a 14th place finish at Kentucky Lake, relied on a one-two punch like Stephens â a topwater bait, followed with wacky-rigged soft plastic stick worm. He targeted fry-guarding and spawning bass.



The 23-year-old Walters was a highly-successful angler in the college ranks at the University of South Carolina. He seems to have a bright future as a pro. Walters was leading at Lake Norman after Day 1 with a limit weighing 15-12.



Mitchell noted that heâs one of the only pro anglers from his home state of Delaware. He seemed plenty comfortable at Lake Norman. His Day 2 bag of 13-4 vaulted him from 43rd place on Day 1 to eighth on Day 2, and he maintained that spot in the final.



Montgomery loves Lake Norman, and he won the last Bass Pro Shops Open here in 2014. But Montgomery noted that fishing was as tough as heâd ever seen it here, due to a combination of most bass being in the postspawn phase and heavy fishing pressure on the lake.



Pike had a strong, consistent three days at Lake Norman, placing a close second on Day with a 15-6 limit and never falling below his sixth-place finish.



Paquette had a strong second day at Lake Norman to rise from 28th place to fifth, and he maintained that on the final day.


Evans was the one angler in the Top 12 who concentrated offshore. He fished points and shoals, starting in about 9 feet of water early, then moving to depths of about 17 feet as the sun got higher.


George had a consistent three days, staying among the top eight in the standings. He said he started each day with an open mind, as the bite seemed to change by the day.



Lintnerâs second-day bag of 14-6 put him in second place going into the final, but Wesley Straderâs 5-pound, 2-ounce lead was just too much to overcome on what proved to be the toughest day for everyone on Lake Norman.

