Bass Angler Magazine

Ryan Hall Hauls Up The Limit To Lead Day One Of BAM At The Delta

BAM TT pro am 3 delta 1 Ryan HallPro angler Ryan Hall of Orangevale, Calif. junk-fished his way to the top of the Day One leaderboard at BAM Tournament Trail’s 3rd Pro/Am stop of the 2024 season at the California Delta with a five-fish limit that weighed 27.90, anchored by a 7.63 Big Bass. Hall’s bag boosted his standings more than six-pounds over his nearest competitor and cu

rrently has him holding the biggest bass of the event.

Fishing the 1000 miles of waterways of the tidal water fishery, Hall covered a lot of water and narrowed his areas by breaking them into zones that he described as five square miles. He didn’t specifically consider tide changes. “I bounced around those big zones,” he shared.  “I could be in one spot for 15 minutes or five minutes or 20 minutes. I didn’t have a game plan, just a few areas that I felt I could catch them in, and I didn’t really chase the tide. I just fished what was in front of me, but when the tide dropped out it did get tougher.”

With his weigh fish in the box by noon, Hall stopped fishing and looked for new grass and mats to use for the next two days of fishing.

“I threw a Senko, a bladed jig, punched, got some frog fish; it was a little bit of everything,” said Hall about his first day. “Mostly it was about areas rather than baits. I ran around a bunch, and I caught three punchin’. I didn’t get a ton of bites that way, but the ones that I caught were good.”

Yamamoto Senko Green Pumpkin Black
Yamamoto Senko (Green Pumpkin Black)

His theory on nothing specific regarding types of baits, continued through to the colors that he found most productive “When I was flippin’, I had craw colors, the Senko was Green Pumpkin, and the ChatterBait was bluegill,” he explained. “There was a lot of bluegill in the areas I was in, but mostly I don’t think color mattered that much.”

Dobyns Rods and P-Line were the tools for his techniques. “I had everything out from an 8’ Dobyns punchin’ rod to a 7’3” casting rod,” he shared. “I got some new P-Line braid the other day at Fisherman’s Warehouse (the BAM TT Conservation Partner) and I was punchin’ with it and throwin my Senko with it – 80-pound for punchin’ and 40-pound to a 17-pound leader for my Senko.”

The big bass in Hall’s bag fell to a frog. “It was a spawn fish,” he added. “I just threw the frog in an area that she was in. Everything else was pre or post spawn. Their tails were really clean, so they were either really far after their spawn or before.”

Target areas for Hall focused on Delta vegetation. “A lot of places had grass and the kind of grass didn’t really matter, just any grass that’s healthy was good,” he stated.

According to hall, the gusty winds of Day One weren’t a factor. “I fished in howling wind and areas that were flat calm and caught fish in both,” he said. “I just had to change the tactics I was using.”

With his biggest bass from the six-pound class, Phil Tilbury of Escalon, Calif. ended Day One with 21.67 and hot off his recent Major League Fishing win from Clear Lake, Ken Mah of Elk Grove, Calif. rounded out the top-three with 20.88 and no recorded big fish weight. Of the 78 anglers, these were the only sacks that broke the 20-pound mark.

BAM TT pro am 3 delta 1 Rodney BrownLeading the co-angler side and gapping the next co more than four-pounds is Rodney Brown of Sacramento, Calif. with a full limit that went 17.51 and included a 6.07 kicker. Brown was paired to draw-partner Steve Frick. Frick a Redding, Calif. pro sits in 15th place on his respective side of the non-shared weight event with 13.78, including his biggest at 5.17.

The morning bite was the sweet spot for Frick and Brown’s bite and Brown had all his weigh fish in the livewell by 8 a.m. thanks to undisclosed down bait presentations. He believed the windy conditions helped.

 “I caught them all on slow baits,” said Brown. Steve was great and gave me plenty of water to fish.”

Launching out of Big Break Marina at safelight, the three-day Delta bass battle will continue through Sunday, April 28. Weigh-ins begin at 3 p.m. each day at the same Marina. Boaters are fighting it out for a pro purse north of $22,000 and the non-boaters for over $10,000.

Full pro and co-angler results can be seen here.

About BAM Tournament Trail

BAM TT Logo Revised 7 copyThe Bass Angler Magazine Tournament Trail (BAM TT) offers an unparalleled media platform for anglers and sponsors alike combining vast exposure opportunities that celebrate the skills of western bass anglers. The circuit garners extensive coverage across television, print magazines, websites, video, digital magazine, and multiple social media channels.

Delta Pro-Am Event Sponsors:

The BAM Pro Tour proudly welcomes the City of Oakley, Oakley Ace Hardware Bass Boat Technologies, Tackle Warehouse, Bass Cat Boats, Mercury Outboards,  Garmin, Storquest and our dedicated conservation sponsor, Fisherman’s Warehouse.

Proud Sponsors of the BAM Tournament Trail:

BAM TT is honored to be associated with its title sponsor, Bass Boat Technologies, and presenting sponsor, Tackle Warehouse. The trail’s also supported by Storquest, Garmin, Bass Cat Boats, Mercury Outboards,  Ford Fairfield, Dish – Accel Marketing, Power Pole, , Bob’s Machine, Wood Bros, Sticky Graphics, Jean Deleonardi Real Estate, Valley Outdoors, Eternal Lithium, Alpha Angler Rods, and Fisherman’s Warehouse.

BAM’s Esteemed Tourism Sponsors:

The BAM TT is grateful for the support of its tourism sponsors: the City of Oakley, the Lake Almanor Chamber, the Boardman Chamber, and the Feather River Tourism Association.

Tournament Details:

The BAM Tournament Trail features the BAM Pro Tour, Pro-Am, and Kayak events, each designed to test the determination of western anglers in a competitive and environmentally conscious format.

Connect with BAM TT:

To learn more about the BAM Pro Tour, Pro-Am and Kayak events. Visit: BAMTRAIL, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Instagram

Media and Advertising Inquiries: Please contact Mark Lassagne for further information regarding media and advertising opportunities.

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