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Mans Brothers Win Cabela's NTC at Green Bay |
Click here for Final NTC Results
GREEN BAY, Wis. - There was still more than an hour left before the first flight of competitors were due back, but Joe and John Mans were already walking to the stage clutching a bulging bag of fish. The ear-to-ear smiles on their faces said it all.
They knew before they even put their catch on the scales that they had something special. Then, when they saw that their day-two catch weighed a whopping 34.17 lbs., they knew they had a catch that could earn them a trip on stage when the winner of the Cabela's National Team Championship (NTC) was announced later that evening.
Then the waiting began. As the afternoon faded to evening and contestant after contestant crossed the stage to weigh their fish, the Mans brothers could be seen pacing nearby. The weigh-in couldn't finish fast enough for the brothers from Peshtigo and Menominee, Wis.
But after all had weighed their fish for the day, the Mans' wait had come to an end. Their two-day total of 63.26 lbs. of walleye had been enough for them to capture the coveted title of NTC champions.
Both pumped their fists and kept smiling that ever-present grin as they came on stage to accept their trophies, the certificates for two Ranger 618VS boats and their check for $25,000.
Now that the tournament was over, the two were eager to share their secret. The key, it turns out, was their knowledge of how Green Bay walleye respond when the wind howls as it has for the past several days.
"We live here, so we know how the wind affects the fish," Joe said. "To catch these fish you have to know how to adapt. Basically when the wind is out of the West you have to fish the east shore. When it's out of the east, you have to fish the west shore. We know a spot where the fish always are when there's a south wind like there's been for the last few days."
Familiarity with Green Bay walleye didn't just pay off for the Mans brothers, the top six teams and nine of the top 11 teams all hailed from Wisconsin.
One team that managed a top-10 finish without ever having fished Green Bay before was Leland Bailey and Bill Seibert of Kearney, Neb. who added 27.87 lbs. to their day-one total of 19.59 lbs. to claim seventh place.
Leland said the pair had no problem locating fish during pre-fishing, but yesterday's gale-force winds kept pushing them off of the spot. Today, the wind diminished a bit and they were able to maintain better boat control as they drifted crawler harnesses in about 24 ft. of water.
The second-place team of Dave Dretske and Rob Krause of Berlin, Wis., who weighed a two-day total of 57.53 lbs., agreed that calmer conditions allowed for better boat control and trolling speed, resulting in more effective bait presentation.
Third-place finishers Jyson Freund of Winneconn, Wis., and Jim Tiemann of Marinette, Wis., said they had located big fish over the past few days, but the improved conditions finally got the big ones to hit their slow-trolled crawler harnesses.
Overall, the tournament paid a total purse of $155,100. The day-two prize for the big fish of the day went to Dean Johnson and Mark Van Uliet for their 10.32-lb. catch. The pair received a Stihl chainsaw for their catch.
Obviously every angler competing in Cabela's NTC enters the tournament with aspirations of bringing home prize money or a new boat but for John Mans, winning the tournament was simply icing on the cake.
"The fact that this happened with my brother makes it special," John said. "We're not just brothers. We're best friends and to simply spend a weekend fishing with him would have been enough. We're just a couple of ordinary guys. I feel very blessed." |
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Cabela's NTC Day One Results |
Click here for Day One NTC Results
GREEN BAY Wis. - What were the conditions like on Green Bay for the first day of Cabela's National Team Championship (NTC) walleye tournament? That depends on who you asked.
Answers ranged from "a good walleye chop" to "big rollers." No matter how the anglers described the conditions, all agreed that the gusty winds had the bay rockin' and rollin' all day long.
But experience with battling the big waves and punishing Wisconsin winds paid off for many of the local teams who qualified for the two-day competition. Only four teams in the 238-team field weighed totals of more than 30 lbs. The top three were from right here in Wisconsin.
Partners Pat Schuette and his stepson, Ethan Van Laarhoven of Manitowoc, Wis., brought in a five-fish basket that tipped the scales at 35.91 lbs. to claim the day-one lead. In addition to staking an early claim to first place, the team also brought in a 9.02-lb. lunker that earned them a Stihl chainsaw awarded for catching the big fish of the day.
Schuette and Van Laarhoven said they trolled spinners along the bay's west shore, a strategy they had employed in the same windy conditions that persisted during the pre-fishing days leading up to the competition.
While the tactic paid off with a big basket, they said the bites were actually few and far between.
"We only caught seven walleye all day," Schuette said. "We were actually done by noon, but we stalled a little bit to make sure our family could get here."
Just 18 weighed baskets totaling in the 20- to 29-lb. range, leaving 137 teams with totals in the range between 10 and 20 lbs.
Ted Winkelman and Shawn McLaughlin, of Laona and Brillon, Wisc., brought in a day-one total of 28.47 lbs., that was enough to earn them a position in seventh place going into tomorrow's final day of competition.
Like Schuette and Van Laarhoven, Winkelman and McLaughlin committed themselves to the strategy that had been paying off for them during the days leading up to the competition.
"We stuck with what we'd been doing, pulling spinners and hoping for the right fish," Winkelman said.
Another Wisconsin team made up of Jim Tiemann of Marinette and Jysen Freund of Winneconn, said they lost two fish that could have weighed in the 9- to 10-lb. range, but still managed to bring in 20.41 lbs. to put them at the bottom of the top 25 teams for the day.
While many locals did well during day one, several others, including some from as far away as the West Coast, managed to secure positions that will put them in the running for the championship.
What finished as a productive day for the team of Gary Day of East Wenatchee, Wash., and Ron Fear of Hermiston, Ore., started very slowly. The team weighed 22.72 lbs. to grab tenth place, but didn't boat their first walleye until after 1 p.m.
With so many teams in close competition for what could be a top-25 finish and a total payout of $155,100, day-two's weigh-in should include some exciting moments to add to the already electric atmosphere at the weigh-in site along the banks of the Fox River.
Tomorrow, in addition to the Cabela's NTC, Green Bay is also hosting its annual International Bayfest celebration and a 10K run through the heart of downtown.
The first flights are due back at Green Bay's Leight Park at around 4 p.m. Saturday and the National Champions will be awarded a $25,000 check and a Ranger 618VS tomorrow evening. |
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