Quantcast The State Hornet
College Media Network

Get macromedia Flash Player

Fishing team wins $5k

Club donates earnings to charities, scholarship funding

Andrew Hazard

Issue date: 4/15/09 Section: Sports
  • Print
  • Email
  • Page 1 of 1
The Sacramento State Bass Fishing Club was established this semester. The team has nine members and is looking to expand.
The Sacramento State Bass Fishing Club was established this semester. The team has nine members and is looking to expand.
[Click to enlarge]
With a new season comes a new club. The Sacramento State Bass Fishing Club is well on its way to bringing another winning-tradition to Sac State.

The club's president, Stephen LeSieur, founded the club in January.

"I went back to Sac State to finish my degree in organizational communications," LeSieur said. "I got word of the major tournament company called FLW (Forrest L. Wood). They were starting a college fishing tour and I inquired with Sac State to see if they had a team or a club set up for bass fishing and they didn't," he said.

LeSieur decided to take matters into his own hands.

"I just sent out some information on www.westernbass.com looking for others who may be interested and (go) to Sac State who are going (here) full-time and are undergrads," LeSieur said.

The club has seven fishermen who actually compete in the tournaments.

"We're looking for eight tournament fishermen," LeSieur said. "We actually have nine members but some of them don't actually fish with us."

LeSieur hopes the club will eventually have 20 to 30 members.

A month before each competition, the club meets to talk about upcoming tournaments.

"In the past, we've invited some sponsors and some local pros to our meetings at Round Table or Starbucks and we have the pros talk with us about fishing strategy. The Buggy Whip is going to provide us with a place to eat and have two of our meetings," LeSieur said.

Although classified as a club, the team hopes the campus will see it in a different light.

"We are considered a club by all the standards of Sac State. It is not like a club where you just go out and have fun. It is competitive fishing. It is a team/club," he said.

Each member of the club is an experienced fisherman. Treasurer of the club and LeSieur's fishing mate, Matthew Paul, has been involved with tournament fishing at a local club for two years.

"(The club is) just a bunch of guys who meet once a month and we fish tournaments," Paul said.

LeSieur has put a lot of effort into fishing. He has spent the last four years on the Future Pro Tour amateur circuit and hopes to turn pro at the end of this year.

"I've always fished. I grew up in Wilton with my grandparents. We had a creek and I used to have fun competitions with my uncle to see who could catch the most bass," LeSieur said.

Paul has fond memories of fishing as a child too.

"I fished a lot when I was little. Whenever I had free time I went fishing," Paul said.

Paul attributes his love of fishing to his family on the east coast where bass fishing is more popular.

FLW hopes to raise the visibility of bass fishing to the west coast through its college-level tournaments, which are sponsored by the National Guard.

There are five divisions in the newly developed league. Sac State is a part of the West Division along with Arizona State, Boise State, Cal Poly, Chico State, Fresno State, Humboldt State, University of Nevada Reno, Oregon, San Jose State, Sonoma State and UC Davis.

There are only 40 spots available at each tournament. That means if there are 40 schools participating in one event, then a school can only bring one two-person team to the tournament. If 20 schools come to the tournament, then that means each school can send two two-person teams to the tournament, and so on.

Each angler is only allowed to bring five rods to a tournament. "It is tough because each body of water brings about different obstacles. When the water is dirty and the course is curvy you need a heavier line. You need a lot of equipment to be successful. Each angler must decide what type of lake (they) are going to and bring the equipment best suited," LeSieur said.

The Hornets had its first tournament on March 7 in Clear Lake and was able to take three teams to the tournament.

Sacramento State's LeSieur-Paul team finished second in the tournament by reeling in six fish at a total weight of 19.04 pounds.

It turns out bass fishing can be quite profitable for the anglers and the university. For taking second place in Clear Lake, Sacramento State won $5,000. Half went to the club while the other half went towards Sacramento State's general scholarship fund.

LeSieur and Paul agree the money is nice but it is the competition that makes it worth their while.

"The competition of fishing against other people, trying to figure out what the fish are doing and figuring out what is the best way to catch them," Paul said is what he enjoyed most.

"The competition is a lot of fun. It is really fun for me to figure out what the fish are doing and not to mention the camaraderie between the team," LeSieur said.

Think of bass fishing in terms of golf; they both are thinking-sports. "It takes a lot of mental skill. With fishing anyone can do it at pretty much any age. It is a tough mental game to try to figure out where the fish is located (and) what baits to chose," LeSieur said.

Yet for the all the money that can be won by finishing in the top five at tournaments, funding a bass fishing club is not cheap.

Sac State has to rely on the kindness of sponsors like NASCAR in order to survive.

"It has been pretty nice. Local companies and the community have been pitching in to help us succeed on this tour. It is a huge deal to have sponsors because even though it is free to play in the tournaments, we still have to pay for our own tackles, poles (and) reels. Our sponsors help us with worms and jigs," LeSieur said.

The Hornets had to use most of its Clear Lake winnings to be able to go to its next tournament in Arizona, but is planning to thank its sponsors for their generosity with future earnings.

"We thought it would be cool to give a portion of our earnings to charity, so our team decided we want to donate all our money to Loaves & Fishes. We want to give something back to our sponsors," Leisure said.

The club will have a chance to improve on its winnings when the Sac State will travel to Roosevelt, Ariz., for its next tournament on Saturday.


Andrew Hazard can be reached at ahazard@statehornet.com
Page 1 of 1

Article Tools

Click here to view the State Hornet's comment guidelines.
Comments do not appear immediately.

Viewing Comments 1 - 1 of 1

Norval Chan

posted 4/15/09 @ 10:35 AM PST

I'm proud to represent the following companies that are providing sponsorship to the Sac State Bass Fishing Team.

The companies are:

ESOX Rods
Put a Sock on It
Lefty's Lures
Save Phace
Xtreme Lubricants
Mend-it
Cool Foot

To assist the team with their upcoming tournaments at Lake Oroville and the California Delta the members of the River City Bass Masters in Sacramento will host a pre-fishing day for the team members on each location prior to the tournament. (Continued…)

Post a Comment

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Get macromedia Flash Player

Advertisement

Print Edition

Online Features Section

Handling a breakup
Online Dating
Interview with Andrew Sean Greer
Hollywood Buzz No. 5 - The Oscar results
Hollywood Buzz No. 4 - The 81st Oscars
Sac in Stereo No. 19 - What makes a great singer?
Hollywood Buzz No. 4 - Classic Christmas Movies
Sac in Stereo No. 18 - Haven't I heard this song before?
Sexcapades No. 7 - Dating your co-worker or your boss
Hollywood Buzz No. 3 - Romantic Comedies
Sac in Stereo No. 17 - Eclectic additions for any record collection
Sexcapades No. 6 - Why men and women date
Sac in Stereo No. 16 - Dillinger Four CD review, worldwide Thriller dance, Prince's secret message
Sac in Stereo No. 15 - Mixtapes and D.Willz live in the studio
Sac in Stereo No. 14 - Soundtracks for the Obama and McCain campaigns
Hollywood Buzz No. 2 - Indie and DVD gems
Sac in Stereo No. 13 - Don't call it a comeback! Should Metallica, AC/DC, Journey and LL Cool J stay or go?
Hollywood Buzz No. 1 - Summer Blockbusters
Sac in Stereo No. 12 - We (almost) interview Kanye, Justin and Amy Winehouse
Sexcapades No. 5 - Going for home base on the first date; avoiding psychos
Sac in Stereo No. 11 - Turntablism v. mashups; Coachella recap
Sac in Stereo No. 10 - Mariah Carey: bigger than the Beatles?
Sac in Stereo No. 9 - Hip-hop meets rock culture; interview and freestlye with rapper D.Willz
Sac in Stereo No. 8 - The state of the Sacramento scene (with KWOD's Andy Hawk)
Sac in Stereo No. 7 - The most overrated artists
Sexcapades No. 4 - The safe Spring-Break hookup
Sac in Stereo No. 5 - Guilty pleasures from the CD bin
Celebrity Wrap-Up No. 3 - The ugliest, most drugged-up celebrities we love
Sac in Stereo No. 4 - The top artists to watch for in 2008
Sexcapades No. 3 - Sleeping together without staying together
Sac In Stereo No. 3 - The worst albums from our favorite artists
Celebrity Wrap-Up No. 2 - Who was hottest at the Oscars?
Sac in Stereo No. 2 - Is music more accessible in this generation?
Celebrity Wrap-Up No. 1 - Does Britney Spears smell; exploiting celebrities' children
Sac in Stereo No. 1 - Why form a side project? Can local musicians even make money?
Sexcapades No. 2 - Proper anal etiquette; watching porn as a couple
Reel Talk No. 7 - Oscarbation
Reel Talk: No. 6 - The dying drive-in
Sexcapades podcast: Hornet relationships and sex: No. 1
Reel Talk: Episode 5 - That annoying guy in the theater
Sex Ed(itors) - Episode 4: Mistakes women make in bed
Reel Talk: Episode 3 - Who's hot in film?
Sex Ed(itors): Episode 3 - Kinky relationships
Rapping with Kingspade's Johnny Richter
Sex Ed(itors): Episode 2 - Fetishes
Reel Talk: Episode 2 - Cult Classics
Reel Talk: Episode 1 - Summer movies
Sex Ed(itors) : Episode 1 - Oral Sex
Local reggae artists sound off
The Dimes to flip in for nooner
Jello to slide into Union Ballroom on Monday
Mayday Parade interview
Lovedrug interview
Red Jumpsuit Apparatus interview

Advertisement