

Gainesville, Fla.

My dad took me fishing when I was young. We’d do all kinds of fishing, but the guy who really got me into bass fishing was Gerry Bevis. He came to my 8th grade class to talk fishing, and we became friends. He introduced me to tournament fishing as well.

Rick Clunn and Roland Martin. Those guys made me realize it’s not all luck. To see them consistently win proves that there’s lots of skill involved.

I’d have to say in 1987 or so when I led four days in a Mega Bucks event at the Harris Chain. That let me know that I may have a career doing this.

Thirteen pounds, five ounces. I got it out of the Withlacoochee River in 1995 or so.

The challenge. There’s no way â no matter how good you are â that it isn’t a challenge. You’ll never beat them all the time or know everything 100 percent. It’s just never the same.

If it’s one technique, I’d have to say sight fishing. If it’s overall, it’s my love of fishing. I love it so much; it motivates me to get ready every day.

Being able to switch presentations on the fly. I can’t just drop one thing and pick up another like that. I have to get it beat over my head a few times.

There’s so many, it’s hard to say, but probably anywhere in the Northeast, like the Great Lakes. I love smallmouth fishing because I never had the chance to catch them growing up in Florida.

answer it?
Along with “What’s your biggest fish?,” I get asked “How do you become a pro?” a lot. The best answer I can come up with is to start small. Fish local and club tournaments, then move into regional, then national, and as long as you’re successful, you’ll keep moving up. B.A.S.S. has it all set up so that’s the way to do it, and at each step of the way you learn a lot.

Not knowing where to present a bait. What I mean is, they don’t know where bass will be holding. Pros struggle with that too, but I see it more in amateurs.

Nope.

A very small one. At the Elite level, it’s almost nothing. In a one day tournament, it could be everything. Getting one big fish could mean the difference between winning and losing.

I think winning nine B.A.S.S. events, and the back-to-back wins (Bassmaster Top 150s in 2000) are pretty cool. I almost got three in a row, though.

Winning a Bassmaster Classic and Toyota Bassmaster Angler of the Year. That’s what everyone wants to do.

The lack of accomplishing those goals.

Letting the 1995 Angler of the Year award slip through my fingers. I was leading by 25 points or so, then blew it on the last day of the tournament.

Hunting and saltwater fishing with my family. I’m passionate about bow hunting.

None. I love my job.

I want to be remembered as a positive guy who tried to do everything right all the time.