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Kristine Houtman
06-25-2007, 05:37 AM
Kemos Husband and Wife Team Win $27,000 at Cabela’s MWC at Green Bay

Total Purse Exceeds $113,000 -- Presented by Toyota


Green Bay, WI -- Tom and Heidi Kemos of Oconomowoc, Wisconsin bested a field of 184 teams for the Cabela’s Masters Walleye Circuit tournament out of Green Bay, June 23rd and 24th. While Tom cut his teeth on the Masters Walleye Circuit back in the mid-90’s, this was his first circuit victory, and particularly sweet with the one he loves. Heidi, a self-proclaimed novice when it comes to tournament fishing said, “I just do what he tells me to do, and luckily I did it pretty well this time.”

Indeed. The duo brought in the maximum ten fish over two days totaling 56.57 pounds. Tom strategized staying in the lower bay at this time in the season, and targeted a little stained water in the Two-Mile Reef area, the North and East side of the reef. They trolled spinners with crawler harnesses with blue and white beads and pink and blue #6 blades.

His Mercury Pro-kicker helped him keep the troll dialed in slowly, 0.9 to 1.2 mph, targeting a 23’-25’ break line four feet off the bottom. When asked the key to his success he said, “My particular boards have a great tattle-tale indicating lite bites – and that allowed me to detect what I might have otherwise missed. When I got a lite bite I fed out 30’-35’ of line. That seemed to really make a difference.” Kemos targeted the bigger fish that were staying closer to the bottom. “If you got any higher than that you’d catch a lot of fish, but they were smaller ones. The bigger fish were further down.”

Tom Kemos is the reigning PWT Champion, winning his first-ever walleye tournament for $100,000 last fall. This was his second walleye victory; he had previously fished more bass tournaments. In the last two years he has won several honors in the PWT, but also enjoys team fishing when the schedule works. “I do this because I love the competition – and the MWC is the premier team circuit. The competition is just as fierce on the MWC as on any other I fish.”

The weekend bite was very good on the Bay of Green Bay, with the 184 teams weighing an average of 8.4 fish per team, totaling 1,555 fish at 5,830.2 pounds, a respectable 3.75 pound average. “This fishery is spectacular,” shared emcee Steve Pennaz from the stage. Pennaz is the Executive Director of the North American Fishing Club and Vice President of Outdoor Television at North American Media Group. “There were over 100 teams that caught ten-fish baskets. That’s truly amazing!”

Kevin & Karen McQuoid of Isle, Minnesota weighed the largest fish of the tournament on day one at 11.04 pounds. A total of $7,300 was paid out for big fish money with $1,850 for first place. The following teams cashed in the big fish pot accordingly:

Day 1 - 1st Place: $1,850 Kevin & Karen McQuoid of Isle, MN 11.04 lbs.
2nd Place: $1,275 Jeff Manz of Vanderbilt, MI & Greg Yarbrough of Port Clinton, OH 10.48 lbs
3rd Place: $525 Rob Krause and Dave Dretske of Berlin, WI 9.89 lbs.

Day 2 – 1st Place: $1 850 Don Olson of Andover, MN & Michael Olson of Coon Rapids, MN 10.23 lbs.
2nd Place: $1,275 Dan Wheaton of Yorkville, IL & Eric Palmquist of Oshkosh, WI 10.08 lbs.
3rd Place: $525 Tie between John Gillman & James Bakos of Freeland, MI and Gerald Arnold of Norway, MI & David Koller of Iron Mountain, MI 9.63 lbs.


Second place honors for 54.24 pounds went to John May of Forestville, WI & Chad Wertepivy of Green Bay, WI. They cashed a check for $12,100 plus a $2,000 bonus from Toyota to total $14,100. May bought his Toyota Tundra a month ago and just loves it. The Tundra is quickly becoming the new tow vehicle in the circuit.


Jerry Plourde of Cornell, MI & Dan Stier of Pierre, SD took fifth place honors with 52.2 pounds and cashed a check for $4,200 plus the $1,000 bonus from Ranger Cup totaling $5,200. In all, $113,400 was paid out to the top 32 teams.


Toyota donated a bike specially rigged to carry fishing rods to the NPAA/MWC Youth & Family Fishing Clinic on Saturday, immediately following the weigh-in. Lowrance Electronics, Cabela’s and the North American Fishing Club donated rods and reels with tackle boxes full of essential gear to area kids. After putting their very own rod in their hands, the NPAA anglers led the kids in learning to tie the knots for slip-bobber fishing. Lauren Neabling, age 4 of Oshkosh, WI won the bike which was probably more likely the size for a twelve year old. She told the anglers, “I might have to grow another week before I can ride this bike, but then I’m going fishing all by myself.”


Farm and City Insurance Services donated safety equipment to several anglers, including two new PFDs. In addition, they place $5 for every quote into the conservation fund. Ice Armor also donated a new set of outdoor gear.

The Packer Country Visitors and Convention Bureau hosted the event, and the Walleyes for Tomorrow Club provided volunteers to assist with tournament operations, such as boat inspection, parking, weighing fish, setup and tear down. In appreciation the MWC anglers have donated $15 from each entry fee for conservation efforts in the area. Club President Dan Farah acknowledged that a gift of $2,760 will help tremendously in building reefs in the Fox River, which will assist with spring spawning.

Openings exist in future MWC tournaments. The remaining schedule is:

MWC East
July 21 & 22 – Youngstown, NY – Niagara River and Lake Ontario

MWC Central
Sept 8 & 9 – Dubuque, IA – Mississippi River


MWC West (Exhibition Tournament)
August 18 & 19 –Ortonville, MN – Big Stone Lake

World Walleye Championship (invitation only)
Oct 4-6 -- Dundee, MI -- Detroit River and Lake Erie

For more information contact circuit headquarters by email at: events@masterswalleyecircuit.com or toll-free by phone at 877-893-7947.

Cabela’s is the title sponsor for the Masters Walleye Circuit. Official Sponsors are Toyota Trucks, Mercury Motors, Ranger Boats, MotorGuide, Lowrance Electronics, North American Fishing Club and Versus (Vs.) television network. Associate sponsors are Tommy Docks, The Inhibitor, Food Source Lures, Ice Armor and Farm & City Insurance Services.

j unlogged
06-27-2007, 04:18 AM
Great job Tommy and Heidi!!!! Enjoy the new ride!!!

J Ruffolo

yarby (Greg Yarbrough)
06-27-2007, 07:26 PM
Congratulations Tom and Heidi. Great job in Green Bay! Way to hang tough day two and finish strong. Heidi I hope you pick a nice one out. Again great job! Enjoy!

Greg Yarbrough

GB Upset
06-28-2007, 10:46 AM
So, can anyone tell the number of walleyes that Died during and after this tournament. Local rumor is they could not find enough people to keep them so they buried some.
Last tournament killed 200 large walleyes in much colder water temp 3 weeks ago.
And theres another big tourney in 2 weeks.......


HUMMMMMMMM

WalleyeHunter1
06-28-2007, 10:56 AM
What caused this?

Juls
06-28-2007, 10:59 AM
Uh Huh...and we all know how RUMORS spread. They keep getting bigger and bigger in each new telling. Your's sounds like a whopper!

We don't deal with rumors on this site. Got proof, or just local hear say?

Juls

GB upset
06-28-2007, 11:41 AM
Not fact on this last tournament, but the previous tourney was printed in the Green Bay Gazzette that 200 had actually died

Fact Finder
06-28-2007, 11:43 AM
>Uh Huh...and we all know how RUMORS spread. They keep getting
>bigger and bigger in each new telling. Your's sounds like a
>whopper!
>
>We don't deal with rumors on this site. Got proof, or just
>local hear say?
>
>Juls
Just look at the pictures here on the live leaderboard page. All of the big fish look dead to me. As long as none go to waste it is not a waste. Who would want to eat walleye that big out of the bay is another story.

thump55
06-28-2007, 12:28 PM
In the NTC, there were 250 boats (500 fishermen!) fishing for TWO days and only 200 fish died? That is awesome, especially if they were eaten.

Dave S

Kristine Houtman
06-28-2007, 12:57 PM
We had an 87% release rate. Better on the 2nd day when we held the boats out on the lake rather than too many in the warmer river.

Over 26" is Non-Consumption in those waters, we could not donate those. However we arranged through a couple of groups to put the meat to good use (church groups, food pantry) ...and I know they came by and took care of that both days.

For 85 degrees plus air temp both days and warm river temps (80 to 82 degrees) this was a pretty successful release program. Successful doesn't mean 100%. That's unrealistic.

Thanks to the Walleyes for Tomorrow Club that helped out. And thanks to Bumpmaster Dan Palmer for managing the oxygenation and temperature levels in our release tanks. He's doing a great job!

Kristine

Nate Curell
06-28-2007, 03:29 PM
Congrats Tom and Heidi, that's a pretty awesome feet to do as a husband and wife team. Class Act!

Johnny Synett
06-28-2007, 05:36 PM
Congrats Tommy and Heidi!

Juls
06-28-2007, 07:36 PM
It seems like only yesterday, that we were congratulating you, Tommy, for your PWT Championship Title, and now we're doing it again for your MWC win at Green Bay.
This time you shared it with your wife...that's a memory for the rocking chairs and grandkids, eh? How cool is that? :rock-on:

Congratulations to you both for a job well done! ;)

Juls

Juls
06-28-2007, 07:36 PM
It seems like only yesterday, that we were congratulating you, Tommy, for your PWT Championship Title, and now we're doing it again for your MWC win at Green Bay.
This time you shared it with your wife...that's a memory for the rocking chairs and grandkids, eh? How cool is that? :rock-on:

Congratulations to you both for a job well done! ;)

Juls

Gary Korsgaden
07-01-2007, 06:58 AM
First, congratulations to Heidi and Tom impressive tournament record.
Second, here we go again on dead fish at tournaments. It comes down to this. Biologically, it doesn't make a dent in the fish population particularly on big water. Most fishery biologists, shavey ones anyway without political pressure, think it is just fine to have catch and kill events. The only negative impact "visible" dead fish has at a tournament, it helps the anti tournament and the anti sport of fishing crowd. They would like you to believe tournaments are bad because there are some dead fish. But wasting fish, if that happened, is not a good idea and tournament organizers need to be proactive and find ways to donate the fish. Community fish fries etc.
The tournament proved there is a healthy walleye population close to the city of Green Bay, for us outsiders, and that is positive.

Gary Korsgaden
07-01-2007, 06:58 AM
First, congratulations to Heidi and Tom impressive tournament record.
Second, here we go again on dead fish at tournaments. It comes down to this. Biologically, it doesn't make a dent in the fish population particularly on big water. Most fishery biologists, shavey ones anyway without political pressure, think it is just fine to have catch and kill events. The only negative impact "visible" dead fish has at a tournament, it helps the anti tournament and the anti sport of fishing crowd. They would like you to believe tournaments are bad because there are some dead fish. But wasting fish, if that happened, is not a good idea and tournament organizers need to be proactive and find ways to donate the fish. Community fish fries etc.
The tournament proved there is a healthy walleye population close to the city of Green Bay, for us outsiders, and that is positive.