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Kenora's Jeff Gustafson is 1st Canadian to reel in the Bassmaster Classic championship in Tennessee

Kenora, Ont.'s Jeff Gustafson — Gussy to his friends and fans — has done what no other Canadian angler has ever done.

On Sunday, Gustafson won the Bassmaster Classic in Knoxville, Tenn., an event that's often called the Super Bowl of professional bass fishing.

Gustafson led handily going into the third and final day Sunday, and it looked as if he might have an easy ride to the championship.

But the smallmouth bass he had been targeting in the deeper water of the Tennessee River watershed shut down that day, and he only caught two bass in the live well. 

"I had an hour ride back to check-in, and it was horrible," said Gustafson at the televised weigh-in. "I thought I'd blown it for sure. I thought there was no way I'd even be in the mix."

However, people who watched the event at home — thanks to in-boat cameras — could see the other leading anglers struggling as well.

Viewers knew Gustafson was still in contention.

He was the last to weigh in and his two bass were six pounds, 12 ounces.

Although he was three fish short of his limit, Gustafson hung on and won the event with a three-day total of 42 pounds, 7 ounces.

As the first Canadian Classic champion winner ever, Gustafson takes home the Ray Scott Trophy and a $300,000 US first-place check.

Gustafson also claimed the $7,000 US Rapala Monster Bag of the Week with the 18.8-pound limit he caught on Day 1 of the event.

Gustafson was using a technique called "moping," which involves hanging a jig under the boat with almost no action. He would see the bass on his electronics and dangle the jig over them.

Gustafson said onstage that the Smeltinator jig he used was also made by his friend Bryan Gustafson from Fort Frances, Ont., who was also in the stands to see the weigh-in.

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Read more on cbc.ca