By BassFan Staff

Veteran tournament anglers often talk about how such and such pattern or technique was "the deal" at a particular event and how those who weren't doing it were doomed from the start. There was really no specific deal at last week's Bassmaster Classic – at least not until the final day, when hometown hero Casey Ashley capitalized on the rainy, warming conditions to box a 20-pound stringer and cop the trophy in front of a large contingent of family, friends and proud South Carolinians in general.

Quality fish were caught from both deep water and shallow, and on a variety offerings, in a derby that began in conditions that would've made the rugged crabbers on The Deadliest Catch think twice about heading out into them. As is often the case in this game, timing was critical, and location may have been even more important.

Here are some of the details about the programs utilized by Ashley's closest pursuers.

2nd: Bobby Lane

> Day 1: 4, 10-10
> Day 2: 5, 17-04
> Day 3: 5, 19-01
> Total = 14, 46-15

Nobody in the field had a great deal of experience competing in the type of brutal cold that beset Hartwell on day 1 of the Classic. The event got under way in air temperatures in the low teens, and it would've been even chillier had the launch not been delayed for 2 hours due to the ice that covered every surface exposed to moisture.

Lane, a lifelong Floridian who does the majority of his casting while wearing shorts and flip-flops, was determined to keep the weather from affecting his psyche.

"Mentally and physically, I kept telling myself that no matter what I couldn't use the weather as an excuse," he said. "I had to keep my eye on the prize and make the right decisions under those conditions."

He caught fish from water that was as deep as 45 feet and pulled his best specimen of the tournament – a 6 1/2-pounder on the final day – from 2 feet.

"With the forecast for the first and second days being so cold, I knew I had to find something deep in the ditches, the drains or the roadbeds. I had two (deep) areas that had fish – not giant schools of them, but enough to catch some good ones.

"Then leading up to the tournament there'd been some warmer weather, and that had made some fish go shallow and get around bridges, docks, rocks or whatever. They'll get right up in 1 1/2 to 2 feet of water and once they've gone, they don't screw around. They don't leave once it gets cold, they just get tougher to catch."

His strategy to catch a limit of deep fish on a jig/dropshot combo in the mornings and then hunt quality closer to the banks with a crankbait after that worked stunningly well on the last 2 days. It didn't come together on the abbreviated day 1, though, when his sack was a fish shy of a limit.

"I just could not catch that fifth fish so I could go spend time on the docks trying to catch a big one. With it being so cold, I'm reluctant to say the shallow bite would've even happened that day, but I guess I'll never know."

> Jig gear: 7' medium-heavy Abu Garcia Veracity rod, Abu Garcia Revo MGX casting reel (7.9:1 ratio), 15-pound Spiderwire EZ fluorocarbon line, unnamed 7/16-ounce jig (brown/purple or green-pumpkin/orange), Berkley Havoc Craw Fatty trailer (green-pumpkin).

> Cranking gear 7' medium-action Abu Garcia Veracity rod, Abu Garcia Revo Premier casting reel (7:1 ratio), 10-pound Spiderwire EZ fluorocarbon, Yo-Zuri Mid Crank (red craw).

> Dropshot gear 6'9" medium-action Abu Garica Veracity rod, Abu Garcia Revo SX spinning reel, 6-pound Spiderwire EZ fluorocarbon, 3/8- or 1/2-ounce unnamed dropshot weight, unnamed size 1 dropshot hook, Berkley PowerBait Hand Pour Finesse Worm (watermelon red glitter).

> He picked up a fish or two on an unnamed under-spin lure thrown on a 7' medium-heavy Abu Garcia Veritas rod and a 5.4:1 ratio Abu Garcia Revo Winch reel. He opted for the Veritas rod for that presentation because it features larger-diameter guides that didn't freeze over as often.

Main factor in his success – "I think it was one of the better decision-making tournaments of my life. I made Casey actually have to catch a good bag on the final day to win. I fished slow and sometimes I tried three or four different baits in the same place. Everything came together as the week went on."

Performance edge – "The new Humminbird Onix Series depthfinder showed me everything on those flats that I needed to see."



BassFan
Photo: BassFan

Takahiro Omori fished outside his comfort zone and placed third at the Classic.

3rd: Takahiro Omori

> Day 1: 5, 15-00
> Day 2: 5, 16-11
> Day 3: 5, 12-08
> Total = 15, 44-03

One of the biggest surprises at the Classic was the performance turned in by Takahiro Omori. He’s made no secret about his distaste for fishing in cold, windy weather. That he led after day 2 and eventually finished 3rd speaks to his ability to adjust to the less-than-ideal conditions.

What’s more is he caught his fish using a technique he typically loathes – drops hotting. All in all, this year’s Classic was a learning experience for Omori, who averaged a shade under 15 pounds a day.

He uncovered the spot he fished for the majority of the tournament during the 3-day practice session the week prior to the event. It was a long, clean main-lake point a couple miles from the takeoff and within eyesight of where Casey Ashley caught the winning stringers.

“It was a clean point and a drop off to the inside tree line,” he said. “I was fishing just a 200-yard area of it.”

Of the 22 or so hours of competition, Omori estimates he spent 16 of them on this area, casting a football jig up on a ledge and then using a vertical presentation when he’d notice fish on his electronics. He caught a mix of largemouth and spotted bass off the point.

By the third day of the tournament, he sensed the spot was starting to fade away, but he was convinced the Classic could be won off a small area like he was fishing.

“Almost every tournament nowadays isn’t won on a pattern,” he said. “It’s won on a spot so if you had a spot, you have to hang on to it. It’s not like fish were biting all over the lake so a pattern wouldn’t work in general. If you’re running around the lake and everybody found the same stuff, you’re not fishing fresh. You’re always fishing behind somebody.

“Overall, I maximized my opportunities. I did all I could. I don’t think I made a big, big mistake. Of course you want to win. All you can ask for is to be in contention. It just worked out for Casey.”

> Drop shot gear: 6’8” medium-action Daiwa spinning rod, Daiwa spinning reel, 7-pound Sunline Super FC Sniper fluorocarbon line, 1/0 Gamakatsu drop shot hook, Gary Yamamoto Custom Baits Shad-Shaped Worm (green-pumpkin), 3/8-oz. Ultra Tungsten dropshot weight.

> Omori said the Daiwa spinning gear models he used have been discontinued.

> Jig gear: 7’3” medium-heavy Daiwa Black Label casting rod, Daiwa Tatula casting reel, 16-pound Sunline Super FC Sniper fluorocarbon line, 3/4-oz. unnamed football jig, Gary Yamamoto Custom Baits twin-tail grub trailer (green-pumpkin).

> Main factor in his success – "Just being patient. I was only getting eight to 10 bites per day. The way I fished was not my favorite way to fish. I had to have the patience to stick with it. I started liking a dropshot a little more this week than before. It’s just against my nature to fish that slow.”

> Performance edge – "My Lowrance HDS-12 was a big key for me in finding that area and where the fish were.”

B.A.S.S./Gary Tramontina
Photo: B.A.S.S./Gary Tramontina

Dean Rojas' 21-02 haul on day 1 was the biggest stringer caught in the Bassmaster Classic.

4th: Dean Rojas

> Day 1: 5, 21-02
> Day 2: 5, 10-07
> Day 3: 5, 12-04
> Total = 15, 43-13

Rojas couldn't maintain the torrid pace he set with his tournament-best stringer on day 1, but he viewed his opening-day performance as sort of a semi-win.

"To be able to catch the largest bag on the first day in record-cold temperatures, after all the hype and excitement leading up to the Classic and the long layoff (of the offseason), that itself is like a stand-alone victory," he said.

He caught all of his fish around docks. Some of the fish were set up as shallow as 5 feet, while others were as deep as 44.

Some of the docks had creek channels meandering in close proximity. All featured nearby rock or at least a solid mud bottom.

"I hit most of them each day and they just got progressively worse," he said. "With the cloud cover coming in, the fish didn't need the docks anymore. I could tell what was happening when I started catching smaller fish – it meant there were no big ones there anymore.

The sun shone brightly on his glorious day 1, which positioned the fish underneath the docks. He caught the majority of his fish on a shaky-head that day, but one fell for a jig.

> Shaky-head gear: 7' medium-action Duckett Fishing Terry Scroggins Signature Series rod, Daiwa Exist spinning reel, 8-pound Sunline Super FC Sniper fluorocarbon line, 1/8-ounce Gamakatsu Alien Head jighead, prototype Big Bite Baits finesse worm (blue/green).

> Jig gear: 7'4" heavy-action Duckett Fishing Terex rod, Duckett Fishing 360R casting reel (6.3:1 ratio), 18-pound Sunline Sniper fluorocarbon, 1/2-ounce unnamed football-head jig (brown/purple), Big Bite Baits Twin Tail Grub trailer (watermelon candy).

> He caught a 5 1/4-pounder on day 4 on an unnamed 6-inch swimbait attached to a Revenge head.

Main factor in his success – "That huge first day set the tone for the week."

Performance edge – "I'd have to say the Lowrance units – they were very key this week."

BassFan
Photo: BassFan

A single-digit bag on day 1 hindered Jacob Powroznik's how of winning the Bassmaster Classic.

5th: Jacob Powroznik

> Day 1: 4, 9-02
> Day 2: 5, 15-00
> Day 3: 5, 18-15
> Total = 14, 43-01

Powroznik's situation was similar to Lane's in that a light sub-limit on the first day left him too much ground to make up. He was disheartened about the opening-day launch delay from the get-go after it was announced the prior afternoon.

"The first hour and a half of the day was the most crucial for me and I would've gladly given back 3 hours at the end of that day if I could've launched at daylight," he said. "That would've given me my best chance.

"The only thing I have to complain about for the whole week is I'd like to see what I could've done that morning. But everybody had the same amount of time to fish, so it's all good."

He threw an under-spin to ditch-dwelling that would move onto flats in 15 to 25 feet of water at first light to gorge themselves on baitfish. Later in the day they'd move to the edge of the timberline (30 to 40 feet) and become much more difficult to catch.

"This time of year it's all about baitfish. When the water temperature gets 50 or 51 degrees, then the crawdads will come out and (the bass) will get on them, but when it's in the 40s, it's all about herring or shad.

> Under-spin gear 6'10" medium-heavy Quantum Tour KVD Cranking rod, Quantum Smoke PT casting reel (6.3:1 ratio), 12-pound Hi-Seas fluorocarbon line, homemade 7/16-ounce custom made under-spin (white with silver blade), V&M Shad trailer (pearl white).

> His under-spin was made by Ryan Coleman, the veteran Lake Lanier guide and producer of SpotSticker Baits.

> He caught a few weigh-in fish from the timber on a half-ounce football-head jig with a V&M Mag Finesse worm.

Main factor in his success – "Just finding that bait."

Performance edge – "It'd have to be the Lowrance electronics. Without them, I wouldn't have been able to see what I was fishing. They also show the bait and the bass really well. They were the biggest key for the week."