LAKE MILLE LACS – Brandon Palaniuk had said he would be the last professional bass angler to pull his boat off this giant lake the other evening, and he was.
As Tiffanie McCall, his girlfriend, backed a fancy-wrapped Toyota pickup and boat trailer into Mille Lacs in front of Eddy's Resort, awaiting Palaniuk's arrival, a faint orange glow dusted an otherwise darkening sky.
Palaniuk, of Hayden, Idaho, was concluding one of three practice days on Mille Lacs that he and 49 other Bassmaster Elite Series pros were allowed ahead of this weekend's Toyota Bassmaster Angler of the Year Championship.
At stake are cash and prizes worth $1 million, with $25,000 awarded to the angler who catches the heftiest three-day bag of bass, and $100,000 and the Bassmaster Angler of the Year title reserved for the fisherman who amasses the most points after a 10-tournament season that ends on Mille Lacs.
Palaniuk, 29, who has fished the top tier of national Bassmaster tournaments since 2011 and has nearly $1 million in winnings, was the points leader heading into Mille Lacs, topping Oklahoman Jason Christie by just 15 points, 811 to 796.
Since February, Palaniuk has recorded six top 12 Bassmaster Elite Series finishes, including a victory at the Toyota Bassmaster Texas Fest on Sam Rayburn Reservoir, north of Beaumont.
"I can't point to any one thing that has been a difference maker this year," he said. "I did make some changes in the offseason that helped my focus and confidence. Now it seems even if I don't have a good practice, I'm confident enough to make something happen when it counts."
In last year's Mille Lacs Angler of the Year Tournament, Minnesota's Seth Feider weighed a three-day smallmouth bag of 76 pounds, 5 ounces, topping the 50-angler field. Gerald Swindle, meanwhile, of Guntersville, Ala., totaled the season's most points a year ago after Mille Lacs and was named 2016 Bassmaster Angler of the Year.