

I love being out on the pecan farm, whether itâs spraying, fertilizing, trimming â just working with the trees. It had 400 pecan trees when I bought it seven years ago. Now Iâve got 2,700 trees of various ages, including 1,200 that are producing pecans. I just like being outside.

Iâve got two that are running neck-and-neck â the last two Bassmaster Classics. Iâve tried to produce another magic day like that 29-pounds (on Day 3 in 2016) at Grand Lake. I need to realize that was a special day and let it go. I would have had a chance to win last year at Lake Conroe and this year at Lake Hartwell if Iâd been more conservative. I thought Iâd need a lot more weight on the final day in both tournaments.

I would like to be a seventh- or eighth-grade coach, either football or basketball. I like being around kids. I like keeping busy, and I think Iâd be happy being a coach and a pecan farmer.

When I was growing up (Chicago Bears running back) Walter Payton was a guy I really admired. He was relentless, never got hurt and just went about his business. And Iâve always admired Michael Jordan too. He could elevate everyone one around him and turn it up another notch when he needed to.

Rick Clunn (above) and Mark Davis. Rick was dominant for a long time, he kept things pretty simple, but he was intense. He was the greatest when I started fishing tournaments. Mark Davis did it with a different style, but he was dominant too.

When I made my first Bassmaster Classic, George Cochran sat down next to me one day and said, âYour second Classic is the toughest one youâll ever make.â I didnât know what he was talking about at the time, but it turned out he was right. I didnât qualify the next year. I think we were at Lake Eufaula the following year, I had five keepers in the livewell on the last day, I knew Iâd made the Classic again, and I let out a yell.

The biggest part is youâve got to be competitive. Iâm not sure how you coach or train for that. Take Kevin VanDam, for instance. He wants to beat you crossing the street. It doesnât matter whether itâs bass fishing or anything else, he wants to win. Iâm the same way. My parents didnât fish at all. But they supported my interest in it. My birthday present for three years, beginning when I was 7 or 8, was a guided fishing trip to Lake Stockton. The first year it was for crappie, the second year it was for bass and the third year it was for walleye. The was so important, that they supported my initial interest in the sport.

It used to be a purple, 6-inch, curl-tail worm with silver flake. The tail was white. I caught a lot of bass on those worms, and I donât think Iâve got anything like it today. Right now my go-to bait is a 7/16ths Andyâs E Series Custom Finesse Jig in brown-and-orange. I add a Zoom Lil Critter Craw to it. I caught my biggest bass this past week (at Grand Lake) on it. It mimics a crawfish really well, and itâs not something that a lot of other people will have.