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Southeastern University announced Bass Fishing as its 20th program on January 17, 2023. Members of the SEU community welcome the newest team during a ceremony featuring University leadership, donors, and the new boat.

Bass Fishing Donnie Smith

Fire Athletics adds Fishing as Newest Program

Southeastern University will launch its 20th athletic program this fall when bass fishing begins its inaugural season this coming fall.
 
The Fire will compete in the Bassmaster College Series and Major League Fishing's Abu Garcia College Fishing Series where boats of two anglers each will fish in a tournament on a given weekend with each boat weighing in its five best fish.
 
Several donors, including Mark Overstreet and Pete Frantzis, got behind the program early on to help with its launch and encourage others to give. 

"I have been bass fishing all of my life," said Overstreet, an avid outdoorsman who was paralyzed from the waist down at the age of 19. "Fishing is my passion. It has given me great freedom, and it is my stress relief." 

"We are very grateful for the generosity of Mark and Pete and all of those that gave to start the program," said Executive Vice President Dr. Chris Owen.
 
Southeastern will travel across the south to compete in various tournaments from the Harris Chain of Lakes in Leesburg, Fla. to the Sam Rayburn Reservoir in Brookeland, Texas to Lake Hartwell in Anderson, S.C.
 
"The addition of a fishing program brings one of the fastest growing sports to Fire Athletics," said Director of Athletics Drew Watson. "It's no secret that bass fishing has taken the intercollegiate athletic world by storm and this goes a long way towards expanding our brand into a new and exciting demographic of intercollegiate athletics."
 
Southeastern graduate Weston Marsh will serve as the program's first head coach and is currently in the process of gathering sponsors and his first roster of 10 anglers to begin competition in August of 2023. Anglers participating will earn scholarships to participate on the team and will have their travel expenses and tournament entry fees covered by the program.
 
"Weston brings a unique mix of strengths and experience into his role of head coach," said Watson. "First off, he is a Southeastern alumnus who knows our campus and culture and has the unique ability to recruit mission-fit student-athletes who are accomplished anglers. Add to that his skill as an angler and the wealth of knowledge of the industry and you have what is a great fit for the person to lead our program."
 
Marsh, a 2013 Southeastern graduate returns to Lakeland to start the Fire Fishing program after working as a home builder in Charleston, S.C. Marsh has a passion for the outdoors and boasts a very successful tournament fishing resume.
 
"I feel super privileged and very honored to have the opportunity to come back to Southeastern, do what I love doing, and do it at a university that I believe in," said Marsh. "Southeastern absolutely changed my life in the four years that I was here and having the opportunity to come back and provide the same opportunity for anglers is an honor."
 
The high school fishing scene in Florida provides a fertile recruiting ground for Marsh as just Webber International and Florida Gateway offer the type of fishing program that Southeastern will. Most of Florida's top anglers have had to look at colleges dozens of hours away in the past. Now, a much closer option exists.
 
"Some of the leading talent in the industry comes out of Florida," said Marsh. "With Southeastern providing a legitimate program here in the state, we are able to capture a lot of great talent here in Florida."
 
"We have the opportunity to get behind the anglers 100% which I feel like a lot of other universities don't have that opportunity when it comes to fishing," said Marsh. "There aren't very many schools in the state that are going to do things the way that we are. We don't expect other athletes to take turns swiping their debit cards to get to competitions, and we aren't going to ask that of our anglers either."  
 
 
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