Lucas rocks around the docks.
By Bryan Brasher
BASS PRESS RELEASEBy Bryan Brasher
If professional bass fishing fans didn’t know it before, they know it now. Justin Lucas is a force to be reckoned with — and it doesn’t matter which coast he’s fishing on.
West coast drop shot is winner on the East coast bass. (Photo: BASS) |
It was Lucas’s second career victory on the Bassmaster
Elite Series and the first away from his native West Coast waters. The
30-year-old pro picked up his first win last season on the Sacramento River.
“I think I proved to other people — and to myself — what I can do outside my home state,” Lucas said. “I’ve never won out of state before. That makes this one different for me, and it means a lot.”
Lucas won the event by finding and exploiting the kind of
spot all tournament anglers dream of.
It was a long parking dock adjacent to a
water treatment plant on the upper end of the river. The water was 5 to 8 feet
deep, and the dock had aquatic grass growing all around its edges.
Instead of flipping a jig or skipping a soft-plastic bait
under the dock like many anglers would in that situation, Lucas went with a
drop shot rig — and he said that made all the difference.
“I don’t think the fish under that dock had ever seen a
drop shot before,” Lucas said. “They’re used to seeing a bait hit the water and
then fall all the way to the bottom. But that drop shot stays right in their
face, and it worked all week.”
Lucas spent a little time fishing a stickbait and a swim
jig. But his main technique was the drop shot rig with a 6-inch hand-poured
worm in a purple and brown combo.
He fished the rig on a 7-foot-6 medium-heavy Veracity Abu
Garcia spinning rod and an Abu Garcia Revo MGX size 30 reel. There were times
when he also used the Revo Premiere size 30 reel.
His line choice was particularly important.
“I used
10-pound braid with a 10-pound Berkley Trilene leader,” Lucas said. “I wanted
to use the largest line I could get away with on a spinning reel.”
He said the water was too deep under the dock for a
standard baitcaster.
“You would have spent too much time pulling line out with
a baitcaster just trying to get the rig to the bottom,” Lucas said. “It was so
much easier to pitch in there with a spinning reel.”
Lucas insisted he found the spot by accident on the first
day of competition after failing to get a bite there during practice.
He knew there was a discharge at the water treatment
plant, and he was hoping it would produce a few fish early. After catching a
couple of smaller fish from that area, he decided to pitch the drop shot under
the dock.
“I caught two 3-pounders, and that told me the fish were there,”
Lucas said. “So many things worked in my favor.”
Lucas said he was amazed the dock never received any
pressure from anyone else, and he thanked the anglers from Maryland and
Virginia for giving him plenty of space.
“This is not like a secret spot,” he
said. “It’s the community hole of all community holes. So it still just amazes
me that no one else fished it.
“The people here are awesome.”
The biggest key to his week, Lucas said, might have been
that he had nowhere else to go.
“I didn’t have a plan B,” he said. “If I had
been forced to go to plan B, I would have been running all over the place.”
The
dock produced 20-4 on Day 1, 19-14 on Day 2, 12-15 on Day 3 and 19-13 on Day 4.
“I
went there originally looking for two or three keeper bites,” Lucas said. “But
it ended up being the best spot I’ve ever found in my tournament career.”
Brent
Ehrler (62-12), Bill Lowen (61-0) and Andy Montgomery (59-12) rounded out the
Top 5.
Alabama pro Gerald Swindle (53-6) finished 10th and
maintained a 37-point lead over Keith Combs in the Toyota Bassmaster Angler of
the Year race.
Swindle was awarded $1,000 for the leading the Toyota Bassmaster
Angler of the Year points race at the end of the event.
Lowen earned the
Power-Pole Captain’s Cash award of $1,000 for being the highest-placing angler
who is registered and eligible and uses a client-approved product on his boat.
Lucas earned the Livingston Lures Leader Award of $500
for leading on the second day.
Lucas also won the Toyota Bonus Bucks
Award of $3,000 for being the highest-placing eligible entrant in the program.
The second-highest-placing eligible entrant, Jason Christie, received $2,000.
The
Phoenix Boats Big Bass Award of $1,500 was presented to Cliff Pirch for
weighing in the overall biggest bass of the event — a 6-11 bass caught on
Saturday.
Lucas earned the A.R.E. Top Angler Award of $1,000 for being
the highest placing angler using A.R.E. products.
Dick Cepek Rolling Forward
Award of $1,000 will be presented to the angler who makes the largest gain in
Toyota Angler of the Year points from tournament to tournament.
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