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Late start no hindrance for Martens

Late start no hindrance for Martens

(Editor's note: B.A.S.S. issued the following press release Sunday evening after Aaron Martens wrapped up the Angler of the Year title ahead of next month's AOY Championship event at Sturgeon Bay in Wisconsin.

Aaron Martens slept through his alarm clock Sunday morning, got on the water 30 minutes late and still clinched the 2015 Toyota Bassmaster Angler of the Year title 3 weeks early.

By finishing 6th in the Plano Bassmaster Elite at Lake St. Clair, the 43-year-old Leeds, Ala., angler built an insurmountable 102-point lead over his next closest competitor. It sealed possibly the most dominant season in Elite Series history. And it made the Toyota Angler of the Year Championship on Lake Michigan’s Sturgeon Bay next month a foregone conclusion.

“Now I feel bad,” said Martens. “If I wouldn’t have done that, (the AOY race) officially wouldn’t have been over.”

Martens was only halfway kidding. There was very little chance anyone was going to catch him, even if it had been mathematically possible, at Sturgeon Bay next month. Now it’s impossible.

In the eight-tournament Elite Series season, Martens won twice and finished lower than 15th only once. His one hiccup came in the second tournament of the year when he was 66th at Alabama’s Lake Guntersville. His victories came at Lake Havasu and Chesapeake Bay. He finished 2nd at the Sacramento River/California Delta, 3rd at the Sabine River, 13th at the St. Lawrence River and 15th at Kentucky Lake.

“It’s getting better every day,” Martens said of the 2015 season. “I’ve definitely been blessed this year.”

This marked Martens’ third AOY championship. He previously won in 2005 and 2013. He was 4th in 2014.

“It has been an amazing 3 years,” said Martens, who has won over $2.5 million in his B.A.S.S. career.

It was a sign of how diligently Martens has prepared for every tournament day this season that he slept through his alarm clock and several wake-up calls Sunday morning. From working on tackle and preparing his nutrition shakes each evening, Martens has been averaging 4 hours sleep per night. Exhaustion may have caught up with him before Sunday’s final day on Lake St. Clair.

“I never heard an alarm go off,” Martens said. “I’ve never done that before. When you wake up and see it’s light outside, you know you’re in deep (trouble).”

Even spotting the other 11 finalists a half-hour before he got on the water, Martens still moved up in the standings Sunday, starting in 11th place and finishing in 6th. It was just the latest example of how dominant he has been all season.

The final AOY standings won’t be determined until the Sturgeon Bay event, but going into it, Dean Rojas is 2nd with 601 points, Justin Lucas is 3rd (598), Jacob Powroznik is 4th (565) and Edwin Evers is 5th (564). There will be 35-plus 2016 Bassmaster Classic berths decided by the final AOY standings after Sturgeon Bay.

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