EDENTON, N.C. — It took Zack Birge 45 events and 12 Top-10 finishes before he notched his first Bass Pro Tour victory at Lake Eufaula in Oklahoma last month. Now that he’s broken through, he just might make lifting trophies a habit.
Birge used a blistering start Saturday morning to claim the top spot on SCORETRACKER®, then maintained it for the rest of the Knockout Round at U.S. Air Force Stage Five Presented by WIX Filters on the Chowan River. After stacking up 14 scorable bass for 29-9 during the first period — more than enough to qualify for the Championship Round — Birge cruised to a 20 bass 42-14 total. Looking to win back-to-back BPT regular-season events, he’ll be first to blast off Sunday morning, having topped Michael Neal by 4-5.
With weights returning to zero, Birge will take on the rest of the Knockout Round Top 10 in a wide-open sprint for the $100,000 first-place prize. Watch all the action on the MLFNOW! live stream from 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. ET on the MyOutdoorTV (MOTV) app and MajorLeagueFishing.com.
Complete results can be found here.
Birge admitted that he didn’t expect a start like that. He’d fished that same stretch a couple times already during competition, once during his first afternoon on the water and once Friday. The first time, he “caught them good;” the second, he only got about five bites.
The third time proved to be the charm in terms of finding feeding fish. The rate at which he got bit and his style of fishing — sliding a swim jig around shallow wood and bank grass, watching bass engulf the bait and cracking them on straight braid — made for a fun flurry.
“It was a blast,” he said. “I really didn’t expect to get that many bites, but if they’ll bite it, I’ll catch them.”
Overall, the Chowan River continued to kick out impressive quality, with 11 bass over 5 pounds (seven of which topped 6) hitting the scales during the Knockout Round. Birge didn’t connect with one of those lunkers; his biggest bass of the day weighed 3-15. But he made up for it with quantity. Birge boated all 14 of his scorable bass in Period 1 during a span of less than two hours — about a bass every 8 minutes.
He doesn’t necessarily think that has to be the formula to earn his second BPT trophy, though. Birge caught fish over 4 pounds during each day of qualifying, and he saw some bigger ones cruising the shallows Saturday. Getting them to bite, he said, will be critical to his chances of winning.
“I saw some big fish swim by, so I know there’s some bigger ones in there,” Birge said. “I just need to get them to bite. … I know they’re swimming around, so I know I’ve got an opportunity to catch them.”
Midway through the second period, Birge eased off the throttle, searching for new water he could exploit during the Championship Round. Not finding anything to his liking, he’s “all in” on his Knockout Round starting spot.
True to his understated nature, he has a straightforward outlook on whether it can produce enough. If the shallow bite remains as hot as it was Saturday, Birge thinks he left enough fish in the area that he can contend for the win, or at least get off to another good start and go from there. He predicted it will take 40 to 50 pounds to top the final-day field.
“If they’re biting somewhat decent and I milk it for all it’s worth, I feel like there’s another 30 to 40 pounds in there,” he said.
As for why the bank bite shined during the Knockout Round, Birge doesn’t really have an explanation, nor a prediction about whether it will last another day on the unfamiliar fishery. Other anglers posited on MLFNOW! that it had to do with a change in conditions or mounting fishing pressure on the submerged offshore (albeit not far offshore) targets that produced strong Qualifying Round performances for the likes of Dustin Connell, Jacob Wheeler, Matt Becker, Alton Jones Jr. and Drew Gill.
Still, those five anglers — each among the best in the world at utilizing forward-facing sonar — all overcame the slower day to make the Top 10. So, if the offshore bite turns on again during the Championship Round, it could be anyone’s trophy to win.
“I feel like there’s days when they just bite, and it’s different here by the day,” Birge said. “That’s the only thing I can really say is changing the scenario is whether or not they bite. Yesterday, they didn’t bite as well for me, and I was fishing shallow, and I felt like today they bit better. So, I’m hoping that tomorrow the shallow bite is decent again and I can catch a few.”
Don’t mistake Birge’s realism for a lack of confidence. After landing his long-awaited first win on a national tour, he’s confident that, if the conditions line up in his favor again Sunday, he has the ability to take advantage.
“Definitely more confident just knowing that if the opportunity is there, I can get it done, because I’ve done it now,” Birge said. “So, that’s really cool. Hopefully it can happen again tomorrow.”
As usual, the brawl to finish above the cut line came down to the final seconds of the Knockout Round. And, as has been the case a few times during his first two seasons on the Bass Pro Tour, it was Becker who came through in the clutch.
Becker, who led Group B through qualifying, went more than 2 hours, 40 minutes without boating a scorable bass Saturday afternoon. That caused him to tumble out of the Top 10 and stay there most of the third period. Finally, with less than 15 minutes remaining, he ended the drought with a 3-15 largemouth.
He would need every ounce of it. Both Mark Daniels Jr. and Stephen Browning also added to their totals in the closing minutes, with Browning catching a 3-7 with about 2 minutes left before lines out. That bass left him 1 ounce shy of Becker’s 25-10 total. It marked the second time this season Becker has jumped from the wrong side of the cut line into the Top 10 in the final minutes of the Knockout Round, the first coming during Stage Two on Santee Cooper.
“That was a nail-biter, but we pulled it our right at the end,” Becker said. “We’re moving on to the Championship Round. That’s all that matters. It didn’t matter if you were first or 10th today; you’ve just got to make the Championship Round, and weights are zeroed and it’s a one-day shootout.”
Sunday’s sprint for the Stage Five trophy will double as a showdown between the top contenders in the Fishing Clash Angler of the Year race. Four of the anglers who entered the week in the top five of the season-long points standings made the Top 10 at Stage Five: Wheeler, Jones, Connell and Gill.
Wheeler, who arrived at the Chowan River with a 12-point lead over Jones, has ensured that he will remain atop the standings heading to the James River for Stage Six. However, the two-time AOY winner won’t have much breathing room over Jones or Connell. Entering the week, Jones was 14 points ahead of Connell and 19.5 clear of Gill. It’s shaping up to be another tightly bunched finish in the race for the $100,000 prize.
Fishing Clash, an interactive 3D fishing simulation game played by over 80 million people worldwide, is the official AOY sponsor of the Bass Pro Tour, Tackle Warehouse Invitationals, Toyota Series and Phoenix Bass Fishing League. You can download Fishing Clash for free in the App Store and on Google Play or log on to www.fishingclash.game for more information.