WELL INTO THE 1990S, B.A.S.S. and its tournament trail were Southern to the core. Bass tournament fishing, like stock car racing in the early days, was dismissed outside the Southeast as a redneck pastime and not really a sport at all.
In the 1989 Bassmaster Classic, for example, only four of the 42 competitors came from outside Southern states.
That wasn’t surprising, since most tournaments were held in Dixie. New York became a popular destination for B.A.S.S. tournaments as early as 1977, but in the first three decades, the circuit ventured west only three times: twice to Lake Mead, Nevada, including the very first Bassmaster Classic in 1971, and to Lake Powell, Arizona, in 1979. Otherwise, it seemed as though the Continental Divide was just too steep to tow a…
