Well, I didn't have the availability to watch the last day live, but it certainly was a shootout through day three (and really until the finish from what I can gather online). I thought Spohrer might have been able to pull it off, as I know the fish that area is capable of producing, and he would have done it if he could have gotten another 16-6 bag (which was his average for the previous three days); both he and Monroe were fishing the same essential pattern - lower pool backwaters - they were just on different pools... and as many of us tournaments types know, it's about having less pressured water, which is where Ish may have had the advantage. Part of me expected Martens to pull it off also because no one else was hitting his fish, and I know the quality of those fish as well, but it just wasn't meant to be. Overall, a very exciting tournament, and watching it live was super intense.
Lamar: Years ago Minnesota allowed culling while Wisconsin did not and that caused some problems for the winner of the first (hosted) Redman All-American tourney here back in the late 1990s; then, some years later with a lot of protesting, Wisconsin abolished their no-cull rule, but (somewhere around the same time) Minnesota instituted theirs, which burned Palaniuk (when someone dropped a dime on him).
In a similar fashion to Palaniuk's unawareness, did you notice the bass hooked in the side that Martens caught (on the jigging spoon) and put in his livewell?... that could have been trouble if the DNR wanted to get stinky because any fish caught outside the mouth is a foul catch and must be immediately returned to the water... (I worked with a guy that got burned on this rule for chin hooking walleyes with a jigging rap)... and, just as in Palaniuk's case, breaking a state rule could have been grounds for a DQ on Martens' day three bag.