

Columbia, S.C.

I started with my dad and granddad when I was a kid.

My granddad. He had one of the original bass boats like the one built by Skeeter, and he fished a few tournaments.

When I won the Toyota Bassmaster Angler of the Year award in 1997. It brought some security and longevity to my career.

Eleven pounds, 7 ounces. I got it in 2000 while I was filming an instructional video on a small lake here in South Carolina. Talk about good timing!

I’m competitive by nature, and I love fishing, so being able to fish against the best bass fishermen in the world in a competitive setting is great.

Power fishing and fishing to win. Winning 8 events in 18 years is testament to that, but it has also affected me negatively. Sometimes in the dog days of summer I don’t know how to catch a small limit to stay alive. I always go for broke.

Finesse fishing. In the same way I can’t fish for anything else but first, it’s hard for me to slow down and settle for a small limit.

Lake Murray right here in South Carolina. I was raised around there.

Probably, “How do I become a bass pro?” My answer is always “Time on the water.”

Probably that they don’t understand that being a pro is about more than being able to catch fish. There’s a business side to it. You need to represent your sponsors in a positive way. You really need to understand both sides of it.

My most famous one is my lucky underwear. I had a pair I was wearing when I won my first Angler of the Year title â a certain pair I wore a lot. I eventually wore the elastic out of them, “rebuilt” them with more elastic, then when the second elastic wore out, I had a piece of them on me when I won my second title in 2002.

It’s funny that I’d say this when you consider I have a lucky pair of underwear, but I don’t believe in luck. I really don’t. I think that good and bad things happen in our lives, and what you make of them is your luck.

Winning the Bassmaster Classic in 1999. However, winning Angler of the Year means more to me personally. But when I’m introduced, it’s always as Classic champ.

Winning another Classic. I told my boys that when I’m dead and gone, there’d be a Classic champ ring for each of them.

Having made that promise to them. When I came in second in 1996, I vowed I’d win.

I don’t really have any. There’s a few tournaments I wish went differently, but I don’t have any real regrets.

Outdoors. I’m either hunting or fishing … just being outdoors.

I’ve always loved football, and I think being a high school football coach would be a great experience. You get to influence young men’s lives and be around the game.

I want to be remembered as a straight-shooting, honest guy who always tried his hardest. More importantly, I want people to see I’m a guy who came from a middle-class raising at best, had a dream, and lived it.