Minor wins first Bassmaster Kayak Series title at Susquehanna River
LEWISBURG, Pa. —

Last summer, Ewing Minor helped one of his friends celebrate their birthday by taking a trip to the Susquehanna River. The conditions he fished then helped Minor dial in the winning smallmouth strategy this week at the Yamaha Rightwaters Bassmaster Kayak Series at Susquehanna River scored by TourneyX.


With a two-day total of 187.75 inches, the Virginia angler secured his first Kayak Series victory and earned the top prize of $11,694. Just a quarter of an inch separated Minor from second-place Kristine Fischer, who landed a two-day total of 187.50 inches.

“I think this is the largest kayak tournament I’ve ever fished, so that is really cool. The blue trophy is one that I didn’t have, and I just wanted to have one of the top three. So, this will be a really nice addition to the collection.”

While this is Minor’s first victory in a Bassmaster event, it adds to a long list of accomplishments he’s accrued in the kayak fishing world. Prior to this event, the Carson-Newman University angler had won several Hobie Bass Open Series events and nearly won Angler of the Year in 2021. He will also compete in the Strike King Bassmaster College National Championship presented by Bass Pro Shops at Lake Hartwell next month.

Minor believes the Susquehanna River is the best river in the country, and there’s certainly a strong case to be made after this weekend. In total, 2,463 bass were caught in the two-day event and 52 bags over 90 inches were submitted to TourneyX.

Since his first trip to the Susquehanna in 2021, which resulted in a second-place finish at a Hobie BOS event, Minor has made a point to fish the river every year. When he arrived for practice, conditions of the river matched up almost perfectly with what he experienced the previous summer.

“That week was very close to the water clarity and water level it is right now,” he said. “I feel like that trip last summer really helped me out.”

With the water rising from recent rains, Minor struggled to find consistency in practice and was not dialed in until about the first hour of Day 1.

“The water was rising, and I was a step behind the bass the whole time. I never really caught up to them until Day 1. They pushed up a lot further than I expected. But on Day 1, I just kept pushing up into shallower water, and I eventually found them in inches of water. But it was kind of tough to figure out what stage they were in each day.”

Minor decided to fish the section of the river he was most familiar with, which features a diverse selection of grass, wood, rock, shade and different speeds of current. Slower-to-moderate current proved to be the most productive, but not one type of cover was more productive than another.

While the first hour of fishing was a struggle on Day 1, he moved into shallower water as the morning progressed and began catching quality smallies on a ¼-ounce buzzbait with a Strike King Rage Menace trailer. An unnamed wake bait was also a key presentation.

“I had a buzzbait tied on that I bought at the tackle store the night before. I hadn’t thrown it in practice, and I started throwing it inside of the grass islands and started catching a bunch. I lost a bunch of fish yesterday, too. But once I started getting on that I kept running it. Once the sun came out, they stopped biting on the islands, and I stuck to the shade lines.”

Entering the final day in 14th place with 93.5 inches, Minor found the buzzbait bite was not as productive to open Day 2. With an increase in fishing pressure around the islands, he decided to motor up the river in search of fresh real estate. On his way, he landed a 19.5-inch smallmouth — his biggest bass of the tournament — on a Berkley Choppo 120.

“I was just fan casting. It was completely random. I wasn’t targeting anything,” he said.

Once he reached an area without any other competitors, Minor targeted rock, wood, shade and grass to fill out the rest of his bag, which included another 19-incher as well as three smallmouth over 18 inches.

“I didn’t have much of a pattern today. I was just fishing what looked good and cleaning up the leftovers,” he said.

Fischer opened the tournament in fifth place with 94.75 inches before moving into the runner-up position on the final day with a 92.75-inch limit of smallmouth.

“This river has always clicked for me. It has always made sense. I think I’ve fished six tournaments here now and cut checks in all of them,” Fischer said. “I practiced for two days and had great days.”

Knowing some of her better areas would likely receive a lot of fishing pressure, the BassmastHER ambassador fished the southern section of eligible water. While she planned to fish around 15 different spots, trolling motor issues both days of the tournament limited her range.

Fischer made the most of it, however, landing a smallmouth 20 inches or better each day of the event. She landed the majority of her bass using an unnamed glide bait as well as a 6-inch Berkley Cull Shad.

“What I figured out was, the majority of the competitors wouldn’t make a cast at the water I was fishing,” she said. “Shade is big. The fish really utilize the shade, a lot of times shallower than people realize. I was working everything pretty fast. I was fishing the Cull Shad in slower flats deeper than 3 feet. Anything shallower than that, I was fishing the wake bait.”

With bags of 93.5 inches and 93.75 inches, Mickey Pfortsch finished third with a two-day total of 187.25 inches.

“I did not expect to get third place,” Pfortsch said. “Day 2 was definitely a lot tougher. I looked at some of the scores from the past and saw that you are never out of it if you did well on Day 1 because Day 2 is always a struggle no matter what the conditions are.”

Pfortsch’s best day of practice was Wednesday, but when the water rose, he had to make several adjustments to his gameplan. Throughout the tournament, the Pennsylvania angler threw a Boogerman buzzbait and a black Berkley Choppo around shade lines and whitewater areas.

“I must have fished 75 (whitewater areas) and caught two fish. But those two fish are 20.75 inches and 20 inches. Each day was really tough. Day 1 I think I had 91 inches by 7 a.m. and didn’t upgrade again until 1:25 p.m. Day 2 was pretty much the same way. All 10 of my fish were caught on topwater.”

Brandon Palmer of Loveland, Ohio, claimed Big Bass of the Tournament honors with the 21-inch smallmouth he landed on Day 1.

The Susquehanna River Valley Visitors Bureau hosted the tournament.