Leo Osborne’s Eufaula flashback - Major League Fishing
Leo Osborne’s Eufaula flashback
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Leo Osborne’s Eufaula flashback

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Local longtime expert Leo Osborne offers some words of wisdom on how to tackle Oklahoma's Lake Eufaula. Photo by Alan McGuckin. Angler: Leo Osborne.
May 2, 2024 • Alan McGuckin • Bass Pro Tour

EUFAULA, Okla. – Major League Fishing pros who find themselves mentally rattled by fast-rising, muddy water at this week’s MillerTech Stage Four Presented by REDCON1 event at Lake Eufaula, Oklahoma, might want to ask: “What would Leo do?” 

This very same week in 1999, Eufaula water levels were right at normal elevation when pros began practice. Then, storms and torrential rainfall saw the massive reservoir rise more than 4 feet by Day 1 of competition, a mirror image of what’s happened in the shadow of rough storms and tornado sightings the past five days.

Local fishing legend and lifetime Crowder, Oklahoma, resident Leo Osborne pitched a uniquely colored plastic worm to flooded bushes and notched the biggest win of a fishing career decorated with wins and high finishes on the sprawling 108,000-acre lake. 

The event was the Bassmaster Central Invitational. The former machine shop owner and previous Dr. Pepper delivery route driver recalls getting several bites in practice with longtime best buddy Orlean Smith before storms forced them off the water and sent them running to their trucks. 

Rained-out for hours, their practice session was strong enough that Osborne actually believed he and Smith had located the winning area. Whether it would be himself or another angler, he truly believed the area would ultimately produce the winning weight.

And it did. Osborne caught 50 pounds of largemouth in three days from his favorite bushes, and while other competitors crowded him on the water during the final two days of competition, he kept his head down, stayed in the general area and kept pitching his Gene Larew electric blue worm with a white tail – at one point catching twin 5-pounders off the same exact flooded persimmon tree. 

“A lot of guys commented after I won that they’d never seen a worm that color,” he laughed. “I told them neither had the bass. That’s why it worked so well.” 

His first-place prize was $16,000 cash and a brand-new boat valued at $32,000. 

So, what would the former Little League baseball coach soon to turn 81 years old tell anglers to do this week? 

“There’ll be a bunch of them too busy staring at that sonar screen to consider flippin’ bushes, but I’d tell them to get in those flooded bushes and don’t come out until your boat carpet is covered in stray limbs and willow leaves,” he joked “That’s when you know you were fishing as thorough as you need to.”

No question about it: He’d be pitching soft plastics to flooded bushes this week. 

That’s exactly what Leo would do.