FLW Pro Circuit FLW's top tournament circuit was the FLW Pro Circuit (FLW Tour). The Pro Circuit featured a field of 150 anglers competing for a top prize of $125,000 at each tournament and points to qualify for the end of the season championship, the FLW Title. The top 40 anglers will qualify for the Major League Fishing Bass Pro Tour while the bottom 40 will be demoted to the FLW Series. The FLW Tour was created by businessman
Irwin L. Jacobs, owner of Genmar, the world's largest manufacturer of recreational boats (including Ranger, Wood's former company). Jacobs bought a small fishing-tournament promotion company based in
Gilbertsville, Kentucky,
United States, and renamed the company's tour as the FLW Tour. Jacobs' plan was to turn the tour into the object of major media coverage, with larger cash prizes, a television-friendly competition format, and sponsorships from well-known corporations from outside the fishing industry. Jacobs promptly signed the biggest company of them all —
Walmart — which became the title sponsor for the FLW Tour, which was the first such sponsorship in the giant retailer's history. The tour went without Walmart as a title sponsor in 2010, but the retailer signed a new deal that restored the title sponsorship beginning in 2011. That same day, Jacobs also announced that legendary oilman and investor
T. Boone Pickens had taken an equity stake and a partnership in the company.
Toyota FLW Series The FLW Series was FLW's AAA-level circuit. The Series offered regional anglers a chance to compete close to home for a shot at qualifying for a no-entry fee championship. Twenty four regular-season tournaments were held in eight different divisions around the country. Qualifiers from each division advanced to the FLW Series Championship. The top 40 anglers each year qualified for the FLW Pro Circuit.
Phoenix Bass Fishing League The Bass Fishing League (BFL) is for the weekend angler, featuring one-day tournaments in 24 divisions across the country that provide advanced competition and lucrative payouts. Each division will each feature four one-day qualifying tournaments that pay as much as $8,000 to the winning boater and $3,000 to the winning co-angler, plus a two-day super tournament offering top awards of $11,000 and $4,500, respectively. There are six no entry fee regional championships for the top 45 anglers in each division. The top six finishers at each regional qualify for the BFL All-American.
Non-bass tours In 2001, FLW expanded beyond bass fishing with a new tour for
walleye fishing, for
kingfish and
redfish in 2005 and for
striped bass in 2006. Since 2013, FLW has been exclusively a
bass fishing organization. == Media ==