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McGuckin: 7 Qs with Ike

McGuckin: 7 Qs with Ike

Editor's note: Prior to the final day of practice for this week's Cayuga Lake Elite Series, industry rep Alan McGuckin caught up with Mike Iaconelli at the ramp this morning and quizzed the former Classic champ and Angler of the Year on the upcoming event.

Mike Iaconelli stepped out of his Toyota Tundra on Wednesday morning prior to the final day of practice for the Cayuga Lake Elite Series and said, “I love this place. I always have I used to say when I’d come up here fishing in my amateur days that someday, maybe, I could buy a place up here in the Finger Lakes area.”

Iaconelli’s roots to Cayuga run as deep as the lake’s staggering maximum depth of 435 feet. Back to his days competing in Red Man tournaments that began to prove his pro potential two decades ago, Iaconelli knows Cayuga is loaded with quality fish, and neither he, nor his fellow pros, are sandbagging on the eve of what’s sure to be a multispecies slugfest.

1. Greg Hackney averaged 21 pounds per day when he won the Elite Series event here in August 2014. How much weight per day will it take to win this week?

> Iaconelli: “Wow! Did he really? I didn’t realize his weights were that heavy. My best guess is 18-pounds per day this year to win.”

2.) Will you spend the majority of your time fishing greater or less than 10-feet deep?

> MI: “Man, that’s right on the fringe – good question – I’ll say barely less than 10-feet.”

3.) Name three lures we’ll see tied on the most among the entire Bassmaster Elite Series field?

> MI: “Texas-rigged plastics, and a heavy punch-skirted jig for getting through the vegetation to largemouth on the very northern part of the lake. And thirdly, a wacky-rigged worm or soft stickbait for smallmouth on the lower ¾ of this lake.”

4.) Will you spend the majority of your time targeting smallmouth or largemouth?

> MI: “Largemouth, because I think largemouth will win this tournament. But the tough part is most of the largemouth fishing takes place in a pretty small portion of the lake located just north of Frontenac Park where we’re weighing-in – so it’ll be crowded up north. South of Frontenac, smallmouth become more prominent.”

5.) You’ve got a wide assortment of rods and reels rigged for the final day of practice – what style of reel do you think you’ll use most in the tournament -- spinning or baitcasting?

> MI: “Baitcasting because I’ll focus mainly on largemouth.”

6.) After two 14-hour days of practice, what do you think will be the biggest X factor in this tournament?

> MI: “Weather. We’ll have clouds and cooler weather for Day 1 on Thursday, but then the rest of the tournament will be sunny and hot – so fish could position a lot differently later in the tournament than what they will on Thursday.”

7.) Lastly, a question not directly related to fishing. You’re a big sports fan, and in the past three weeks there have been some amazing events. Muhammad Ali died. The Penguins won the Stanley Cup. Lebron James gave his hometown their first championship in 52 years. Dustin Johnson returns from personal struggles to win the PGA’s U.S. Open, and Greg Hackney won BASSfest. Which of those resonates most with you?

> MI: “Lebron bringing home a long awaited championship, because he performed like a champion to win a long awaited title for his hometown in his sport’s biggest game, under a ton of pressure. That’s what a champion of his caliber is expected to do – and he delivered.”

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