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Younger tournament anglers are coming on strong and competing with
the veteran pros; and, nowhere was it more evident than at this year’s
BASSMASTERS Classic.
These guys are to be commended just for earning the right to be at
the Classic.
They qualified
by being top notch anglers along the various B.A.S.S. Invitational
and Top 150 trails and through the Federation divisions.
At this year’s Classic, there were eight Classic qualifiers under
the age of 30: Timmy Horton, Brent Chapman, Edwin Evers, Todd Faircloth,
Brett Hite, Michael Iaconelli, Kotaro Kiriyama and Aaron Martens.

Timmy Horton, from Spruce Pine, Alabama, especially deserves a ton
or credit.
In his rookie year (1999-2000 season), he won the B.A.S.S. Angler
of the Year title and won over $178,000.
His dedication is evident as he put in his time prefishing for
weeks, sometimes months before events and was on the road the entire year.
When he won the B.A.S.S. Marilyn Top 150 on the Potomac River, he
gave a lot of credit to Gary Klein for coming to his room and motivating
him the night before the last day of competition.
Tim is a college graduate and gave up his athletic scholarship in
baseball to pursue fishing.
He is an active member of the Christian anglers and donates time
towards kids fishing events for underprivileged and disabled kids.
Tim helped organize last year’s event that had Bill Dance as
weighmaster.
He took proceeds from his fishing career and bought his first home
for his wife Melanie and their new baby.
At 27 years of age, he not only knows where he’s going, but takes
time to help others along the way and gives a great deal of credit to the
pros who have helped him along the rugged path as a professional angler.

Brent Chapman is a 28 year old professional angler from Shawnee,
Kansas. He
is achieving his lifelong dream of making it as a professional B.A.S.S.
angler. He
still belongs to his local bass club, the Shawnee Mission BASSMASTERS,
which he joined when he was 15.
He has seven top finishes on the BASSMASTER tournament trail and
has won over $186,000.
In May, he was very creative in achieving victory on the Louisiana
Central Invitational on the Red River.
Wanting to fish where the big rigs couldn’t go, he called on his
sponsor at the Skeeter plant in Kilgore, Texas, to get him an aluminum
boat with a small Yamaha engine so he could push-pole a flat bottom boat
over stumps and obstructions until he could reach the waters that put a
$42,000 paycheck in his pocket and helped secure his birth at the Chicago
Classic.

Edwin Evers hails from Mannsville, Oklahoma is a young sprout of
25. He
started fishing tournaments for bass at age 13 out of a pond boat and used
swim fins as the method of propulsion to win the tournament!
This was his second year on the pro BASS tour and he ranked third
in the Central Division.
Edwin was a local favorite in Chicago as he went to school in
Seneca, Illinois, just outside of the windy City.
When he went to college, he picked Southeastern Oklahoma State
because is was a warmer climate.
He graduated with a degree in communications and a minor in
business marketing.
Because of this background and his natural abilities as an angler,
he is sure to be a success in the fishing world.

Another young angler on his way up the ladder in the pro circles is
Todd Faircloth, from Jasper, Texas.
He finished 8th in the BASSMASTER Top 150's in 1999-2000
and has fished 19 events and had 8 finishes in the money.
He has been fishing bass tournaments since the age of 9 and credits
his dad for “...always taking me along on his fishing trips.”
He and his uncle won a parent/child club tournament when he was
twelve. Todd
grew up along the banks of Sam Rayburn Reservoir in Texas and has been
hooked on bass fishing for most all his life.
He is quite a successful angler in Texas as has fished most every
pro circuit in the State.
His main sponsors are Skeeter Boats, Yamaha Outboards and Lake Fork
Tackle. Todd
won six boats in three years and is a sincerely dedicated angler.
He was one of the few single guys at the Classic and at age 24, is
going to be quite some catch!

It seems like the ages keep getting younger, but Brett Hite at age
21 is no newcomer to bass fishing circles.
While other kids were watching cartoons, he grew up watching the
fishing shows on TV.
With father, Davy Hite who was the 1999 Classic winner and long
time B.A.S.S. contender, Brett had an excellent teacher and head start
over most anglers.
He started bass fishing at age 3 and finished third in his first
tournament at age 13.
This was his second year on the BASSMASTER Western Invitational
trail and Brett overall finish in 5th place.
He finished in 4th place at Lake Oroville and Clear Lake
in California and had a 13th place finish at Elephant Butte,
NM. He
won his first draw tournament at age 19.
His personal hero is Jay Yelas who now resides in Tyler, Texas, but
grew up out West and has been a big superstar on the BASSMASTER Circuit.
Young Brett, hopes to follow in Jay’s and his dad’s footsteps
right on up the ladder to success along the BASS pro tournament trail.

Another youngster on the circuit, Michael “Spike” Iaconelli,
who won over $180,000 in the 1999-2000 year.
He has fished the tour just two years with B.A.S.S.
Spike was quoted in BASS
TIMES as saying he would never fail to qualify for a Classic, and
according to the various people who have fished with him, it’s his
intuition, sixth sense about fishing and natural abilities that separates
him from most anglers.
He uses this talent to make it all work for him and not against
him. He
is extremely focused and is a “fishing machine” on the water.
Mike won the B.A.S.S. Federation Championship in 1999, won the
Vermont Top 150 on Lake Champlain and earned a paycheck in eight of twelve
competitions during the 1999-2000 season.
This young man was cast as a favorite to win the B.A.S.S. Classic
by both Hank Parker and Fish Fishburne.
However, the cards just weren’t right for Mike for this year, but
he is definitely someone to keep your eye on in the future.

Kotaro Kiriyama is another new face to watch.
This 29 year-old angler qualified for the Classic his second year
out on the Western Invitational Tournament Trail.
He is a native of Japan and only the second angler from Japan to
fish B.A.S.S., the first being Norio Tanabe.
Kotaro divides his time between his home in Japan and his home in
California.
This past season, he finished 5th in Arizona on Lake Powell, 14th
at Elephant Butte in New Mexico and 13th at Lake Oroville in California.
Kotaro has worked very hard and earned a paycheck in six of the
nine BASSMASTERS tournaments that he entered.
Just before this year’s Classic, he hooked up with Skeeter/Yamaha
and made an impressive run for the Classic title, tieing 4th place with
seasoned veteran Rick Clunn.
A very commendable and humble young man who is going to go very far
in this industry.

Rounding out the under 30 group is Aaron Martens, another newcomer
that was picked to win the Classic.
Aaron is a Westerner hailing from Castaic, California.
At 27 and wearing the colors of Crown Royal, you couldn’t miss
him. He
fished his first B.A.S.S. Classic in 1999 on the Louisiana Delta where he
was practice fishing when he hooked a 15-foot alligator on a Carolina rig.
That big ole’ gator gave him a run for his money and an elevated
heart rate to say the least, especially since it was almost as long as his
boat! Aaron
has been on the circuit for three years and has qualified twice for the
Classic.
Both times were through the Western Invitationals.
He finished in 1st place on the Western trails followed by Kotaro
Kiriyama in 2nd place.
Aaron said that “Dedication and determination have brought me to
where I am today.”
He has finished in the money fifteen out of 20 tournaments.
He won the California Lake Oroville tournament.
Aaron also finished third in Megabucks and finished in the Top 10
in seven of the ten events he fished.

All of these young men are to be commended and are truly an
inspiration to aspiring anglers coming down the tubes.
They have been blowing the doors off the competition and are going
to be in this sport for the long run.
One of the major differences between the pros of today and
yesterday is their education.
Most are college graduates, very well groomed and mannered and
highly skilled anglers, which makes them very marketable and prized by
potential sponsors.
If they continue to play their cards right, they all have a long
future in the fishing and marine industry.

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