DECATUR, Ala.
— When you have a gut feeling, sometimes you
just have to go with it.
That’s what
happened for Jason Hemminger today at 10
a.m. He only had one keeper in the boat that
he estimated at 1 pound, 3 ounces. “I knew
it wasn’t working, so I just scrapped it all
and started over.”

The California
angler caught what he called a
“California-size bag” today when he
abandoned everything he’d been doing on
Wheeler Lake during the 2012 Cabela’s
Bassmaster Federation Nation Championship
and started fresh.
“I had a gut
feeling and it worked out,” said the Ventura
County Bass Club member.
And when he
says it “worked out,” he means it. Hemminger
brought in a huge 19-pound, 10-ounce bag,
far bigger than any other in the
competition, with two bass that weighed 5-1
and 5-3. He bounced back from his 6-13 bag
yesterday that left him mired in eighth
place in the Western division, and moved
nearly 5 pounds ahead of his closest Western
competitor, Timothy Klinger.
Hemminger’s
huge change was the most dramatic today, but
it was representative of multiple success
stories in Day Two of the tournament.
Anglers who mixed it up had much bigger
sacks than yesterday; anglers who didn’t
brought in disappointing bags.
Tim Dycus of
Arkansas credited his “mental adjustment”
for bringing in a limit of 8-8, which was
much stronger than his two fish that weighed
3-1 yesterday. Teb Jones of Mississippi said
he made a change today, and it resulted in
not only a 15-pound, 5-ounce bag, but also a
5-13 bass that took today’s Cabela’s Big
Bass honors. JJ Patton of Iowa
had a Day One total weight of
2-6, trumped by just one of his five fish
today — a 4-pound, 6-ounce beauty that
anchored his 13-6 bag.
And just as
those who changed reaped the benefits, those
who didn’t lamented their decision. Josh
Polfer of Idaho, who led the Western
division yesterday, brought in only 6-15
today. “Things changed today, and I should
have adapted a little bit quicker,” said
Polfer. Dale Hightower, yesterday’s overall
leader, brought in 8-0 today, half of what
he caught yesterday. “I think I spent too
much time in one area before I decided to
change,” Hightower explained. “The fish just
kept getting smaller.”
Polfer and
Hightower both said they figured something
out in the afternoon, though, and they are
looking forward to tomorrow, the final day
of competition.
Tomorrow has
the potential to be vastly different than
today. The forecast calls for wind, rain and
cold. Polfer joins Jamie Sochocki of
Michigan and Jason Pecoraro of Louisiana in
hoping for the big weather change. “The
clouds and wind are going to
help me,” said Pecoraro. Others, including
Teb Jones of Mississippi and Andy Bravence
of Arizona, expressed concern that the wind
might make it tougher. But for Mark Pierce
of Tennessee, it’s a mental game. “Weather
affects the fishermen a lot more than it
affects the bass,” he said.
The average
fish weight moved up slightly today from
1-12 yesterday to 1-14. More anglers had
limits — 41 instead of 34, like Day One —
and only one angler goose-egged.
Hemminger’s
19-10 bag is currently in the lead for the
Lowrance Heavyweight of the tournament. If
he wins, he’ll take home a Lowrance HDS-7
Touch worth $1,599.
Four of the
six divisions had leader changes today.
Bryant Copley of Virginia took over the
Mid-Atlantic lead; Brady Farrell of
Wisconsin took the Northern; Mark Pierce of
Tennessee moved up to first in the Southern;
and Hemminger took over in the Western.
Hightower of Oklahoma remained on top in the
Central, as did Jonathan Carter of Maine in
the Eastern.
The top angler
in each division after competition ends
tomorrow will head to the 2013 Bassmaster
Classic in Tulsa, Okla., in February.
The final
launch takes place tomorrow at 6:45 a.m. CT
at Ingalls Harbor. All the contenders will
weigh in on stage, also at Ingalls Harbor,
beginning at 3 p.m. CT, and it will be
streamed live on Bassmaster.com. Joining
them on stage will be the junior anglers,
who are fishing their one-day competition
tomorrow on nearby Wilson Lake.