Fothergill breaks records, makes history with Bassmaster Classic win

FORT WORTH, Texas, March 23, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Nineteen months ago, Easton Fothergill was lying on a gurney in an Alabama hospital, awaiting surgery to remove an infected abscess from his brain.

Minnesota's Easton Fothergill wins the 2025 Bass Pro Shops Bassmaster Classic presented by Under Armour in Fort Worth, Texas, with a three-day weight of 76-15.

Photo by Seigo Saito/B.A.S.S.
Minnesota's Easton Fothergill wins the 2025 Bass Pro Shops Bassmaster Classic presented by Under Armour in Fort Worth, Texas, with a three-day weight of 76-15. Photo by Seigo Saito/B.A.S.S.

Sunday afternoon, in front of thousands of fans at Dickies Arena, Fothergill stood tall as champion of the 2025 Bass Pro Shops Bassmaster Classic presented by Under Armour.

Fothergill, a 22-year-old native of Grand Rapids, Minn., finished the three-day event on Lake Ray Roberts with a total of 15 bass for 76 pounds, 15 ounces. It was the biggest winning weight in the 55-year history of the most prestigious fishing tournament in the world and was exactly 8 1/2 pounds more than the nearest competitor in the field of 56 anglers. Fothergill is also the second-youngest champion in Bassmaster Classic history (only Stanley Mitchell who won the 1981 Classic at 21 was younger.)

For most anglers, the Ray Scott Trophy and a $300,000 check are the biggest prizes to accompany a Classic victory. But for Fothergill, just being able to compete in the Classic was the ultimate prize. He said every feeling was heightened given his very real brush with mortality less than two years ago.

"It's indescribable, the trajectory of my life since that first bad moment," Fothergill said. "Everything has come true that I've ever wanted. It's pretty crazy."

Fothergill fished with confidence on Lake Ray Roberts, having to switch spots and techniques every day of the tournament. The versatility was necessary as Day 1 was extremely windy, Day 2 was calm, and Championship Sunday was somewhere in between. Rising temperatures started the spawn on Ray Roberts, too, and bass were scattered across the 23,950-acre reservoir as they began moving to shallow water.

As Fothergill would find out, that made getting bites difficult on Ray Roberts. The difference for him was he was able to get big bites every day, something most of his peers couldn't do.

"Eighty percent of my catches this week came on a 3/32-ounce Neko rig (red bug)," he said. "I caught a couple on an off-white jerkbait, too, but I had confidence in the Neko in the (slightly stained) water."

Fothergill's most important catch of the week came mid-afternoon Championship Sunday and with only four bass in his livewell, at that. He spotted a fat bass suspended near a tree in the back of a slough. He went back to the Neko rig, casting delicately to not spook the bass. He said he "lost four baits to that tree within 10 minutes. I just broke them off rather than spook that fish … The funny thing was she swam out and wasn't even interested in the bait. But then she turned back and just ignited on it.