Savik First Woman To Fish Championship As Pro

  • bill_cadwell
    Rochester, Minnesota
    Posts: 12607
    #1324380

    For additional information, please contact:
    Dave Washburn, communications director, (270) 252-1607

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    SAVIK BECOMES FIRST WOMAN TO FISH EVERSTART SERIES CHAMPIONSHIP IN PRO
    DIVISION

    BENTON, Ky. (Oct. 16, 2002) – Karen Savik of St. Louis Park, Minn.,
    finished 15th on the pro side of the EverStart Series Northern Division
    this season. More importantly, she earned a berth in the EverStart
    Series Championship, making her the first woman ever to qualify as a pro
    angler for an FLW Outdoors bass-fishing championship.
    Savik put together a successful string of finishes in four qualifying
    tournaments, finishing as high as 20th at the Mississippi River
    tournament June 28 in Red Wing, Minn., and again on Lake Champlain July
    26 in Ticonderoga, N.Y., to secure her spot in the EverStart Series
    Championship. She will fish against 149 other anglers for a top pro
    award of more than $60,000 in cash and prizes, including a Ranger boat
    powered by Yamaha or Evinrude. The event, which is to be held Nov. 6-9
    on Lake Martin near Alexander City, Ala., boasts a $325,000 total purse.
    “It’s a head shaker,” Savik said. “It’s hard for me to believe.”
    Believe it or not, Savik will be a serious contender in this year’s
    championship, and she says she got there by taking a different approach
    to her fishing. “This year, I’ve said I’m just going to go do what I
    do,” said Savik, who started fishing the EverStart Series last season.
    “I said I would go enjoy it and just go fishing. I think maybe taking
    some of the pressure off myself has helped.”
    2002 has been a banner year for female anglers. Judy Israel of
    Clewiston, Fla., won the Co-angler Division of a Wal-Mart Bass Fishing
    League event in July and earned the distinction of being the fifth
    female angler in history to win an FLW Outdoors tournament. By
    qualifying for the championship, Savik takes her place next to Israel
    and other trailblazers like Wanda Rucker of Cocoa, Fla.; Renee Flesh
    Hensley of Edwardsburg, Mich.; Nobie Lebert of Brooklyn, Texas; Glenda
    Jackson of Las Vegas, Nev.; Beverly Little of Greensboro, N.C.; Tammie
    Muse of Little Rock, Ark.; and Shirley Crain of Van Buren, Ark., in the
    line of successful female anglers.
    Although finding success as a pro angler is a path not forged by many
    women, Savik considers it par for the course. “Sometimes people shout,
    ‘Karen, do it for the women,'” Savik said. “I don’t think I’m doing this
    for all the women. I have a hard time doing it for me, let alone all the
    women! I have to forget that I’m a woman out there because it isn’t an
    issue. You just get out there, and you just do it.”
    While Savik says she doesn’t really consider herself a role model,
    she does hope that her efforts can inspire other female anglers to take
    charge and join the sport of competitive fishing. “Hopefully they’ll see
    that women can compete in this,” Savik said. “I don’t think I’ll make
    the difference, but if I do for just one woman, I’d be pretty happy. I
    sure would.”
    Competitive fishing is one of the few professional sports where women
    and men compete against one another on the same playing field, says
    Charlie Hoover, president and CEO of FLW Outdoors. “That’s one of the
    great things about this sport,” he said. “It’s open to everyone. Men and
    women, people of all races and backgrounds, they all fish. There are no
    limits to the opportunities if you are dedicated and develop the right
    skills. Professional fishing is a fast-growing, big-money sport, and the
    doors are wide open.”
    Each year 14.3 million women fish for recreation, according to the
    National Sporting Goods Association. That’s more than the number who
    participate in jogging, basketball, volleyball, softball, golf or
    tennis. Thirty-three percent of these female anglers fish for bass,
    making bass fishing the most popular type of fishing among women,
    according to the U.S. Department of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife
    Service. Research also shows that fishing is the fastest-growing sport
    among the 10 most popular women’s sports and recreation activities, with
    participation rising 10.8 percent between 1999 and 2000, according to
    the National Sporting Goods Association. Women spend $3 billion per year
    on fishing equipment and trip-related fishing expenses, according to the
    U.S. Department of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service.
    FLW Outdoors is the world’s leading marketer of competitive fishing
    tournaments. The organization will award as much as $20 million to
    anglers nationwide in 2003 through the EverStart Series, Wal-Mart FLW
    Tour, Wal-Mart Bass Fishing League, Wal-Mart Texas Tournament Trail and
    Wal-Mart RCL Walleye Circuit.

    NOTABLE ACCOMPLISHMENTS BY FEMALE ANGLERS

    Wanda Rucker, Cocoa, Fla. – First woman to win an FLW Outdoors
    tournament, Wal-Mart Bass Fishing League Gator Division, Lake
    Okeechobee, Fla., March 1, 1998.

    Judy Israel, Clewiston, Fla. – First woman to qualify for a Wal-Mart FLW
    Tour final round, ninth-place co-angler, Lake Okeechobee, Fla., Jan. 29,
    1999. Leading female money winner in FLW Tour history. Fifth woman to
    win an FLW Outdoors tournament, Wal-Mart Bass Fishing League Northeast
    Division co-angler, Thousand Islands, N.Y., July 13, 2002.

    Nobie Lebert, Brooklyn, Texas – First woman to win an EverStart Series
    tournament as a co-angler. Second woman to win an FLW Outdoors
    tournament, EverStart Series Central Division co-angler, Toledo Bend
    Reservoir, Texas, Feb. 13, 1999.

    Tammie Muse, Little Rock, Ark. – Second woman to qualify for a Wal-Mart
    FLW Tour final round, ninth place co-angler, Wal-Mart FLW Tour, Lake
    Okeechobee, Fla., Jan. 26, 2001.

    Beverly Little, Greensboro, N.C. – Highest finish for a woman in
    Wal-Mart FLW Tour history. Third woman to qualify for an FLW Tour final
    round, third-place co-angler, Wal-Mart FLW Tour, Pascagoula River,
    Miss., Feb. 16, 2001.

    Shirley Crain, Van Buren, Ark. – Highest finish for a woman in the
    Wal-Mart FLW Tour Pro Division, 16th-place pro, Wal-Mart FLW Tour, Lake
    St. Clair, Mich., June 21, 2001.

    Glenda Jackson, Las Vegas, Nev. – Third woman to win an FLW Outdoors
    tournament, Wal-Mart Bass Fishing League Colorado River Division Super
    Tournament co-angler, Lake Mead, Ariz., Oct. 7, 2001.

    Renee Hensley, Edwardsburg, Mich. – First woman to win a national
    bass-fishing championship. Fourth woman to win an FLW Outdoors
    tournament, EverStart Series Championship co-angler, Pickwick Lake,
    Ala., Nov. 9, 2001.

    Karen Savik, St. Louis Park, Minn. – First woman to qualify for an FLW
    Outdoors championship as a pro. EverStart Series Championship, Lake
    Martin, Ala. Nov. 6-9, 2002.

    For more information, including photos, visit http://www.FLWOutdoors.com.

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