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Fishing

Texas Team Claims National High-School Bass-Fishing Championship

Bass Fishing Champions, High School Bass champions, Girl bass champion

Wyatt Ford (left) and Fallon Clepper of Lake Creek High School in Montgomery, Texas, won the High School Fishing National Championship making Clepper the first female to with the title.

The Lake Creek High School duo of Fallon Clepper and Wyatt Ford, both of Montgomery, Texas, brought a final day limit to the scale Saturday weighing 12 lbs., 14 oz., (5.8 kg) to win the 2022 High School Fishing National Championship on Pickwick Lake in Florence, Alabama. Clepper became the first female to ever win the High School Fishing National Championship.

The duo’s three-day total of nine bass weighing 39 lbs, 9 oz. (17.95 kg), earned them the victory by a 5-lb., 5-oz. (2.41 kg) margin over the runner-up, New Hampshire’s Keene High School, and earned the duo thousands of dollars in prizes and scholarship offers — including a four-year $80,000 offer to California’s Simpson University and a four-year $100,000 offer to attend Kentucky Christian University.

Clepper and Ford also now advances to the 2022 Toyota Series Championship, held Nov. 3-5 on Lake Guntersville in Guntersville, AL, to compete as co-anglers and a shot at the top prize of a new Phoenix 518 Pro boat with a 115-horsepower Mercury outboard.

Down to the Wire

Going into the third and final day of competition, Clepper and Ford held just a 1-ounce lead on their competition.

bass fishing team, Bass champions

The Cleppers and Ford found a secret spot during practice that had them on the fish on Sunday.

“I was nervous at takeoff,” Clepper said. “I thought we were going to get gapped by everybody, but when we got to our spot there was only one other boat there.”

Leaning on sage advice from their captain, Julian Clepper — Fallon’s father — the team weathered wracked nerves to boat a 12-lb. (5.44 kg) bag on the final day for the win.

“We stayed on our juice the entire time today,” Ford said. “That was the only spot we consistently caught fish over 2 lbs. (.91 kg), so we figured we would try to win it all and stay there all day.”

Title Within Sight

It didn’t take long for the team to launch itself into serious contention for the crown on the final day. At 6:40 a.m., Ford plunged a Zoom Trick Worm to the bottom of Pickwick Lake ledge on a shaky head jig.

Bass champions, Fallon Clepper, girl bass champion

In addition to trophies, Ford (left) and Clepper were offered four-year scholarships to two different colleges.

Its hook connected with a Tennessee River stud, and seconds later, a 7-lb., 8-oz. (3.4 kg) largemouth crashed into the net held by his teammate’s father.

“I was thinking that we had been here before,” said Ford, a soft-spoken football tight end who kept his composure throughout the event. “I knew if we got it in the boat that we might have a shot.”

The Big Score

The fish was the largest landed in a tournament featuring 236 boats competing in the 2022 High School Fishing National Championship. Combined with a pair of quality keepers from teammate Clepper, the Pickwick kicker was enough to outpace the pack and land the duo high school fishing’s highest honor.

In the process, Clepper, who started fishing competitively with her father at 11 years old, became the first female angler to ever win the High School Bass Fishing National Championship.

Bass champions, Fallon Clepper, girl bass champion

The team was a little concerned before the start of the final day.

“I want to see more girls out here getting in it,” she said. “Just because a boy says you can’t do it doesn’t mean you can’t. Just keep after them.”

In a tournament fought out mostly under bluebird skies, slow current and brutal summer heat, Clepper and Ford’s single honey hole was productive enough to get the job done.

“When we found the spot in practice, we drove over it with the graphs and saw a really big school of fish,” Ford said. “It was like something we had never seen before.”

Family Ties

Clepper and Ford began fishing together when their parents, who were childhood friends, reconnected at a meet-the-teacher event during their freshman year. “I asked him if he was going to fish,” Clepper said. “He said ‘Yes’ and that he didn’t have a partner, so we ended up together ever since then.”

Three years later, the two fishing-forged friends stood together on stage with one of bass fishing’s most famous rivers as a backdrop. At their feet lay massive checks and scholarship offers. The two most coveted trophies in high school bass fishing were hoisted above their heads. And in the crowd, a pair of overjoyed parents cheered feverishly for their kids.

“It doesn’t even seem real right now,” Clepper said. “I feel like I am in a dream. I have always dreamed of this day and it finally came true.”

The Top 10 teams at the 2022 High School Fishing National Championship on Lake Pickwick:

  • 1st: Lake Creek High School, Montgomery, Texas – Fallon Clepper and Wyatt Ford, nine bass, 39-9
  • 2nd: Keene High School, Keene, NH — Bradyn Antosiewicz and Connor Holbrook, nine bass, 34-4
  • 3rd: Owatonna High School, Owatonna, MN — Walker Krampitz and Brady Matz, nine bass, 32-5
  • 4th: Northeast Louisiana High School Anglers – Ian Carter and Colby Dark, nine bass, 32-3
  • 5th: Fairview High School, Fairview, AL — Levi Harris and Zane Roberts, nine bass, 31-15
  • 6th: Alcoa Fishing Team, Alcoa, TN — Walker LaRue and Joe Vaulton, nine bass, 31-9
  • 7th: Calvary Baptist Academy, Shreveport, LA — Noah Trant and Mark Andrew Trant, nine bass, 29-2
  • 8th: Osseo High School, Osseo, MN — Jackson Betker and Kenrick Kisch, nine bass, 28-9
  • 9th: Central High School, Martinsburg, PA — Gerald Brumbaugh and Dalton Metzger, nine bass, 28-9
  • 10th: Benton High School, Benton, LA — Zachary Halbert and Gray Allums, seven bass, 25-9