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VanDam recalls 'pots and pans' at Ross Barnett

VanDam recalls 'pots and pans' at Ross Barnett

Industry rep Alan McGuckin filed this report from Ridgeland, Miss., site of this week's Bassmaster Elite Series:

A lot of things change in three decades, so Kevin VanDam put in long practice days on Ross Barnett in preparation for this week’s Bassmaster Elite Series. The only other time he has fished the shallow reservoir previously was 32 years ago when he was just 17 years old.

“Back then, I was fishing team tournaments and B.A.S.S. Nation Series tournaments around home in Michigan, and my team partner Don Stevens and I qualified for an end-of-the-year tournament down here at Ross Barnett,” explained VanDam. “To be honest, I don’t even remember what trail it was.”

He may not remember the tournament circuit, but the southerly winds warming the air at Madison Landing boat ramp following a long day of practice seemed to spin sweet memories of 1985 at a rate equal to the revolutions the giant willow leaf blade was making beneath the swivel of the spinnerbait he was holding.

“Don and I called this spinnerbait blade combination 'pots and pans' because those big blades clank on each other underwater and make a ton of noise like somebody banging pots and pans together,” VanDam recalled with a smile.

And in what would become a very telling tournament 32 years ago – the noisemaker worked.

“I caught a 7-pounder from a beaver hut on a big-bladed spinnerbait just like this in that tournament, and that big fish is the one that landed us a Top 10 finish,” he said. “Other than that, I really couldn’t remember much about this place before practice started Monday.

“I mean heck, Don and I came down here from Michigan in an 18-foot boat with a 150-horsepower engine, and nobody had GPS mapping back then, so it was pretty intimidating to try and navigate and figure out where to fish among the massive lily pad fields and underwater stumps.”

Stevens has since retired, and spends his days shooting trap and skeet. VanDam has figured things out just fine – to the tune of $6 million in prize money, with hopes of adding to the sum this week where good memories chime like the big blades of a spinnerbait configuration that helped launch his amazing career.

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