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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 3:38 a.m., Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Preps: Bass fishing proposed as a Missouri high school activity

By Brent Frazee
McClatchy Newspapers

HIGH SCHOOL BASS FISHING

The competition would include many of the same concepts as other interscholastic sporting events.

° Scoreboards: Digital scales weigh each fisherman's catch and the weight is posted on a scoreboard.

° Bleachers: Fans would watch weigh-ins from a designated area at the edge of the lake.

° Concession stands: What would be more appropriate than fish and chips? Just make sure the fish aren't bass. Those go back in the water after weigh-ins.

° Venues: There would be no shortage of potential tournament sites in Missouri. The Show-Me State has nationally recognized bass waters.

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Picture this: Spectators in bleachers tensely watch as points are posted on a scoreboard, cheerleaders wave pompoms and young athletes sweat out a close contest.

A typical high school game or match? Well, not quite.

Someday, this scene may take place at a Missouri reservoir — as part of a high-school bass fishing tournament.

Don't laugh.

Once you get over the unlikely prospect of a student lettering in bass fishing or getting a scholarship to fish for some Division I school, consider this: Bass fishing already has become a recognized high school activity in Illinois. And a group of fishermen in the bass-rich Ozarks are pushing for the sport to gain the same status in Missouri.

"I know I would have had more interest in school if there had been a bass fishing team," said John Neporadny of Lake Ozark, Mo., a nationally known outdoors writer. "This has the potential to bring in a whole new group of kids who hadn't been involved in sports before.

"With bass fishing being so popular in Missouri, this is a natural. I think it would go over big."

Neporadny is leading the charge to get bass fishing recognized as part of Missouri's high school scene. A former guide and tournament fisherman, he has seen the sport's popularity explode.

From the big pro tournaments on reservoirs such as Lake of the Ozarks and Table Rock Lake to the bass club events on countless bodies of water in the state, Missouri is crazy about bass fishing.

And Neporadny thinks that carries over to youngsters of high school age.

"A lot of these kids in the Ozarks are brought up fishing," he said. "I know a lot of high school kids who are very good fishermen.

"This would give them another outlet. And it would offer teaching tools in biology, meteorology and even math."

The concept already has been endorsed in Illinois, the first state to offer bass fishing as a state-sanctioned high-school activity. This spring, 214 of the 775 Illinois high schools will compete in a tournament series to determine a state champion.

They will start with 10 to 12 sectionals, with the top four or five teams at each of those events advancing to the finals May 8-9 at Carlyle Lake.

Neporadny and others see no reason something similar can't take place in Missouri.

One of the biggest supporters of the concept is Jim Huson, an American history teacher at Republic High School. He fishes tournaments in the Ozarks and teaches a summer-school class on bass fishing. There is classroom instruction three days a week and a half day of actual fishing, often with pro fishermen.

"This is my way of passing along my passion for bass fishing," Huson said. "We may be the only high school in the country that has a class like this.

"It's been unbelievably popular. Once we open enrollment, it doesn't take long for the class to fill up."

Huson has joined Neporadny in mounting a campaign to get bass fishing recognized as a high school sport.

His proposal to the Missouri State High School Activities Association looks something like this:

—Each school that chose to participate would field a team of four fishermen.

—The state would be divided into four regions, each of which would have a sectional tournament.

—Schools would fish as a team, two boats per school. Total weight of bass for each team would count for that school.

—The top 10 teams in each sectional would advance to a state tournament.

—All boats would be operated by a coach or school representative, though students would be allowed to handle the trolling motor.

Neporadny and Huson have been busy this winter trying to gain support for the idea. The activities association will start by including bass fishing on a questionnaire that will go out to state schools soon.

If there is adequate interest, it would then be placed on a ballot and voted on by representatives of member schools this spring. If it passed, bass fishing probably would start as an activity, not a sport. But that could change, depending on the popularity of the events.

"Anytime we can provide activities that give students a reason to wake up and want to go to school, it's a positive thing," said Jason West, a spokesman for the activities association, "But we can't add activities just to add them.

"We have to make sure there's adequate support from our schools. That's the process we're in now — to see if that support is there."