Canadians Gustafson 12th, Gallant 41st, Evan Kung 45th, Chris Johnston 70th & Cory Johnston 80th
By Christopher Decker
BASS Press Release
ALEXANDER CITY, Ala. — Brock Mosley never caught a 2-pounder in practice for
the Lippert Bassmaster Elite at Lake Martin, but all the ingredients came together
for a magical Day 1.
The Collinsville, Miss., pro landed 15 pounds, 7 ounces to take the lead at the Tallapoosa River impoundment, anchoring his bag with a 4-pound largemouth. In total, Mosley brought three largemouth and two spotted bass to weigh-in, which were 12 ounces heavier than Drew Cook’s second-place limit.
“I didn’t have a great practice, but I didn’t have a terrible practice,” the 2023 Sabine River champion said. “At Lake Martin, you are liable to catch 6 or 7 pounds. I didn’t catch but one or two good ones in practice, but I kept an open mind and went fishing today.”
As anticipated, the weights throughout the field are super tight. Fifteen of the 101 anglers caught between 11 and 13 pounds while 30 more caught bags weighing between 10 and 11 pounds.
After last week’s cold spell, water temperatures have climbed several degrees from the start of practice to tournament day, which has the bass moving towards their prespawn and spawning patterns. On Day 1, air temperatures were close to 70 degrees, and Mosley found the prespawners ready to bite on Day 1.
“Several of the bass I caught today were full of eggs and right where they should be before they go up to start the spawning process,” he said. He rotated between four different baits and several locations, mixing in forward-facing sonar techniques as well as traditional tactics.
“I started looking for a certain type of deal, and I caught some offshore and some up shallow,” Mosley said. “I kind of junk fished and put a bag together. I’m putting my head down and fishing for what is in front of me. I may fish a point, I may ’Scope out some brushpile, or I might catch suspended bass.”




