Tennessee's Hatfield hammers 20-pound, 11-ounce final-day limit to win Tackle Warehouse Invitationals T-H Marine Stop 5 at the Potomac River - Major League Fishing
Tennessee’s Hatfield hammers 20-pound, 11-ounce final-day limit to win Tackle Warehouse Invitationals T-H Marine Stop 5 at the Potomac River
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Tennessee’s Hatfield hammers 20-pound, 11-ounce final-day limit to win Tackle Warehouse Invitationals T-H Marine Stop 5 at the Potomac River

Second-year pro catches biggest limit of the tournament on final day to vault to top of leaderboard and earn top payout of $117,500
Image for Tennessee’s Hatfield hammers 20-pound, 11-ounce final-day limit to win Tackle Warehouse Invitationals T-H Marine Stop 5 at the Potomac River
June 19, 2023 • MLF • Press Releases

MARBURY, Md. – Pro Nick Hatfield of Greeneville, Tennessee, caught a five-bass limit Monday weighing 20 pounds, 11 ounces – the largest limit weighed throughout the three-day tournament – to win the Tackle Warehouse Invitationals T-H Marine Stop 5 at the Potomac River . Hatfield’s three-day total of 15 bass weighing 53 pounds, 12 ounces, earned him the win by a 5-pound, 3-ounce margin over Bass Pro Tour angler Cody Meyer of Star, Idaho, who finished second with a three day total of 15 bass weighing 48-9, good for the $50,000 runner-up payout.

Link to Photo of T-H Marine Stop 5 at the Potomac River Champion Nick Hatfield
Link to Video of T-H Marine Stop 5 at the Potomac River Final Day Weigh-in
Link to Photo Gallery of Stop 5 at the Potomac River Day 3 Afternoon Highlights

After a Polaris Rookie of the Year win in 2021 on the Pro Circuit, Hatfield signed on to the new-look Invitationals for another go-round. After finishing 101st at Lake of the Ozarks in May, it looked like his Bass Pro Tour dreams may have gone by the wayside; but winning the Potomac vaulted him back into the Top 10 in points and may prove to be a key moment in a long career.

Starting the day in second behind Martin Villa, Hatfield knew he was close to a win. Still, the Top 10 was about as stacked as can be on the Potomac, and he also knew he needed to do more than just hold serve.

“Today I decided to scrap where I’ve been starting because it sucked yesterday,” Hatfield said. “I didn’t want to try to go in there and scrap out 14 or 15 pounds, I wanted to go for the win.”

So, he rolled into Chicamuxen Creek and started fishing in a recently opened spawning sanctuary.

“I knew it hadn’t had the pressure; I didn’t know if I could catch them in there, but I figured it hadn’t had the pressure like everywhere else,” Hatfield said. “So, I went in there and started catching them pretty quick. I got in a few areas there and caught them on a bunch of different things, but there was one little area in there that was a bream bed, and most of the big ones I caught, I caught off of it. When it went down it was pretty crazy.”

After catching a few swimming a jig and frogging in a marshy creek, Hatfield pulled out a popper as he roamed around. Things happened in a hurry after that.

“I stumbled into it as I was fishing, just going down the bank,” he said. “I threw a popper up close to the point, and one engulfed it. I kept throwing over there, and upon further inspection, after I caught some, I saw it was a bream bed. So, I actually went back to it later in the day and caught another 4-pounder off of it.”

Running bream beds has gotten a bit trendy recently, and the Top 10 definitely added them into the mix with the usual Potomac staples. For Hatfield, a big patch of spawning bluegill in Quantico Creek did a lot of the heavy lifting.

“I saw the one in Quantico the second day of practice and I saw there were a bunch of big ones swimming on it and it was easy to get bites,” Hatfield said. “I never found another one until today.

“I’d say out of 15 bass I weighed, maybe four or five came off something else,” he said. “Swimming a jig, a frog, ChatterBait, something like that. It was all on bream beds, basically.”

For his bream beds, Hatfield’s primary weapon was a wacky-rigged Yamamoto Senko with a No. 1 Hayabusa WRM929. He also mixed in a 3/8-ounce Z-Man Evergreen ChatterBait JackHammer, a 3/8-ounce  Hayabusa Lil’ Schmitty Swim Jig, a popping frog and a bone Lobina Rio Rico. He used Doomsday rods for all of his techniques, opting for a 7-foot, medium-heavy model for the wacky rig.

“I’ve wanted to win one of these, I’ve tried hard,” Hatfield went on to say. “I knew that I could do it, and today just shows that I can. I can’t wait for the next one, I’m ready to go right now.”

The Top 50 pros at the T-H Marine Stop 5 at the Potomac River finished:

  • 1st:        Nick Hatfield, Greeneville, Tenn., 15 bass, 53-12, $117,500 (includes $35,000 Phoenix Bonus)
  • 2nd:       Cody Meyer, Star, Idaho, 15 bass, 48-9, $50,000
  • 3rd:       Eric Panzironi, Longwood, Fla., 15 bass, 48-8, $20,000
  • 4th:        Wyatt Frankens, Corrigan, Texas, 15 bass, 46-9, $18,000
  • 5th:        Martin Villa, Charlottesville, Va., 15 bass, 46-8, $17,000
  • 6th:        Blake Hall, Rogersville, Ala., 15 bass, 46-1, $17,000
  • 7th:        Andrew Loberg, Rocklin, Calif., 15 bass, 46-0, $15,000
  • 8th:        Keith Carson, DeBary, Fla., 15 bass, 45-13, $14,000
  • 9th:        Bryan Schmitt, Deale, Md., 15 bass, 45-12, $13,000
  • 10th:     Kyle Weisenburger, Columbus Grove, Ohio, 15 bass, 44-11, $12,000
  • 11th:     Pete Ponds, Madison, Miss., 15 bass, 44-8, $10,000
  • 12th:     Jim Moynagh, Shakopee, Minn., 15 bass, 44-5, $10,000
  • 13th:     Jordan Collom, Canyon Lake, Calif., 15 bass, 44-4, $10,000
  • 14th:     Troy Stokes, Trenton, Mich., 15 bass, 44-1, $10,000
  • 15th:     Michael Neal, Dayton, Tenn., 15 bass, 43-13, $10,000
  • 16th:     Cody Spetz, Hollister, Mo., 15 bass, 43-12, $10,000
  • 17th:     Flint Davis, Leesburg, Ga., 15 bass, 43-11, $10,000
  • 18th:     Hunter Eubanks, Inman, S.C., 15 bass, 43-11, $10,000
  • 19th:     Cole Hewett, Orange Park, Fla., 15 bass, 43-10, $10,000
  • 20th:     Spencer Shuffield, Hot Springs, Ark., 15 bass, 43-9, $10,000
  • 21st:      David Walker, Sevierville, Tenn., 15 bass, 43-7, $10,000
  • 22nd:    Jeremy Southerly, Fulks Run, Va., 15 bass, 43-6, $10,000
  • 23rd:     Robert Nakatomi, Sacramento, Calif., 15 bass, 42-14, $10,000
  • 24th:     Jason Vance, Battle Ground, Ind., 15 bass, 42-13, $10,000
  • 25th:     Ron Nelson, Berrien Springs, Mich., 15 bass, 42-11, $10,000
  • 26th:     Matt Becker, Ten Mile, Tenn., 15 bass, 42-7, $10,000
  • 27th:     Charlie Reed Jr., Gloucester, Va., 15 bass, 42-5, $10,000
  • 28th:     Justin Cooper, Zwolle, La., 15 bass, 42-4, $10,000
  • 29th:     Wayne Vaughan, Chester, Va., 15 bass, 42-3, $10,000
  • 30th:     Mike McClelland, Blue Eye, Mo., 15 bass, 42-2, $10,000
  • 31st:      Blake Felix, Warsaw, Mo., 15 bass, 42-1, $8,000
  • 32nd:    Cody Pike, Powhatan, Va., 15 bass, 42-1, $8,000
  • 33rd:     Michael Catt, Jacksonville, Fla., 15 bass, 41-14, $8,000
  • 34th:     Tyler Stewart, Dubach, La., 15 bass, 41-14, $8,000
  • 35th:     Christian Greico, Tampa, Fla., 15 bass, 41-13, $8,000
  • 36th:     Kyle Hall, Granbury, Texas, 15 bass, 41-11, $8,000
  • 37th:     Joe Wieberg, Freeburg, Mo., 15 bass, 41-9, $8,000
  • 38th:     Matt Greenblatt, Port Saint Lucie, Fla., 15 bass, 41-4, $8,000
  • 39th:     John Duarte, Middle River, Md., 15 bass, 41-2, $8,000
  • 40th:     Marshall Robinson, Landrum, S.C., 15 bass, 40-15, $8,000
  • 41st:      Braxton Setzer, Wetumpka, Ala., 15 bass, 40-15, $8,000
  • 42nd:    Ramie Colson Jr., Cadiz, Ky., 15 bass, 40-10, $8,000
  • 43rd:     Terry Olinger, Louisa, Va., 15 bass, 40-9, $8,000
  • 44th:     Eddie Carper, Valliant, Okla., 14 bass, 39-11, $8,000
  • 45th:     Travis Harriman, Huntsville, Ark., 15 bass, 39-4, $8,000
  • 46th:     Austin Culbertson, Moberly, Mo., 14 bass, 39-2, $8,000
  • 47th:     Jack Daniel Williams, Kingsport, Tenn., 15 bass, 38-4, $8,000
  • 48th:     Drew Gill, Mount Carmel, Ill., 15 bass, 37-7, $8,000
  • 49th:     Joshua Weaver, Macon, Ga., 15 bass, 36-15, $8,000
  • 50th:     Kyle Minke, Lindstrom, Minn., 14 bass, 36-12, $8,000

Complete results for the entire field can be found at MajorLeagueFishing.com.

Overall, there were 247 bass weighing 663 pounds, 3 ounces caught by the 50 pros Monday. The catch included 47 five-bass limits.

The three-day tournament was hosted by the Charles County Board of Commissioners and featured a roster of 150 pro anglers competing for a top prize of up to $115,000 and an invitation to compete at REDCREST 2024. The next Tackle Warehouse Invitationals event will take place July 25-27 at the Tackle Warehouse Invitationals at the Mississippi River Presented by Mercury in La Crosse, Wisconsin.

In MLF Tackle Warehouse Invitational competition, the full field of 150 anglers competed in the two-day opening round on Saturday and Sunday in a traditional five-fish, weigh-in format. Only the Top 50 pros based on their two-day cumulative weight advanced to the final round on Championship Monday, where they competed for the grand prize of up to $115,000, including the lucrative $35,000 Phoenix MLF Bonus for qualified anglers. The winner of the Tackle Warehouse Invitationals T-H Marine Stop 5 at the Potomac River was determined by the heaviest three-day cumulative weight and will now receive an invitation to compete at REDCREST 2024.

The season-long Invitational Bally Bet Angler of the Year (AOY) will also earn a berth into REDCREST and the top eight anglers in the season-long Invitational AOY point standings will qualify for the 2024 Bass Pro Tour. After four events in the six-event Qualifying Circuit, pro Ron Nelson of Berrien Springs, Michigan, leads the AOY race with 953 points. Charlottesville, Virginia, pro Martin Villa sits in second place with 929 points, while Keith Carson of DeBary, Florida, is in third with 911 points. Pro Michael Neal of Dayton, Tennessee, is in fourth place with 905 points, while Junction City, Wisconsin’s Matthew Stefan rounds out the top five with 874 points.

The Tackle Warehouse Invitational T-H Marine Stop 5 at the Potomac River will feature live on-the-water coverage and a two-hour action-packed television show that will premiere on CBS Sports Network on Saturday, Oct. 28.

Proud sponsors of the 2023 MLF Tackle Warehouse Invitationals include: 13 Fishing, Abu Garcia, B&W Trailer Hitches, Berkley, Black Rifle Coffee, E3, Epic Baits, Favorite Fishing, Fox Rent a Car, General Tire, Grundéns, Lew’s, Lowrance, Mercury, Mossy Oak, Mystik Lubricants, Onyx, Phoenix Boats, Polaris, Power-Pole, Strike King, Tackle Warehouse, T-H Marine, Wiley X and YETI.

For complete details and updated information visit MajorLeagueFishing.com. For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow the Tackle Warehouse Invitationals on the MLF5 social media outlets at FacebookInstagram and YouTube.

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