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Nixon Returns to
his Rightful Classic Spot
Not
long ago, it was commonplace for legendary angler Larry Nixon to qualify for
the CITGO Bassmaster Classic.
In fact, he did it for 18 consecutive years – 1977 to 1994 – creating the
third longest Classic streak in BASS history. But for the 54-year-old Bee
Branch, Ark. angler who owns one of the most illustrious resumes in the
sport, such certainty no longer exists.
In the last decade, Nixon has qualified for the Classic only five times, the
last being in 2002. Now, after a two-year absence, Nixon is planning his
return.
The two-time CITGO Bassmaster Angler of the Year tied with Rick Clunn for
9th place in the Bassmaster Elite 50s standings last weekend, securing him
the final invitation to the 2005 Classic in Pittsburgh as well as an early
ticket to the 2006 Classic on Florida’s Lake Tohopekaliga.
“I worked awful hard to get back in there and I’m just totally excited,”
said Nixon.
The upcoming 2005 and 2006 Classic appearances bump to 25 Nixon’s total
showings in the Super Bowl of bass fishing. He is tied with Roland Martin
for the second most number of appearances. (Clunn is first with 30.)
After finishing in 39th place on the CITGO Bassmaster Tour, Nixon entered
the four-event Elite 50 all-star circuit knowing that it was his last chance
to return to the Classic ranks. In the end, a pair of top 10 finishes on
Lake Lewisville in Highland Village, Texas, and Smith Lake in Jasper, Ala.,
enabled him to place in the top 10 of the overall standings. Because of a
quirk in Classic scheduling, the top 10 anglers in the Elite 50 were offered
invitations to both the 2005 and 2006 Classic, scheduled for February 24-26.
“It really came down to the last day,” said Nixon, who finished 31st last
week at the season-finale in Lake Wissota. “That tournament was so tough on
everybody that if I had fell out I really wouldn’t have felt bad about it
because it was just absolutely, incredibly tough.”
Nixon, who has won every major title and earned $1.6 million in winnings,
says qualifying for the Classic is increasingly harder each year because of
his bustling circuit schedule and the physical toll fishing has taken on his
body.
But soon, Nixon’s thoughts will be centered on Pittsburgh and the Allegheny,
Monongahela and Ohio rivers where Classic XXXV will unfold. It was on a
different stretch of the Ohio River that Nixon won the 1983 Classic in
Cincinnati.
“Everything I’ve heard makes me believe it’s going to be a tough
tournament,” he said. “But the Ohio River was good to me in ’83. Maybe it
will do it again.”
From BASS
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