Arizona Fish Report
Lake Oroville Fish Report for 1-29-2013
Lake Oroville Fish Report for 1-29-2013
Barr, Walker grab tournament title in Western Conference showdown 19.Jan.2013
Lake Oroville - Oroville, CA (Butte County)
by SportfishingReport.com Staff
1-29-2013
Website
OROVILLE, Calif. - The Eastern Washington University team of Jarred Walker of Moses Lake, Wash., and Nick Barr of Lacey, Wash., won the FLW College Fishing Western Conference event on Lake Oroville Saturday with five bass weighing 9 pounds, 8 ounces. The victory earned the club $2,000 and advanced the team to the FLW College Fishing Western Conference Invitational tournament.
"We put together a game plan and tried out a few different things until we found something that worked," said Barr, a marketing major. "We didn't end up catching a single fish until about 10 o'clock. Jarred and I haven't fished for months. Our lakes in Washington are frozen over. I haven't touched a rod until last week when we were getting our gear ready."
The Eastern Washington University team holds up its first-place check after winning the FLW College Fishing event on Lake Oroville. "It was the first time we've ever been out to the lake before," added Barr. "We are from eastern Washington, so it is about a 15-hour drive. We fished Shasta before, but never fished Lake Oroville."
"Our first fish came on a Yamamoto Hula grub," said Walker, a construction management major. "We ran around and caught another fish on a drop-shot Senko. Within the last hour, we caught three in a row on the drop-shot (rig). Later in the day, the fish had started to come up shallower, and we were catching them in about 15 feet of water."
"It was slow fishing," Barr continued. "We literally let the Senko sit for over a minute. We were using the new 5-pound fluorocarbon from Sufix, and we think the light line was key to catching some of our fish. Another piece to the puzzle was Lamiglas's Inifinity drop-shot rods. When combined with our light line, they were absolutely crucial in detecting bites and fighting the ferocious spots."
The top 15 teams that advanced to the Western Conference Invitational tournament are:
1st: Eastern Washington University - Jarred Walker, Moses Lake, Wash., and Nick Barr, Lacey, Wash.(five bass, 9-8, $2,000)
2nd: UC Santa Cruz - Jason Coslovich, San Jose, Calif., and Tyler Brownell, San Diego, Calif. (five bass, 9-8, $1,000)
3rd: Oregon State University - Zach MacDonald, Willits, Calif., and Ryan Sparks, Haines, Alaska (five bass, 8-11, $500)
4th: Sacramento State - Thomas Kanemoto, Elk Grove, Calif., and Kyle Derbish, San Bernardino, Calif. (five bass, 8-8, $500)
5th: UC Davis - Christopher Beck, Diamond Springs, Calif., and Michael Manas, Carmel Valley, Calif. (five bass, 8-8, $500)
6th: University of Nevada, Reno - Anthony Milano and Brandon Cramer, both of Petaluma, Calif. (five bass, 8-3)
7th: CSU-Long Beach - Alex Cox, Long Beach, Calif., Justin Gangel, Valley Center, Calif. (five bass, 8-0)
8th: University of the Pacific - Garrett Brown, Stockton, Calif., and Siddhartha Nag, Cupertino, Calif. (five bass, 7-10)
9th: CSU Monterey Bay - Andrew Sjostrom, Mariposa, Calif., and Joshua Smith, Clovis, Calif. (five bass, 7-9)
10th: Colorado State University - Alex Stuart and Austin Young, both of Highlands Ranch, Colo. (five bass, 7-9)
11th: University of Oregon - Kaitlin Tanner, Missoula, Mont., and Eric Lee, Mather, Ore. (five bass, 7-7)
12th: Sonoma State University - Adrien Briens and Ernest Gorham, both of Carlsbad, Calif. (five bass, 7-7)
13th: CSU Monterey Bay - Matthew Diaz and Sebastian Resendiz, both of Castroville, Calif. (five bass, 7-5)
14th: California State University - Alex Pisarki, Costa Mesa, Calif., and Alfredo Gutierrez, Inglewood, Calif. (five bass, 7-4)
15th: Fresno State - Kong Moua and Cynthia Vang, both of Fresno, Calif. (five bass, 6-14)
Complete results can be found at CollegeFishing.com.
The top-15 college teams from the FLW College Fishing Lake Oroville event pose for a photo. Three regular-season qualifying events are held in each conference - Central, Northern, Southeastern, Texas and Western. The top 15 teams from each qualifying tournament will advance to one of five two-day FLW College Fishing Conference Invitational tournaments, where the first-place team wins $4,000 for their club. The top 10 teams from each Conference Invitational advance to the 2014 FLW College Fishing National Championship.
College Fishing is free to enter. All participants must be registered, full-time undergraduate students at a four-year college or university and members of a fishing club recognized by their college or university.
The next FLW College Western Conference qualifying tournament is scheduled for Feb. 23 at Lake Roosevelt in Roosevelt, Ariz., and is hosted by the Town of Payson.
For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow College Fishing on Facebook at Facebook.com/FLWFishing and on Twitter at Twitter.com/FLWFishing. Visit CollegeFishing.com to sign up or to start a club at your school.
"We put together a game plan and tried out a few different things until we found something that worked," said Barr, a marketing major. "We didn't end up catching a single fish until about 10 o'clock. Jarred and I haven't fished for months. Our lakes in Washington are frozen over. I haven't touched a rod until last week when we were getting our gear ready."
The Eastern Washington University team holds up its first-place check after winning the FLW College Fishing event on Lake Oroville. "It was the first time we've ever been out to the lake before," added Barr. "We are from eastern Washington, so it is about a 15-hour drive. We fished Shasta before, but never fished Lake Oroville."
"Our first fish came on a Yamamoto Hula grub," said Walker, a construction management major. "We ran around and caught another fish on a drop-shot Senko. Within the last hour, we caught three in a row on the drop-shot (rig). Later in the day, the fish had started to come up shallower, and we were catching them in about 15 feet of water."
"It was slow fishing," Barr continued. "We literally let the Senko sit for over a minute. We were using the new 5-pound fluorocarbon from Sufix, and we think the light line was key to catching some of our fish. Another piece to the puzzle was Lamiglas's Inifinity drop-shot rods. When combined with our light line, they were absolutely crucial in detecting bites and fighting the ferocious spots."
The top 15 teams that advanced to the Western Conference Invitational tournament are:
1st: Eastern Washington University - Jarred Walker, Moses Lake, Wash., and Nick Barr, Lacey, Wash.(five bass, 9-8, $2,000)
2nd: UC Santa Cruz - Jason Coslovich, San Jose, Calif., and Tyler Brownell, San Diego, Calif. (five bass, 9-8, $1,000)
3rd: Oregon State University - Zach MacDonald, Willits, Calif., and Ryan Sparks, Haines, Alaska (five bass, 8-11, $500)
4th: Sacramento State - Thomas Kanemoto, Elk Grove, Calif., and Kyle Derbish, San Bernardino, Calif. (five bass, 8-8, $500)
5th: UC Davis - Christopher Beck, Diamond Springs, Calif., and Michael Manas, Carmel Valley, Calif. (five bass, 8-8, $500)
6th: University of Nevada, Reno - Anthony Milano and Brandon Cramer, both of Petaluma, Calif. (five bass, 8-3)
7th: CSU-Long Beach - Alex Cox, Long Beach, Calif., Justin Gangel, Valley Center, Calif. (five bass, 8-0)
8th: University of the Pacific - Garrett Brown, Stockton, Calif., and Siddhartha Nag, Cupertino, Calif. (five bass, 7-10)
9th: CSU Monterey Bay - Andrew Sjostrom, Mariposa, Calif., and Joshua Smith, Clovis, Calif. (five bass, 7-9)
10th: Colorado State University - Alex Stuart and Austin Young, both of Highlands Ranch, Colo. (five bass, 7-9)
11th: University of Oregon - Kaitlin Tanner, Missoula, Mont., and Eric Lee, Mather, Ore. (five bass, 7-7)
12th: Sonoma State University - Adrien Briens and Ernest Gorham, both of Carlsbad, Calif. (five bass, 7-7)
13th: CSU Monterey Bay - Matthew Diaz and Sebastian Resendiz, both of Castroville, Calif. (five bass, 7-5)
14th: California State University - Alex Pisarki, Costa Mesa, Calif., and Alfredo Gutierrez, Inglewood, Calif. (five bass, 7-4)
15th: Fresno State - Kong Moua and Cynthia Vang, both of Fresno, Calif. (five bass, 6-14)
Complete results can be found at CollegeFishing.com.
The top-15 college teams from the FLW College Fishing Lake Oroville event pose for a photo. Three regular-season qualifying events are held in each conference - Central, Northern, Southeastern, Texas and Western. The top 15 teams from each qualifying tournament will advance to one of five two-day FLW College Fishing Conference Invitational tournaments, where the first-place team wins $4,000 for their club. The top 10 teams from each Conference Invitational advance to the 2014 FLW College Fishing National Championship.
College Fishing is free to enter. All participants must be registered, full-time undergraduate students at a four-year college or university and members of a fishing club recognized by their college or university.
The next FLW College Western Conference qualifying tournament is scheduled for Feb. 23 at Lake Roosevelt in Roosevelt, Ariz., and is hosted by the Town of Payson.
For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow College Fishing on Facebook at Facebook.com/FLWFishing and on Twitter at Twitter.com/FLWFishing. Visit CollegeFishing.com to sign up or to start a club at your school.
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