Brandon Cobb Wins Bassmaster Elite Series Lake Hartwell
Brandon Cobb's Winning Pattern, Baits & Gear
The ability to make the right adjustments is about the most important trait a professional angler can possess. Brandon Cobb displayed that characteristic en route to his first tour-level win at the Lake Hartwell Bassmaster Elite Series. Competing on his home water, the resident of Greenwood, S.C. transitioned from docks to bed-fishing in the midst of his wire-to-wire victory. There was barely a 3 1/2-pound weight differential between his four bags and he ended up approximately that same amount clear of his nearest challenger. He entered the final round with a 5 1/2-pound lead and spent the morning fishing around spawning blueback herring. That foray proved fruitless and he doesn't know why, but it didn't matter in the end as he still had plenty of time to return to the shallows and pluck what he needed off the nests. His 16-14 haul on day 4 gave him a 72-04 total and earned him his first six-figure payday. It also moved him up to 2nd place in the Angler of the Year race, just a single point out of the top slot with the season set to reach its midway point following this week's tournament at Winyah Bay. Following are some of the particulars of the 29-year-old Cobb's approach at Hartwell.
Kept a Low Profile:
Cobb described his three days of practice leading up to the event as "pretty terrible," but there's a caveat to that - he avoided most of the areas where he knew he'd fish in the tournament. He waypointed some spawning beds and went into the first day of competition with the mindset that boat docks would be his primary focus. As they do at many venues, a lot of Hartwell's bass hang around docks after participating in the reproduction process, feeding up before making the journey back to their deep-water haunts. The three biggest fish in his 19-09 bag on day 1 came from docks and he thinks another that went to the scale did so as well. His bait for that program was a Zoom Fluke Stick fished wacky-style on spinning gear. "I was skipping it and moving really quickly," he said. "I'd barely have time to engage the reel when one hit it and one fish on the third day ate it off the top of the water while it was skipping. "I'd make one skip under the pontoon and one under the front and then keep going."
It was on day 2, which featured rainy conditions, that he really started working the bed-fishing program. The lack of sun wasn't a major hindrance in the clear water. "When it rains a little bit at Hartwell and then just stays cloudy, it moves some of the pollen around and actually makes (seeing fish) easier. You weren't going to see them from as far away, but it wasn't really hard." When he'd identify a bed but was still too far away to see the fish, he'd make pre-casts with the Fluke Stick with the hope of hooking up quickly. About half of the spawners he caught were enticed in this manner. "It was much easier if you could do it that way. Sometimes I'd troll across one that didn't bite and I'd Power-Pole down and watch it for a little while. If I didn't think it would bite within a few minutes, I'd come back later and do the blind-cast thing.
"The biggest problem with sight-fishing is it was so hard to tell the size of the fish - a lot of them were so close to the same size (between 2 and 3 pounds). His sight-fishing setup included a Zoom Trick Worm attached to a shaky-head jig. He spent most of his time in the Seneca River arm, but also fished some in the mid-lake region. "I kept moving all the time and didn't fish anywhere for too long," he said, noting that he never spent more than about 10 minutes working on any bed-fish. "One thing that also helped was that, knowing the lake like I do, I never ran out of places to fish. Even if I hadn't practiced there or hadn't even been there in five years, I always knew that I had somewhere to go where I'd caught them before."
Winning Gear:
Stickbait gear: 6'10" medium-action Ark Invoker Series rod, Abu Garcia Revo X size 30 spinning reel, 10-pound Yo-Zuri Super Braid (main line), 10-pound Yo-Zuri HD fluorocarbon (6' leader), 1/0 wacky-rig hook, Zoom Fluke Stick (several variations of green-pumpkin).
Sight-fishing gear: Same rod, reel and line, 1/8-ounce Greenfish Tackle Clean Up Shakey Head jig, Zoom Trick Worm (green-pumpkin).
Notable:
Cobb gets to fish his second straight event in his home state the week, but Winyah Bay is a much less prolific bass fishery than Hartwell. "I was pleasantly surprised when I went there and pre-fished (earlier this year), but it was at a time when it had been really cold and then there was one week of 70-degree weather. They were probably biting as good as they can possibly bite."
BASS Tour Lake Hartwell Winning Pattern BassFan 4/9/19 (John Johnson)
Stetson Blaylock's Pattern, Baits & Gear
Stetson Blaylock had a lackluster day 1, but picked up the pace the following day and then crushed it on the weekend as he weighed more than 19 pounds in each of the final two rounds. He competed at Hartwell on multiple occasions during his FLW Tour days and arrived with a preconceived notion that he'd be looking for bass on beds the vast majority of the time. "I'd made up my mind coming over that that's what kind of tournament it was going to be," he said. "It didn't really unfold like that until (day 1) - there were a few more fish coming up each day. "I think the biggest key for me was just knowing what time of year it was and knowing what was happening. If the fish weren't on the beds, they'd be coming quick. With nice, warm days, there was nothing for the ones that weren't already up to do. I made the decision to (sight-fish) with the idea that it was going to keep getting better and I'd keep my head down and try to run into the right ones every day." He caught most of his big final-day bag blind-casting as the ones he looked at early in the day weren't as willing to bite a bait twitched around on their nests.
Gear:
Sight-fishing gear: 7'4" 13 Fishing Envy Black Series rod, prototype 13 Fishing casting reel (8.1:1 ratio), 20-pound Seaguar InvizX fluorocarbon line, 7/16-ounce tungsten weight, 3/0 Gamakatsu G-Finesse hook, YUM Christie Craw (white).
He caught a 4 3/4-pounder on day 4 on a Booyah Poppin' Pad Crasher frog (sunburn). A YUM Finesse Worm, YUM Dinger and an original Rebel Pop-R P70 also produced quality bites.
When asked the color of his Pop-R, he said, "I'd call it 'abused.' It was one of the first ones I got when I started fishing. It started out chrome with a black back, but there's not much chrome left. I guess you'd call it 'bone' underneath."
Bass Elite Series Lake Hartwell 2-5 Patterns BassFan 4/10/19 (John Johnson)
Micah Frazier's Pattern, Baits & Gear
Micah Frazier spent much of his practice time trying to get on a pre-spawn pattern centered around docks. "I couldn't really figure that deal out," he said. "I threw a topwater some and did a lot of moving around, looking at (water) temperatures and trying to get a gauge on which area of the lake was going to be the best. He switched to primarily sight-fishing as more and more fish came to the shallows as the tournament got under way. He spent the first three days up the Seneca River, catching strong bags on the first two and returning with a mediocre haul on day 3.
With his best area pretty much fished out, he went toward the dam on day 4 to a place that has traditionally been plentiful at certain junctures of the spawn. It wasn't as good as he'd hoped it would be, but gave him enough to remain among the top 3, where he'd been the entire event. "The biggest thing or me was just not getting stuck in one area, but moving around a lot," he said. "After not seeing anything I really liked in practice, at 10 o'clock on the first day of the tournament I went somewhere that I hadn't practiced. It was a place where I caught a lot of fish in the Classic last year." He estimated that 15 of his fish came via the looking route, for which he employed a YUM Christie Craw, a YUM Dinger and a YUM Finesse Worm. The Dinger also enticed a couple of good bites from docks and he caught fish blind-casting the worm in extremely shallow water. One weigh-in fish fell for a wakebait.
Gear:
Casting gear: 7'3" medium-heavy prototype Abu Garcia Veracity rod, Abu Garcia Revo Al-F reel (8:1 ratio), 16- or 20-pound Sunline Shooter fluorocarbon line, 3/8-ounce Swagger tungsten weight, 2/0 worm hook, YUM Christie Craw (white).
He wacky-rigged the Dinger (green-pumpkin) with no weight on a 2/0 dropshot hook.
Spinning gear: 7' medium-action Abu Garcia Fantasista Premier rod, Revo MG Extreme reel, 8-pound Sunline Shooter fluorocarbon, 2/0 dropshot hook, YUM Finesse Worm (green-pumpkin).
Bass Elite Series Lake Hartwell 2-5 Patterns BassFan 4/10/19 (John Johnson)
Drew Cook's Pattern, Baits & Gear
Drew Cook, the rookie from Florida who sits atop the Angler of the Year race, sight-fished for 18 of the bass that he took to the scale. The other two came on a wacky-rigged worm. "I knew what I was going to do 10 minutes into the first day of practice," he said. "I found some stuff (on a pre-practice trip) up in the muddy water and I kind of thought maybe I'd do that the first day and just burn it up, and then go to the (main) lake and sight-fish. The muddy water was colder, though, and I just couldn't get bit in it." He'd marked five bedding fish that he'd planned to catch on day 1 - two big females and a trio of 3- to 4-pound males. However, the water level had dropped a couple of inches when he arrived and all were gone."
He had some 3-pounderss pinned down in deeper water that he was forced to resort to, and then he was forced to find new ones from there on. He did a stellar job of that on day 2 as he weighed a 20-06 stringer that was the biggest of the tournament. All five fish were nearly identical in size - the biggest registered 4-11. "The strategy played out pretty well and I ended up in a good area where I caught them on the second and third days. During practice, those fish weren't spawning yet - they were cruising around and I think that caused a lot of people to overlook them. I never saw a boat on the second day and that was definitely one of the main keys for me." He had a difficult day 4 as he managed to catch just one of the four bedding females he worked on. He said none of the three he failed to convert on was under 4 3/4 pounds and the biggest one was over 6. He hooked and lost the latter fish twice.
Gear:
Sight-fishing gear: 7'4" medium-heavy Dobyns Champion XD rod, Shimano Curado casting reel (8.2:1 ratio), 20-pound Seaguar InvizX fluorocarbon line, 1/4-ounce tungsten weight, 4/0 Gamakatsu G Series Heavy Cover hook, Big Bite Baits Fightin' Frog (tilapia magic).
The bait for his wacky rig was a 5" Big Bite Baits Trick Stick (tilapia).
Shane Lehew's Pattern, Baits & Gear
Shane Lehew jumped from 22nd place to 6th with a big day 3 and gained one more spot in the final round to log his second top-5 as a pro (he was 4th at the Harris Chain FLW Tour in 2017). He pulled 15 of his weigh-in fish from the beds, caught a few from docks with a wacky rig and enticed a couple with a buzzbait. He burned up all the marked fish he had on his big-weight day and had to scramble to find new ones in the final round. He passed on a lot of 2 1/2-pounders in search of bigger specimens that would allow him to make another upward move in the standings and found a couple, but they weren't ready to cooperate. "I was constantly covering new water and going into new pockets and fishing fast. Even fishing docks, I'd make two or three skips and that was it. "I had my trolling motor on about 7 the whole time and I was pretty much standing on it. When I found one, I'd turn around and try to catch it."
Gear:
Sight-fishing gear: 7' medium-heavy Abu Garcia Veracity rod, Abu Garcia Revo STX casting reel, 15-pound Berkley Trilene 100% Fluorocarbon line, 3/0 Berkley Fusion 19 Heavy Cover hook, 4" Berkley PowerBait Power Lizard (green-pumpkin or watermelon red).
His wacky-rig bait was a 4" Berkley PowrBait MaxScent The General (baby bass).
His buzzbait was a Greenfish Tackle Toad Toter model with a white toad attached.
Bass Elite Series Lake Hartwell 2-5 Patterns BassFan 4/10/19 (John Johnson)