|
Baker’s primary goal was to get a
website up and running, so that he could start letting people
know that he was working for the women’s future also. The
self-titled American Lady Anglers website was posted in its
under-construction configuration the week of the Bassmaster
Classic. It is not yet fully-functional, but is meeting its
goal in letting the women know that there is going to be
something different out there. Baker’s trail is not the Co/Pro
Individual format of both Thompson and Bowden/York’s, but a team
format exclusively. He listened to the words of his wife, who
had repeatedly remarked that she would rather work as a team
with the woman in the back of the boat, because she felt that
the events would be more relaxed and fun. While she enjoyed
every minute of her time on the WBT tour, she felt there was
room for change.
One of the changes Baker and Elkins
agreed on was to lift some of the restrictions so that the women
would feel more relaxed and more of a team. The first
restriction lifted was a no-brainer; erase the
Off-limits/Official Practice Days format. Both Baker and Elkins
sympathized with the many women who had to leave significant
others and family-members at home. Many of them, with families
to support and limited vacation time had to make the hard
decision to have someone stay at home, either with or without
children to look after, because the significant others couldn’t
be in the boat pre-fishing during the entire week leading up to
the tournament anyway. Monday through Wednesday afternoon of
each tournament week, only registered contestants were allowed
on the water. It didn’t make any sense for their significant
others to take off work, only to stay at the hotel or campground
all day waiting around for their loved ones to come back, tired
and hungry, ready to eat and shower, then get their notes and
maps out and study until they fell asleep, then wake up and do
it again the next day. With the American Lady Anglers (ALA)
format, the only off-limits their registered contestants will
experience will be from the time they come off the water the day
before the tournament for the registration meeting until the
tournament starts in the morning.
The next change in the ALA tournament
format is the boat operation and angler position. As long as
all federal, state, and local rules are followed, Baker and
White don’t care if their contestants want to be in the front,
back, or middle of the boat, either individually or as a team,
as long as they just stay in the boat to fish. That way, if the
anglers wanted to switch-off and take turns running the trolling
motor, they could do so. This rule change also encourages the
ladies to work together, making the whole experience one of
teamwork. When the boat comes in, the fish in it will be the
product of how well these women work together.
The next step in the process involves
how those women will get together in the first place. Both
Thompson and Bowden/York have specified a random-draw pairing
for their tournaments. After the Kentucky Lake tournament, what
the anglers do will be their choices, based on their voting.
Actually, the ballot to proceed at all will have to be the first
vote passed. They will have to collectively decide that they
want to take on the time and effort involved in obtaining
sponsors, scheduling dates, negotiating contracts with both
sponsors and cities, negotiating with marinas and launch sites,
obtaining the necessary permits, deciding on payout amounts,
purchasing or renting equipment, purchasing liability insurance
to cover the cities, equipment and sponsors as needed, doing
weigh-ins, certifying results, collecting and calculating
payouts, setting rules and regulations governing entries,
filling out action reports required by some cities and states
after events, paying taxes in those states that require it, and
the list goes on…
It quickly becomes evident that
Baker’s focus is on doing the entire planning and formatting
processes first, carefully weighing all of the possibilities and
options. He knows he is not going to be able to anticipate
every scenario, but he can imagine quite a few and he wants to
have contingency plans available as much as possible. The next
focus is dual-pronged: Sponsors and Host Cities. After that
will come the posting of the schedule. The website will carry
the information as it becomes available. The Partner page will
soon be able to take on ladies looking to find partners for the
events. Partnering can be decided well in advance of the events
and has been one of the things he has received the most
questions about.
The Rules and Regulations of the
American Lady Anglers was first vetted and then posted on the
website ahead of anything else. Their purpose was clear – to
allow anyone to read them and decide whether or not to
participate in an ALA event, and to clarify the expectations of
the Tournament Directors when dealing with the registered
contestants. These rules show that it is not really the
individual angler getting the points, but the boat, or team. If
someone wants to have the same teammate in her boat for every
tournament, that is up to her. If she wants to be in one event
or every event scheduled, the same is true. Boaters can fish
with eligible females of their choice. If they want to fish one
event with their mother, two with their neighbor and one with
their daughter, and still make the championship at the end of
the year, that’s up to her. “It’s the boat that really
advances”, explains Baker. “It’s not one of those dances where
you have to leave with who brought you. If the person operating
the boat does well in all of the tournaments, her boat will be
going to the championship. She can decide which of her partners
she wants to take with her.” Elkins added jokingly, “Pam
Martin-Wells could probably fish with a female puppy and still
beat me.”
Important to everyone concerned in
tournament fishing is the Payout Schedule. Thompson and Bowden/
York have named $10,000 as their prize for the winning Boater or
Pro, entry-numbers permitting. Thompson has estimated that a
fifty-boat field will satisfy the first prize pot, based on the
entry-payback. Bowden and York have informed everyone that
theirs will be a “100% Payback” tournament, minus $50 per angler
entry fee to cover expenses, which are detailed on their
website. They also estimate a $10,000 winner purse to the
first-place Professional, and promise additionally, that they
will pay back to the entrants monies left over (if there are
any) after the tournament expenses are paid. The facilities and
equipment for the weigh-in and meetings are being donated by
Moor’s Resort and The Sportsman’s Edge.
Perhaps the most amazing thing that
has emerged during the build-up phase of these tournament trails
is the spirit of cooperation that is clearly seen between all
three entities. Everyone is working together to try to secure
the future of fishing for the lady anglers, and in doing so;
expand the options that the ladies have while enabling them all
to fish together. No one wants to do anything that will impede
the success of any of the tournament trails. That is a difficult
job this first year, taking into account all of the differing
schedules. As much as is humanly possible, Baker is trying to
negotiate with the potential Host Cities for a date that does
not impinge on any of the other tournament trail dates this
year. While it may be possible to do that for the events
already listed by Thompson, Bowden, and York, it is impossible
to prepare for every contingency. He has printed out every
schedule from the Media and Bass Champs, to the Opens and FLW.
He has said, however, that he will try his best to not schedule
over the ladies events themselves. In talking to the many
potential host cities and juggling the possibilities, he has yet
to settle on a date for the Inaugural Event of the American Lady
Anglers, which he wants to be so successful that it will ensure
the future of the ALA in the fishing world.
The first tournament for the ALA will
be scheduled and put on the website as soon as the final
contracts are signed with the host cities and the sponsors.
Since Baker’s goal is to get the highest payouts possible with
the lowest entry fees, it will be up to sponsors and host cities
to provide prize money to fill in the gap between the money
generated by entry fees and the prizes being offered. He would
like to have higher cash payouts than seen historically by the
ladies, and also more places being paid. In addition, Baker
plans to have a lot more “fun” prizes available for any lady who
enters the tournaments. These include things like first fish,
biggest fish, most fish under limit, and smallest fish weighed
in, etc. He is also negotiating for each host city to offer a
prize package as a “Host City Gift”, which could include prizes
and cash, and be available to any registered contestant. The
final category being explored is the Sponsor prizes, which
include everything from boosting the payouts across the board to
individual prizes available to all entrants. Without divulging
the contents of the negotiations, these prizes will be varying
cash values, but in keeping with the Sponsor-oriented theme.
With ALA tournaments enabling more ladies chances to defray
their expenses, Baker hopes to attract more entrants to fish in
all of his tournaments.
His true goal is to enable all ALA
members the chance to defray the high cost of tournament
fishing. In saying that, he is not exaggerating. He has been
negotiating with host cities to give a much more substantial
discount on lodging, food, and any and all expenses paid by the
ladies during the fishing of the ALA tour. Instead of taking
the usual free hotel rooms offered only for tournament staff
during the tour, Baker is trying to get a more substantial
discount for all of the ladies. This includes those camping
along with those staying in hotels, and doesn’t involve just one
“host hotel”, since a single hotel sometimes cannot accommodate
every single angler’s needs. While one angler might like to be
in the thick of the action, another might like to have space off
by herself to get her mind set for the tournament. Some may
have families that want to camp in a family-style park, while
singles may want to stay where there is more action and
activities off the water.
The final thrust of the ALA plan
involves increased media exposure for the ladies fishing the ALA
events. Plans are being made, again involving everyone from the
individual anglers to the host cities and the sponsors
themselves. Beginning with ALA flyers advertising the website,
the first goal is to let lady anglers everywhere know that the
ALA even exists and get them started in thinking about fishing
as a team and who they will partner with. In keeping with his
goal of enabling any lady who wants to fish to come out and fish
with the ALA, Baker is hoping to encourage more ladies located
in sites that an ALA event is scheduled to bring her boat and
partner and come and fish the ALA event. Accomplishing that
will involve a lot more publicity than had been historically
associated with WBT events. Pre-tournament publicity will start
1-2 months prior to an event, starting with the flyers.
Internet, newspaper, radio, and television articles will follow,
in an attempt to reach the widest audience possible. ALA staff
and members will be giving interviews and appearing at media
events at local schools, malls, grocery stores, and other
venues, depending on sponsor desires.
In the three-tier priority list on
which the ALA is based, no one value is predominant. In
addition to having a platform through which all ladies are
welcome to fish, the other two tiers are conservation and the
future of female fishing. All ALA events are catch-and-release,
in which the goal is to return 100% of the fish caught back
healthy into native waters. In keeping with that goal, the ALA
is partnering with the premier maker of Bio-chemical fish-care
products, Sure-Life, to insure that all fish that are brought to
the weigh-in alive will be returned back into their native
waters alive and healthy. Sure-Life is the developer and
supplier of the livewell additive Catch-and-Release, which the
ALA recommends that all of its anglers use to help assure the
health of their fish. Catch-and-release is the only livewell
formula that prevents the spread of disease, combats stress,
stimulates the immune response, and addresses water quality
issues in a single formulation. In returning fish back into
native waters using this formula in their live-release tanks,
the ALA is helping local Parks and Wildlife efforts to improve
their water quality and combat LMBV (Largemouth Bass Virus) and
other diseases. The ALA is proud to announce that Sure-Life is
the first sponsor company to commit to the ALA, and has
contracted to supply all of the Bio-Chemical additives for the
Live-Release and Holding Tanks used during the Weigh-Ins.
Plans are also being made to utilize
the tournament’s pre-event publicity to educate future anglers
and to help assure the future of ladies fishing together. The
ALA is working together with potential Host Cities, along with
local bass clubs and Bass Federation members, in order to pull
together a media extravaganza in which the entire local school
system is brought into the area’s Convention Center or Stadium,
for a large seminar on female professional fishing. Boat
parades, autograph signings, fishing and casting demonstrations,
sponsor product giveaways, and audience participation are all
part of the plan to get young anglers interested in and excited
by the idea of fishing professionally themselves some day.
Older teens will have a chance (with their parents’ permission),
to participate not only in some of the live-action
demonstrations, but to enter into a random drawing in which they
will be able to be outfitted as a pro by sponsoring local tackle
shops, and fish for the day as a team member with an actual
female professional angler. Sponsor dollars are needed for all
of this, including a fair compensation given to offset trip and
tournament expenses of the professional anglers willing to spend
their time on the water with the future lady anglers, giving up
their chances to win the event fishing with a more experienced
partner.
Baker and White feel that
implementation of all of these plans will help not just the
current generation of lady anglers, but will help lady anglers
of the next generations become interested in participating in
the sport. He gets many calls wondering when the first
tournament is going to be scheduled, and hopes to post that
soon. Before that happens, however, he has a list of things
that he feels necessary to the successful launch and
continuation of a ladies team tournament trail. “If I had had
about a year or two to put together an organization, recruit
sponsors, and then negotiate contracts with potential host
cities, I might have been able to pull it off a lot more quickly
and efficiently. As it is, I began seriously thinking about it
the second week in January, and by the third week, I had a
website up. I consider that to be a step in the right
direction.”
All three entities share the common love of the sport of bass
fishing and the feeling of the need for a place where ladies can
compete together on a level playing field. Although their
approaches have been different fundamentally, they all show a
willingness to work together, share information, and root for
the success of the other team. Actually, that’s where the
difference really is. There is no “other” team. There’s room
for everybody in the world of women’s fishing to accommodate all
three entities. All three are pulling for their own success and
the success of the other two. It just goes to show that, when
it comes to fishing, whether you call them the WBT, the WBD, or
the WXYZ, when it comes to the ladies, they’re serious about
their fishing. They want to fish together, and a successful
ladies tournament trail means that everybody wins, no matter
what the letters end up being.
Note: On March 9, 2010, after
the filing of this story, the IFBBA announced that it would be
cancelling the WBD Tournament Scheduled March 18-20, 2010, at
Lake Bob Sandlin. Sabrina Thompson called each individual
angler who had been registered for the tournament, to apologize
for the cancellation, which had been done for reasons of poor
attendance. After finding out that there were possible issues
with the Arkansas River, due to recent heavy rains, the decision
was made to cancel the WBD second tournament, and concentrate on
the third one at Lake Belton, in June. Although the Bob Sandlin
tournament had apparently had a very low registration numbers,
Sabrina stated that quite a few people told her that they were
going to register, either online or at the site, increasing the
number of anglers who would have fished at the WBD inaugural
tournament. With the online registration being so light,
however, she had no way of knowing how many would turn up at the
last minute, and felt an obligation to the ladies already
registered to cancel and refund their money to be on the safe
side. Sabrina is going to redouble and concentrate her efforts
on the future of the WBD, including not only the Lake Belton
tournament but the tournament schedule for 2011. Like all of
the planned ladies’ events, we can only hope that her future
efforts will result in success. Once again, a successful ladies
tournament trail means that everybody wins, now more than ever.
|