
Rickey Morris finishes strong on final day to claim victory at )the Strike King NPFL Stop Two on Millwood Lake (Photo: NPFL/ Tanner & Travis Lyons)
Justin Brouillard
NPFL Press Release
After two steady days to start the event, Rickey Morris saved his best for last, capitalizing on
a key early window to claim the win at the Strike King NPFL Stop Two on
Millwood Lake. His three-day total of 48-pounds was enough to best second place
by a pound and earn his first NPFL shield.
Morris opened the event with 13-14 on a slower Day One and
followed it up with 14-4 on Day Two, steadily learning more about his areas. On
Championship Saturday, everything came together. He got going early and never
looked back, making the jump from around 16th place after Day Two to seal the
victory.
After a slow Day One for big fish, NPFL anglers saw what
lives in Millwood on Day Two. Big Bass honors went to Jared Lintner with a 9-0
kicker. Behind him, Hank Cherry weighed in an 8-2 giant as well.
Morris Makes His Move
Despite only coming to Millwood once before this event,
Rickey Morris knew he had to learn the lake before he could really start
fishing. So that’s what he did, running boat lanes, checking creeks, and
figuring out how to navigate for the week. Then came fishing.
“When I finally dropped the motor on Day One of practice,
the first thing I wanted to find was a shad spawn, and I looked for it all
over,” said Morris. “I had found a few places on the main lake, but heard there
had been some activity up the river, so I explored there too.”
With the shad spawn dialed, he knew he needed more. Despite
not getting a bite flipping all week, he locked a punch rod in his hand and
went to work on Tuesday, the final day of practice.
“I found an area and flipped in a few times and my line swam
off,” he said. “But I never set the hook. Later that day, I figured I might
want to know what the quality was, so I went back. Five flips later, I caught a
9.92. That was it — I got off the water and called it practice.”
After two consistent days, Morris again knew he needed more.
By 9 a.m. this morning, his shad spawn bite had died, but not before he caught
a 17.5-pound limit, a solid way to kick off Showdown Saturday. Still not
satisfied, he knew a few key bites would make the difference.
“I was flipping this afternoon and I knew something was up,”
he added. “The NPFL asked for my location, and then a camera boat showed up. I
knew then I might have a shot to win. I was fishing pencil reeds and came to a
rounded clump. I culled up with one fish slightly, but it clued me in.”
By the end of the day, Morris had fished every rounded clump he could find and worked his way to an almost 20-pound limit. He flipped junebug in practice but switched to white on Day Three, which made all the difference.






