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			 The Big Bass Bash tournament is the largest amateur bass 
			tournament in the Midwest. Approximately 3,800 avid fishermen 
			compete in the event. This was the third time Malone had entered 
			this particular contest and as the saying goes, “Third time's a 
			charm.” 
 This contest certainly paid off in a big way. He won the $100,000 
			grand prize for having the biggest fish of the entire weekend and 
			then he received an extra $2,000 for having the biggest fish in a 
			time slot. He didn’t keep all the money for himself, though. He 
			split it with his fishing partner, Jim Lubben of Springfield.
 
 Quite a fish story
 
 With the events still very fresh in his mind, Malone said, “It was 
			pretty surreal, that’s for sure. We went down on Thursday morning 
			and just pre-fished, tried to find out where the fish were at and we 
			really didn’t do that well,” said Malone of the luck he and Lubben 
			started out having.”
 
 With two days worth of practice under their life jackets, they 
			finally decided on a place they would start on Saturday morning. 
			Malone explained, “We found one spot that we found some good fish at 
			but we didn’t know there were any this big. We decided that was 
			where we were going to start because we didn’t have much else to go 
			on.
 
 In this event you can leave and go sit on your spot at two in the 
			morning if you want, you just cannot make a cast until seven 
			o’clock. So we got there on Saturday morning at about five till or 
			ten till seven. I was not 100 percent sure how the rules laid out, 
			so seven o’clock on the money was when I took my lights out of my 
			boat. I didn’t know if you could have them out before because it was 
			just starting to get light out by then and I thought well, I’ll wait 
			until seven to even take them out.”
 
			
			 He continued with his tale, “So, I took my lights out and I could 
			see other people somewhat nearby that were fishin’. So I started 
			fishin’ and I looked at my fish finder and it was seven o’clock and 
			fifty-five seconds. I just started fishin’ and had some little fish 
			hittin’ and I thought well I’m not gonna throw anything to catch the 
			little fish this early in the morning. 
 I switched baits a couple of times and about the third cast with 
			that chatterbait, a fish hit. And it was exciting from there on. It 
			was a battle to get it in. 7.16 pounds,” Malone says, very clearly. 
			“It was a good one,” he added, flashing a big smile.
 
 “That’s his new name,” '7-1-6', Kerry’s wife Michelle chimed in. 
			Malone kept grinning, “That’s what the guys in the bass club are 
			calling me. 7-1-6.” He speaks those words again, very clearly and 
			distinctly, and says, “It’s pretty funny.”
 
 Speaking of his bass club, Malone mentions that eight members of the 
			Lincolnland Bassmasters of Springfield, Illinois went to the 
			tournament together. “A good group of guys, we all like to tease 
			each other and have a good time.” Still gathering his thoughts about 
			the experience he says, “It was pretty amazing.”
 
 Recounting the fish story in detail, Malone says, “So anyway, we get 
			the fish up to the boat and it takes off and we finally battle and 
			get it in the boat.” Malone told his partner, Lubben, who netted the 
			fish, “I’m like, man that’s a good one.”
 
 The best mistake he ever made
 
 “I said before, it was probably the best mistake I ever made. 
			Because I thought the first fish over five pounds weighed in at the 
			tournament got a $1,000 bonus. I’m looking at the fish, I’m like 
			this is a six pounder. We got a chance to win this hour, because it 
			pays out every two hour time slot.” Malone explained the two hour 
			time slots were: 7 a.m. until 9 a.m., 9 a.m. until 11 a.m., 11 a.m. 
			until 1 p.m. and 1 p.m. until 3 p.m.
 
 So with the thought of winning $1,000 on the line, Malone 
			immediately tells Lubben they have to get moving on this. “So I’m 
			thinking we gotta hurry up and get back. So I’m telling my partner 
			we gotta go,” said Malone.
 
 “Let’s weigh the fish first,” said Malone, following his initial 
			instinct and telling the story accurately. “So I weigh it on my 
			scale and it comes up seven pounds two ounces. I’m like, my scale is 
			wrong,” Malone’s voice gets a bit of excitement in it. “This thing’s 
			like six and a half pounds or something like that. So either way we 
			got a chance to win this time slot.”
 
 Malone then says to his partner, Lubben, “Let’s go!” No time to 
			waste. No time for pictures or even admiring the catch.
 
 Two men with a fish, on a mission
 
 Malone continued with his fish story and explained that he and 
			Lubben quickly sat down in the boat and got all their stuff together 
			and took off for the weigh station. “We go as fast as the ole’ 
			Skeeter would let me go,” he said, his voice getting a little 
			excited.
 
 “We get to the weigh in and there’s nobody around,” he said. Pretty 
			soon here comes a guy down the dock and he asks if Malone has a fish 
			to weigh in. Malone answers yes, and the guy says, “I’ve got a weigh 
			in bag and you can keep it. Is it a big one?” Malone answers, “Yeah, 
			it’s a pretty good one,” he grins again, obviously proud.
 
 Malone was curious if any other fish had been weighed in yet, and 
			the guy on the dock answered, “Well, I don’t know. We’re just 
			getting set up.” Malone was not sure exactly what the guy meant, 
			because he did see people all over doing things.
 
 Well, it’s not five pounds
 
 Nonetheless, Malone put the fish in a bag of water and asked the 
			guy, “Are there any fish over five pounds weighed in, do you know?” 
			The guy looks at Malone and says, “Well, that’s not five pounds.” 
			Malone hesitates and says to the guy, “Well, it’s over five pounds.” 
			Then the guy says, “But it’s not five pounds.” Malone says in the 
			interview, “Oh, I am confused at this point.”
 
 Malone continued, “So I got the fish and I’m holding the bag really 
			tight and I am running up to the scales trying to be the first one 
			because there are five different weigh in sites and it’s all done by 
			the computer somehow.” When Malone gets up to where he needs to be, 
			he asks, “Is there any other fish over five pounds weighed in for 
			the $1,000 bonus?” This guy says, “Well, it’s not five pounds. It’s 
			bigger than that.”
 
 Malone laughs nervously, just like he’s back in that moment all over 
			again. He finally says to this guy, “I know, why do people keep 
			saying this?”
 
			
			 “So I ask again and he goes, it has to be five pounds exact.” Malone 
			shakes his head and says, “Aw, well crap, I didn’t know that.” 
			 
			 
 7.16
 
 Malone is getting to the really good part in the fish story now.
 
 “So anyway we are sitting there and we weigh the fish and it comes 
			up 7.16 pounds,” said Malone. “I’m like, wow, that’s a big one!”
 
 No exaggeration here, that indeed was a big catch.
 
 “So then it still hasn’t really registered with me yet. I was kind 
			of thrilled on that and thinkin’ alright, I have a chance to win the 
			hourly or whatever. I still hadn’t put everything together at this 
			point.” This guy eventually guides Malone in the direction of yet 
			another guy.
 
 This new guy has the lie detector test. “This is serious, yes,” said 
			Malone. “There’s a lot of money on the line and people will cheat 
			for way less, you know. So I go talk to the guy.”
 
 This guy introduces himself and Malone admits he doesn’t remember 
			his name but he did recall the guy saying, “Well, it’s early and 
			obviously the big ones are bitin’, so if you weigh in another one 
			today, ‘cause you can weigh in one every two hours, so if you weigh 
			in another one today, you need to come see me or catch up with me at 
			the end the day.”
 
 Malone said ok and explained that in the tournament you can weigh in 
			a fish every two hours. The guy said again to Malone, “You 
			definitely need to make sure you catch up with me ‘cause you’re 
			probably gonna win this.”
 
 Malone brushed that thought off and said, “Ah, I don’t know about 
			that.”
 
 The guy continues, “I don’t think there’s been a fish over seven 
			pounds weighed in, in over five years.”
 
 Malone nonchalantly answers back, “Oh, okay. Thanks. I’ll catch up 
			with you.”
 
 “Make sure you do,” says the man.
 
 “Alright,” says Malone.
 
			
			 
			Reality sets in
 The fish story continues and the reality begins to set in.
 
 “So no big deal,” Malone said. “I walk back down to the boat and 
			grabbed my life jacket and put it on.”
 
 As Malone had pulled into the boat dock earlier, he remembered his 
			boat had died and he said that thought was in the back of his mind, 
			“Why did my boat die?” Malone wondered. “No big deal. I’m all amped 
			up getting ready to tie up the boat. I get back in the boat and on 
			my life jacket, you have a tether cord that like if you fell out of 
			the boat, it will shut the boat off, and that’s why it died. I’m 
			like, oh there’s my cord. That was somewhere just in the back of my 
			mind. And then I just sat down on the deck and laid down on my back 
			and I thought I might actually win this. This is a possibility.”
 
 He paused, “So then it hit me and uh...” Malone kind of choked up a 
			bit and his voice trailed off.
 
 Seconds later he gathered his thoughts and answered the question 
			about how much time had elapsed now. “This is probably by 7:15 
			a.m.,” he said. “I weighed the fish in and I think they said it was 
			7:12 a.m. I was fairly close to the weigh in site. I probably caught 
			the fish at either 7:04 or 7:05 that morning. My boat goes pretty 
			fast,” he laughed and added, “I can cover some water pretty fast. 
			Man, I don’t think it still sunk in good until later that day.”
 
 Without a doubt, a lot sure happened in fifteen minutes that 
			morning. Malone and Lubben had caught what could be the biggest fish 
			of the weekend, but they had to wait until late afternoon on Sunday 
			to know for sure. This was only Saturday morning. One can only 
			imagine the anticipation the rest of the entire weekend.
 
 So what did Malone and Lubben do next? “We went right back to the 
			same spot,” Malone said quickly and laughed.
 “Back to the beginning, why I said maybe it was the greatest 
			mistake I made, because by me thinkin’ that I needed to get weighed 
			in real fast, I got 7.16. A lot of times a fish, I mean they go to 
			the bathroom like we do and they spit up shad or blue gill. So mine 
			weighed 7.16. The second place finisher was 7.15.” 
 Take a deep breath now and go, wow!
 
 “So pretty close,” Malone let out a deep breath himself and 
			continued. “By me taking it and weighing it right then, might have 
			done the whole deal for me. Because otherwise I might have stayed 
			there and fished a little bit longer to see if there was other big 
			ones.
 
 "I can keep two fish in my live well, I can only weigh in one in a 
			time slot, plus my partner could have caught one. And we were in 
			this fifty-fifty. Whatever I catch he gets half of, and whatever he 
			catches I get half of it. That’s how we work it. That’s not how the 
			tournaments are necessarily set up, that’s just what we agreed on 
			three years ago when we started doing them.”
 
 Second place in the tournament paid out $20,000 by the way. That’s a 
			huge difference.
 
 Still Malone’s mind was just on fishing. “I’m thinkin’ I need to get 
			back out there and fish instead of talking to these people,” Malone 
			laughed. “I don’t think it had really sunk in how big that fish was 
			at that point. I mean, I knew it was a good one. I fish a lot,” he 
			readily admitted.
 
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			 With wife Michelle nodding her head, Malone said, “Probably 
				50-60 days a year, I bet. I spend a lot of time on the water. 
				About every weekend, and that usually turns into a three-day 
				weekend, from March until the second week of October usually.” 
				Malone confessed, “I fish a lot of tournaments. The last couple 
				of years I kinda pushed it to the limit and maybe did a few too 
				many. I really didn’t feel like I had been competitive like I 
				should because I was bouncing from lake to lake to lake, instead 
				of actually getting time to practice on the lakes.” 
 Malone and Lubben have more fishing on their minds.
 
 At any rate, Malone and Lubben get back to work. “Honestly, we 
				went back out to the same spot and I ran the boat just as hard 
				going back as I did coming in. We didn’t want to leave fish that 
				were actually biting because we hadn’t gotten very many bites. 
				We got back out there and we got a few but not a lot, nothing of 
				any size. We beat that bank up pretty good. By the end of the 
				weekend on our fish finders you can hit a waypoint and it’ll 
				mark a spot where you are at and then it also saves a tracking 
				from everywhere you’ve been. I had went back and forth so many 
				times up and down that bank that you couldn’t even see the 
				waypoint on my fish finder, almost. So we milked it for 
				everything we could.”
 
 The other half of the “we” in the fish story, Lubben, concurred, 
				“We knew it was going to be a big fish so we didn’t get too 
				excited Saturday yet, but Sunday was when we really got excited 
				and we were nervous. Sunday was when we were really on the pins 
				and needles. We were pretty quiet in the boat. We normally 
				badger back and forth between each another and have a good time, 
				but we were a little quiet on Sunday. We didn’t talk for two or 
				three hours.”
 
 Lubben also mentioned how everyone was nervous on Saturday night 
				and of course the members of the Lincolnland Bassmasters were 
				rooting them on. Lubben added he knew Malone didn’t sleep very 
				well Saturday night.
 
 Looking back, Malone also realized that he was nervous. After he 
				and Lubben returned to that fishing spot Saturday morning, 
				Malone admitted that in about an hour nerves set in. “My chest 
				kept tightening up, my stomach was hurting and I’m like, ah man, 
				my side is killing me and Jim says “you need to slow down a 
				little bit.” I guess I was casting a reel a little fast, it was 
				starting to set in at this point. I switched baits all together 
				just to slow down. I started throwing a jig at that point and 
				that makes me slow down a little bit. That’s when it really 
				started setting in.”
 
			 
			Too close for comfort 
 Malone was also able to check his phone as the tournament posted 
			frequent updates, adding to his anxiety. He recalled his phone 
			blowing up as friends got wind of his big catch and began calling 
			and texting. One friend even sent a message that read, “Dodged a 
			bullet” or “That was a close one” something like that Malone said. 
			So a curious Malone checked the updates and that’s when he saw the 
			7.15 fish weighed in, that was maybe 9:30 a.m. Saturday. Finally at 
			one point he just had to shut his phone off and move it to another 
			compartment in his boat. That lasted about ten minutes, he said.
 
			
			 
			Meanwhile, Malone is in touch with his wife throughout the weekend, 
			as she is back in Illinois. 
 “That’s a long two days,” Michelle said. She admitted the reality of 
			it didn’t set in with her until after lunch on Sunday. “It was a 
			long, long day,” agreed Kerry. “I was doing everything possible 
			mentally in my mind to keep my composure.”
 
 A passion for fishing
 
 Time to go back in time and discover how this passion for fishing 
			developed. Malone talked about being heavily influenced as a little 
			boy by his father and two uncles. “My whole life I fished. My 
			earliest memories are fishing. I was probably just walking and I was 
			fishing. I started bass fishing in farm ponds pretty young with my 
			uncle and my dad.”
 
 Malone’s dad was George Malone and this uncle he is referring to was 
			Jim Barfield. Both men are deceased.
 
 “That was over in Brown County, Illinois, where we usually fished.” 
			Malone later converted an aluminum boat into “somewhat of a bass 
			boat” and got a trolling motor from his uncle Ross Hall, who has 
			also since passed. He ended up taking that boat to Clinton a few 
			times. He spent much of his childhood fishing around these men.
 
 Later on Malone would have two brother-in-laws who influenced his 
			passion for fishing. He said they were like having “extra-dads.” 
			Harold Coats and Norman Heath were the brother-in-laws who helped to 
			mold him into the fisherman he is today.
 
 Eventually that boy grew up but he never outgrew his love for 
			fishing.
 
 
 An addiction (of the good kind)
 
 So when Malone started a new job in Lincoln, his fishing turned 
			serious. He got hired at the bottle factory in Lincoln in June of 
			1994 and he admits, “That’s where my fishing addiction really became 
			a true addiction.”
 
 He hadn’t been at the bottle factory very long, when Mary Morgan had 
			a conversation with Malone in the parking lot. Malone just happened 
			to have a sticker in his truck window that read, “BASS” for Bass 
			Anglers Sportsman’s Society, he explained.
 
 Mary and Malone made small talk and Mary finally asked, “Do you like 
			to bass fish?” Malone told her he really did like to fish. Mary 
			asked if he ever fished in any tournaments. Malone recalled 
			answering, “No, I’ve never been in a tournament.” Mary threw him 
			some bait, “Well, my husband fishes tournaments and bass fishes all 
			the time. He’s always looking for somebody to go. I need to get you 
			guys together.”
 
 Malone took the bait and said, “Ok, sounds good.” No big deal, he 
			thought at the time.
 
 Just a couple days later, Mary hollers at Malone from across the 
			catwalk at the bottle factory and wants him to come over to that 
			side of the building. Malone followed directions and moments later 
			he was meeting Mary’s husband, Travis. “He got me into fishing, bass 
			fishing, bigger lakes and he had a nice big Ranger boat. I started 
			fishing with him, I got into a bass club and the addiction has 
			spiraled out of control since then.”
 
			
			 
			Michelle lets out a big laugh and says, “He is not lying.” 
 Kerry smiles and says, “I couldn’t even imagine how much I have in 
			rods and reels and tackle.” The two just keep laughing as Kerry goes 
			on to say that he’s always “organizing that stuff this year.”
 
 Malone mentions that he was just in contact with Travis after 
			winning the tournament. “I just sent the information to Travis 
			because he was kind of my mentor. I sent it to him and he’s still 
			got the old style flip phone so he couldn’t even see one of the 
			pictures. Then he called me and we talked a little bit.”
 
 What’s next
 
 Back to the future. For now the fish is back in the lake and Malone 
			will be back to the Big Bass Bash in the spring. “Absolutely, 
			hopefully I catch it,” Malone said of the 7.16 bass released back 
			into the Lake of the Ozarks. “I’ve never fished the one in the 
			spring but now, how can I miss it?”
 
 Of course not.
 
			 
 A grateful family man
 
 Kerry is indeed thankful for his understanding wife. “Michelle makes 
			a lot of sacrifices for me to do this. I spend a lot of her money on 
			this. Plus she’s running errands for me because I am fishing,” he 
			said.
 
 Kerry also appreciates the efforts of his coworkers who help to make 
			these fishing trips possible. He works for Memorial Medical Center 
			in the HVAC department and he’s thankful for the great guys in the 
			shop, who often switch the schedule with him and cover for him so he 
			can fish. “It’s a good deal,” he said.
 
 Finally, he added, “It’s pretty awesome for both us,” as Michelle 
			continues to smile. “It’s a big accomplishment and I’ll do 
			everything I possibly can to win another one. I don’t know that I 
			can do it but....” Michelle jumps in to finish the sentence, “all 
			things are possible, right?” “Absolutely,” says Kerry. “If it 
			happened once, it can happen twice.”
 
 Kerry and Michelle have a son, Cory, who also fishes with his father 
			but he’s not quite as intense about it. “Cory likes to fish but not 
			quite like me,” said Kerry.
 
 Summing up his big weekend win, Malone simply says, “Right place, 
			right time, it was just my time.”
 
			
			 One final note:
 Of course, I had to ask what he was going to do with his half of the 
			money. He answered honestly that with his phone blowing up so much, 
			combined with the busy week he was having, he and his wife had not 
			even had a chance to talk about the money yet.
 
 The guy didn’t even get a chance to go cash the check, since this 
			reporter was bothering him. He was just so humble and still in awe 
			of the amazing experience.
 
 There were even balloons decorating his porch when he arrived home, 
			compliments of Taylor Lowe.
 
 By the way, Kerry is an awesome storyteller, as one would expect, 
			since that comes along with being a fisherman. If you see Kerry, ask 
			him about another fish tale that happened to him while at the 
			Ozarks. I love the guy’s attention to detail. This fish story began 
			at 1:48 p.m. on Sunday.
 
 Congratulations, Kerry!
 
 [Teena Lowery]
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