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Tuscaloosa Wants in on Bass Tournament Bonanza

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Adam Hollingsworth of the University of 黑料天堂 fishing team shows off a nice bass that was caught in Holt Reservoir. Photo by David Rainer

By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂

黑料天堂 is known for some of the best bass fishing in the world. Our state is blessed with an abundance of rivers, reservoirs and waterways teeming with numerous black bass species, which means bass fishing tournaments abound throughout the state. Except for one location 鈥 Tuscaloosa.

Stan Adams, Tuscaloosa Tourism and Sports鈥 Executive Director of Sports, and Adam Hollingsworth, president of the University of 黑料天堂 (UA) Bass Fishing Team, want to do something about that, and it all starts with awareness.

鈥淚f you Google Tuscaloosa and fishing, what pops up is Chuck鈥檚 Fish, a restaurant here,鈥 Adams said. 鈥淲hat we are doing is trying to find something that will have an economic impact on the area. We鈥檝e got this river; how do we use this?鈥

Adams contacted Dr. Hobson Bryan at UA and Bob Hale at L&L Marine in Northport, and they told him Tuscaloosa County was missing out on millions in the economic impact that bass tournaments can produce.

鈥淲e鈥檙e missing out on between $1.3 million and $3.5 million by not being able to have fishing tournaments on that river,鈥 Adams said. 鈥淲e knew this was huge. My boss and I went to the Bassmaster Classic in Birmingham right before the COVID shutdown and talked to Kay Donaldson with the 黑料天堂 Bass Trail.鈥

Donaldson, who runs the hugely successful 黑料天堂 Bass Trail (ABT), was asked how to get an ABT event in Tuscaloosa to fish the Black Warrior.

鈥淵ou guys are going to have to start having more tournaments,鈥 Adams said of Donaldson鈥檚 response. 鈥淪how us you can do it, and we鈥檒l start talking about adding you to the trail.鈥

Adams said residents around Lake Tuscaloosa, a lake formed by damming the North River, are not interested in expanded bass fishing, which means the focus will be on sparsely populated Holt Reservoir and Bankhead Lake on the Black Warrior.

鈥淚t鈥檚 really a gold mine down here on the river,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e just trying to figure out how to market it. The more we market it, the more interest there is. That creates demand, and, politically, they鈥檙e going to have to build infrastructure because of the demand.鈥

Adams said he is talking to the City of Northport about building a boat ramp capable of handling larger tournaments.

鈥淭hey have an area at Bankhead Dam where we want them to build a boat ramp that is six or eight lanes wide to accommodate a lot of boats and add parking,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 know the state of 黑料天堂 is all about fishing, and this is one of the untapped areas.

鈥淩ight now, everything is about 黑料天堂 football, and we appreciate that. But that鈥檚 just seven weekends a year. Fishing is our next focus. It can be a Monday through Friday deal, not just weekends. And we know fishermen come in days before the actual tournament, which has a real economic impact.鈥

Hollingsworth said Adams reached out for some advice on how to boost the Tuscaloosa area鈥檚 reputation for bass fishing. Holt Reservoir is a 3,296-acre impoundment in the picturesque Appalachian Highlands. Up river, Bankhead Lake is 9,200 acres and flows through Walker, Jefferson and Tuscaloosa counties.

鈥淚 told them I would absolutely help because I鈥檝e fished these rivers and lakes all my life,鈥 Hollingsworth said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a very versatile place. You can be throwing a swim jig in one place or be throwing a Shaky Head or jig against a wall in another place. You鈥檙e not limited. Holt has stained water with about 2- to- 4-foot visibility. If you go up to the dam (Bankhead), you get cooler water but with current. Going south, it鈥檚 warmer and it cleans up a little too. I enjoy fishing Holt because there鈥檚 a bigger population of fish, bigger fish as well.鈥

Hollingsworth and UA partner Hunter Luke landed several big fish during the tournament at Ross Barnett Reservoir in Mississippi. Photo courtesy of Adam Hollingsworth

While Hollingsworth is more than willing to help with the marketing, his role is actually fishing as a member of the UA team. Hollingsworth is considerably older than his UA fishing teammates. The 34-year-old former policeman, Army veteran and current member of the Army National Guard decided to go to UA to get his degree in criminal justice to further his career in law enforcement. He鈥檚 graduating this week with almost a 4.0 average and plans to enter graduate school.

Before Hollingsworth became president of the UA bass fishing team, he helped get uniforms and graphics for the anglers鈥 boats, and he started adding sponsors to fund the expenses.

鈥淏eing this old in college is kind of weird,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 just try to be a role model for the other members of a team.鈥

Hollingsworth said he鈥檚 been hooked on fishing since he was limited to a cane pole and a bucket of minnows.

鈥淚 had a crappie rig and put a minnow on it and threw it out,鈥 he said. 鈥淎 big ol鈥 largemouth ate it. There were some people fishing right up from us, and their mouths dropped.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 what really sparked my love for it. I kind of got away from it when I was in the military. When I got back here in 2012, I started fishing again. I got with my buddy Dwayne Allen, and he showed me pretty much everything. I learned how to fish a swim jig from him.鈥

Although Hollingsworth has a few plastic worms in his tackle box, they rarely see the daylight. Fishing slow is not his game.

鈥淚 like to fish fast,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檒l get out a Shaky Head if that鈥檚 the last thing I can think of to catch a fish. Most of the time, I鈥檓 going to have a swim jig or a jerkbait in my hands. If it鈥檚 early in the morning, I鈥檒l walk a Spook and throw a buzzbait. I like to move fast and cover a lot of water. In the summer, I will throw a crankbait.鈥

The UA fishing team competes in the Strike King-Bassmasters College Series, the Abu Garcia College Series, the ACA (Association of Collegiate Anglers) Bass Pro Shop Series and the Southern Collegiate Series, which will hold its state championship at Lake Eufaula later this month.

鈥淚 went to Eufaula for the first time two years ago,鈥 Hollingsworth said. 鈥淭hat was the first time I鈥檇 seen gators on the water. I saw gators almost as long as the boat I was in. I thought, 鈥極h, my gracious.鈥 And I wasn鈥檛 far from Lakepoint State Park.鈥

After Eufaula, Hollingsworth and his fishing partner, Travis Pattillo, will be headed to Michigan to fish in Lake Huron鈥檚 Saginaw Bay.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 going to be a trip,鈥 Hollingsworth said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to have three teams there. I鈥檝e never been there. Travis has never been there. What I鈥檝e heard is it鈥檚 a Disneyland of smallmouths. We were just warned about the waves. I鈥檒l have to learn how to drift fish.鈥

While he鈥檚 fishing in the South, Hollingsworth loves to fish for bedding bass.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a game, and I like that challenge,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a competitive thing between me and the fish. I鈥檒l lock onto a fish for an hour, especially if I see it getting madder and madder. When they flare their gills or turn sideways, you know it鈥檚 on.鈥

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Holt Reservoir holds largemouth bass and spotted bass, like this nice one Hollingsworth landed with a jerkbait. Photo by David Rainer