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Rowland Joins BASS Millionaire's Club
Somewhat
lost in the big-bass mania that enveloped the season-opener of the new CITGO
Bassmaster Elite Series on Texas’ Lake Amistad was the fact that Lone Star
State native son Zell Rowland joined one of the most exclusive groups in
professional fishing – The BASS millionaire’s club.
By pocketing a check for $10,250, the 48-year-old Texas pro became the 13th
BASS angler to top the $1 million mark in career earnings.
“It’s nice to join the elite group of guys that are on that list,” Rowland
said. “It’s not like there are 20 or 30 of them. It’s just an honor to be
with that elite group of guys who’s won over a million dollars fishing BASS.
“It’s been a long road to that mark. And now I just hope that I can fish
well enough to win a lot more than that in a shorter period of time.”
Rowland has a long and storied history with BASS.
He fished his first tournament at age 13, which prompted founder Ray Scott
to establish an age limit of 18. Five years later, he rejoined the circuit
and proceeded to fashion a strong career that includes five victories and 15
appearances in the CITGO Bassmaster Classic.
His immediate concern now is getting ready for the March 30-April 2
Bassmaster Elite Series event on Santee-Cooper Reservoir … as well as
preparing for back surgery.
Rowland will fly to Tyler, Texas, immediately after the South Carolina
tournament, where the same surgeon who solved Denny Brauer’s back problems
will treat him. If all goes right, he hopes to be on the starting line for
the next Elite Series event, on Lake Guntersville in Alabama, two weeks
later. Guntersville is where he won a Bassmaster event last season.
"It’s pretty good,” Rowland said on his way home from last week’s Elite
Series stop at Sam Rayburn Reservoir in Texas. “I still have a lot of
soreness. I try to stand up as much as I can and not sit. It only hurts when
I sit down for a long period of time.
“I can stand up and fish pretty well. But if I take a real rough boat ride,
I know it when I get up. I’m not as quick at hopping out of that seat and
jumping up on that front deck.
“I’m sure it affected me some here at Rayburn. It got real rough, and I
wouldn’t make the boat rides I would normally make.
“I’m going to have about 11 days of recovery time after Santee and my doctor
made me promise him that if I go to Guntersville and the wind blows I won’t
make one of those 20-mile boat rides. He said I need to be careful and, if I
do, the recovery time will be three to five weeks.”
The back problems come on the heels of a heart ailment that was corrected in
2005.
“My heart doctor told me that for 48 years old, I’m probably in one of the
best shapes that he’s ever seen — to be able to keep up the pace that we do
fishing,” Rowland said. “He said I’m in better health than 70 percent of the
guys that are 48 years old.
“I feel pretty good. I feel like I’ve got plenty of years left in me to
fish, once I get the back issue cleared up. It seems like it’s been one
thing after another.”
From BASS
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