Canterbury Seals the Deal on Douglas Lake

Final-Day Flurry and Big Fish Lock in First NPFL Win.
canterbury_NPFL

Story by Justin Brouillard | Photos by Tanner & Travis Lyons

With light wind and shifting water levels across Douglas Lake, anglers were once again forced to adjust on the final day of Stop #3 of the NPFL season. The offshore bite never really came back after Day One, and while shallow patterns remained the deal, water color and stability varied depending on where you were.

When the dust settled, Scott Canterbury, who shared the lead heading into Showdown Saturday, showed up when it counted. He started the morning fishing floating docks around a marina and connected with a 4-pound, 14-ounce kicker—his biggest of the week—then backed it up with another solid keeper to put him over 8 pounds right out of the gate. From there, he returned to his flooded bushes, where he’d caught fish all week, and made key culls to build his final-day bag of 19 pounds, the biggest of the event.

He kicked things off with 17 pounds, 6 ounces on Day One to take the lead, then added 14 pounds, 3 ounces on Day Two—his slowest day of the week. On Saturday, he slammed the door shut, weighing the tournament’s heaviest bag to earn his first NPFL win and take home the Douglas Lake NPFL Shield.

Kyle Welcher, the reigning Progressive AOY, came out swinging and put together a solid bag of 16 pounds, 10 ounces, finishing in second place with 48 pounds, 3 ounces for three days. Barron Adams finished in third place with 43 pounds, 2 ounces, adding his biggest limit of the event on the final day.

Canterbury Closes Strong

After holding a share of the lead through two days, tied with Kyle Welcher and Tim Cales, Canterbury knew the final day would come down to decision-making. As it turned out, a choice he made in practice—and another first thing Saturday morning—helped seal the deal.

“Where I caught those big fish this morning, I actually had 15 pounds in there on Day One, but yesterday I only caught one fish,” he said. “The 5-pounder and the 3.5 really got me going this morning and settled me down. I kept it honest each day and was rewarded today.”

The other key decision came several days earlier. With only a day and a half of practice, Canterbury committed to a 3- to 5-mile stretch of the lake and went all in on the bushes and trash mats.

“I spent most of my practice driving around that area and marking places that had 4 to 7 feet of water in the pockets. I was just looking for what looked right,” he said. “Today, I noticed the main stretches I was fishing had the trash mats blown out, away from the bushes. When the mats are there, fish can be anywhere. But when they blow out, those fish slide to the first bush nearby—and today, it was game on.”

Everywhere he stopped on the final day, he got bit. And everywhere he had marked debris mats earlier in the week, he caught fish today. He rotated through 20 to 25 spots on Showdown Saturday and had his best day of the tournament when it mattered most.

“I tried to find as many spots in that one area as I could that would let me run around during the event,” he added. “Some ended up being sneaky, and some I knew would get fished. But I knew a few might be mine. I love fishing this way—when I won on Beaver Lake years ago, it was almost exactly the same deal. Today, everywhere I stopped I caught a fish.”

Growing up on the Coosa River, Canterbury learned how to be efficient picking apart shallow cover. As the water rose during practice, it created the perfect storm. Like Welcher, he left the dock on Day Three fired up and ready to go fishing.

“One other big thing for me this week was using Fishlife First Aid Fish Treatment and their Livewell Treatment,” he said. “I saved a 4-pounder on the first day, and every time I hooked one that started bleeding, I was able to get it back healthy. It was an incredible week out here on Douglas.”

Canterbury’s one-two punch was flipping a Khaotic Custom Rod rigged with either a Dirty Jigs Scott Canterbury Flipping Jig or a Matt Herren Flipping Jig, swapping to a Reaction Innovations Beaver when needed. His setup was rounded out with a Spearpoint Flipping Hook and an Epic Tungsten weight.

Welcher Falls to Second

Alabama pro Kyle Welcher continued to get better as the week went on. After starting in seventh with 15 pounds, 1 ounce on Day One, he jumped into a tie for the lead with 16-8 on Day Two, then wrapped up his tournament with a strong 16-10 limit to finish in second place with 48 pounds, 3 ounces—increasing his weight each day.

He got off to a fast start on Showdown Saturday, locking in a solid limit early and settling into a groove. The area he had dialed in all week continued to produce, and while he ran some new water during the event, it was this stretch on Douglas that held the best quality and became his go-to zone.

“I really don’t know why it got better each day, but I stuck with it because the quality was better than anywhere else I tried to fish,” he said. “I would leave and come back and catch one. The area had everything I liked to fish all in one stretch.”

His main approach—no surprise to anyone—was relying on the Rapala Bronco Bug, a bait that’s earned him a lot of money in 2025 and one he trusts more than anything else. He mixed in a frog to try and trigger a few bigger bites, but in the end, all 15 bass he weighed came on the Bronco Bug.

“Each day it was different, and I don’t know why. One day they were inside on the trees, then outside, then in the debris mats, and some along the vegetation,” he said. “That Bronco Bug is really special. The hinge system makes it unique, and that thin section between the body and tail gives it tons of movement on the fall.”

After a long stretch on the road and a slower practice, heading out on Day Three with a legit shot to win meant a lot—but even more because it let him fish the way he loves.

“I was fired up for the one-day shootout. Whoever got them the best today was going to win—hats off to Scott,” he added. “Fishing shallow cover is something I consider a strength, and to get to fish that way this week was super special.”

A total of 105 anglers weighed five-fish limits all three days, and 113 anglers recorded a catch overall. Tim Cales earned Big Bass honors with a 5-pound, 2-ounce largemouth from Day One.

Top Ten:
Scott Canterbury 50-9
Kyle Welcher 48-3
Barron Adams 43-2
Tim Cales 42-7
Brandon Cobb 42-5
Nick Brown 41-12
Brad Staley 41-11
Caleb Kuphall 41-1
Hunter Sales 40-11
Lendell Martin 40-4

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Since the NPFL launched in 2021, the goal has remained the same: To prioritize anglers and establish a trail that aligns with the original intentions of competive bass fishing's founders.

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