Jason Christie Wins BASS Lake St. Clair
Jason Christie's Winning Pattern, Baits & Gear
This is Christie's third top-10 and second win at St. Clair in B.A.S.S. competition, a startling stat for a Midwesterner known for his shallow-water prowess. "I'm comfortable fishing up here," he said. "I know it doesn't make any sense - me and smallmouth and grass and 20 feet of water - but it's one of the few lakes I click with." He maintained a 22-pound daily average by settling into an area during practice and patiently narrowing his options during the tournament. At one point, he had a handful of smaller areas about the size of football fields. By Sunday, he winnowed them down to patches roughly equivalent to a basketball court, fitting for the former college hoops standout.
During practice, though, he was a bit anxious because he wasn't sure he'd be able to zero in on where the bigger fish were in such a big area. In hindsight, he was right where he wanted to be. He made repeated drifts, stayed patient and tried different presentations, which all led to his ultimate success. "I had a 2-mile by 2-mile area," he said. "It's big, but I could fish and get bites there. I think I found the area (in practice), but I hadn't found the spots. That's good because in the tournaments I've won I always figure it out during the tournament. "I'd drift and drift and catch a 4-pounder, then mark a waypoint. Pretty soon, those waypoints were coming in clusters. In the tournament, I'd make a drift and then scoot over 100 yards and make another drift. After days 1 and 2, I started to see where the football fields were where I caught lot of the bigger ones. Sunday, I caught most of my fish off two of the football fields. I figured it out during the tournament and kept trying different things."
Christie had his mind made up before he even arrived in the Detroit area that he was committing to Lake St. Clair. "All the tournaments I've fished here, only one hasn't been won out of St. Clair," he said. "My experience with St. Clair is there are fish up shallow and out deep. You just need to fish every range to see where the big ones are. It's hard to eliminate anything because there are fish in all ranges. It's one of those lakes where if you say, ÔI'm going to fish five feet or less,' you'll catch them. Same with 15 feet or deeper." In trying to sample it all, an angler can get overwhelmed and also get caught up in catching 3-pounders, which were of little help (and in relative short supply) last week. That's why Christie forces himself to pick an area and dissect it to find the smaller sweet spots. "When you only have 2 1/2 days of practice, it's impossible to see it all," Christie said. "You could spend 1,000 days on Erie and another 500 on St. Clair."
Competition:
Christie started the tournament with a 21-12 bag that had him in 4th after day 1, but he still felt unsettled. He fished a number of spots in the 5-mile area he found in practice and had success on several drifts, but he didn't feel like he was narrowing anything down. Compounding matters was the lingering wind that made being efficient a challenge. He weighed in one fish he caught on a Bomber crankbait and the rest came on a tube filled with a 1/2- or 3/4-oz. tube jig. The prevalent sunshine and high skies on Friday and Saturday were key to triggering the bigger fish to bite, he said. "When the sun is out, the fishing is better," he said. "They can see better and are a lot more aggressive. I could still catch them under clouds, but the bite slowed down." He relied heavily on his Garmin electronics throughout the event, so much so that he purposely avoided areas where the sand grass was taller than a foot off the bottom. "The west side and the south side have a lot of grass that's tall," he said. "The sole reason that I ran away from that grass was because of my Panoptix. (That grass) takes my advantage away of seeing them out there 80 feet from the boat.
"The area I was fishing had clumps, but it was just enough that it gave them somewhere to hide if the sun came out." In addition to the nearly 90 pounds of bass he caught, he reeled in "a truckload" of drum and some of those helped to give away the location of curious smallmouth that would accompany the drum on its way to surface. "A drum feeds on a lot of the same stuff as bass," he said. "Sunday, I caught a walleye, catfish, a bunch of drum - they're all there to eat. When I'd catch a drum, I'd take it off and flip my tube back out toward where I saw them on my screen and I'd have a smallmouth on before it got to the bottom." The common attractant across all the areas he fished was the presence of crayfish.
"The bait in the area was the key," he added. "It didn't matter if I caught a bass, walleye or drum. They were all spitting up crawdads." With very little contour change across vast sections of St. Clair, he kept trying different depth zones just to see if he could collide with another group of bass. "I was mainly in 22 feet and I know it sounds crazy, but I'd scoot up to 21 or 20 1/2 and kept experimenting during the tournament and finally found the stretches I needed to fish," he said. "By 1 p.m. (Sunday), I was fishing areas the size of a basketball courts. It was like when I won the Open - I started with a big drift, then narrowed it down to small areas." The tube was his primary weapon on Friday and Saturday - he weighed in one on a dropshot each day - and everything he caught Sunday fell for the tube. "I'd have rather caught them on a dropshot because I can pitch it out to the fish when I see it (on my screen)," he said. "The weight goes to the bottom and my bait stays above the grass."
Winning Gear:
Tube gear: 7'3" heavy-action Falcon Rods Cara T7 casting rod, Team's Lew's Custom Pro Speed Spool SLP Series casting reel (7.5:1 gear ratio), 10-pound Sunline Super FC Sniper fluorocarbon line, 1/2- and 3/4-oz. tube jig, 4" YUM tube (green-pumpkin).
Crankbait gear: 7'3" medium-heavy Falcon Rods Cara T7 Deep Runner casting rod, same reel, same line (12-pound), Bomber Fat Free Shad Jr. BD6 (fire tiger),
Dropshot gear: 7' medium-heavy Falcon Rods Bucoo SR spinning rod, Lew's Mach II Metal Speed Spin spinning reel, 16-pound Sunline SX-1 braided line, 8-pound Sunline Super FC Sniper fluorocarbon line (leader), 1/0 Lazer TroKar dropshot hook, YUM Warning Shot (green-pumpkin purple), 1/2-oz. unnamed tungsten dropshot weight.
Bottom Line:
Main factor: "History. I love this place. What everybody talks about being negatives - no contours, it's so big - I like that. I can idle around and changes year to year. The wind dictates the current. You have to get out there and fish. I'm patient in practice and all you have to do is find one area."
Performance edge: "This lake has so many variables. It's so rough. The practice days were rough. Everybody talks about being able to run a Ranger, but it's about being able drift in 3 footers and not fall over. The Drift Paddles from Power-Pole were, but nothing topped my Panoptix. I caught a lot of fish this week by landing that tube within 2 feet of their heads. If he was within 100 feet of my boat, I'd see him I have so much confidence in that unit."
BASS Lake St Clair Winning Pattern BassFan 8/29/17 (Todd Ceisner)
Brock Mosley's Pattern, Baits & Gear
His search last Monday afternoon came up empty, but he started to get dialed in the following day on the Metro Flats. It was windy and rough and rather than run around the lake, he opted to stay put and drift the area. "I didn't want to run in those waves so I drifted 5 miles and went 2 1/2 hours without a bite," he said. "Then all of a sudden I catch three over 4 pounds within 100 yards. I expanded on it a little and caught a few more." On the final day of practice, he caught 23 pounds by 10 a.m. in the same area. "I knew the potential was there and made the decision after that morning to start there," he said. "I could save those river fish and grind out five on the flat on day 1." On both days 1 and 2 of the tournament, Mosley had a 5-pounder in the boat before the entire field had blasted off. Rather than mix in a crankbait or other reaction baits like others did, Mosley stuck with the finesse presentation throughout.
"I was the only one slowing down," he said. He was focused stretches where the water was 16 to 17 feet deep with grass that grew up two feet tall. "On day 1, I caught a few off the grass edge, but on days 2 and 3 when the wind slacked off, I caught more in the grass," he added. When he did go to the river on day 2, he finished off his limit by skipping a jig around docks that had current eddys under them.
Winning Gear:
Drop shot gear: 7'2" medium-action Spiralite Defiant spinning rod, Ardent C-Force 3000 spinning reel, 16-pound unnamed braided line, 8-pound unnamed fluorocarbon line (leader), 1/0 Owner dropshot hook, 6" NetBait Contour Worm (green-pumpkin), 1/4-oz. unnamed dropshot weight.
Jig gear: 7'2" heavy-action Spiralite Defiant casting rod, Ardent Apex Elite casting reel (6.4:1 gear ratio), 15-pound unnamed fluorocarbon line, 1/2-oz. Angler Assets Big Money flipping jig (green-pumpkin with orange tips), NetBait Paca Slim trailer (green-pumpkin).
He also used a Bagley Knocker B when fishing a slack water grass flat behind a seawall in the Detroit River.
Main factor: "Slowing down and keeping it simple. For the lake, I had two rods on my deck - both dropshots with different baits. I saw guys throw a crankbait and jerkbait and spinnerbait and dropshot. I stuck with a dropshot knowing I was going to get seven or eight bites a day."
Performance edge: "I ran the Garmin Fishing Chart on the satellite image and that helped read me the grass lines a little better."
BASS Lake St Clair 2-5 Patterns BassFan 8/30/17 (Todd Ceisner)
Mark Daniels Jr's Pattern, Baits & Gear
"I decided I wasn't fishing anywhere else," he added. The area he targeted featured some eelgrass and sand grass, but the bass were scattered out amongst it in 16 to 18 feet and relating to perch in the area. "There was no rhyme or reason why or when I got bites," he said. "The fish that I was catching were not grouped up. They were loner, rogue perch-eating smallmouth." He used a medium-diving crankbait made by Yo-Zuri/Duel that ran just above the grass and it was a bait fellow competitor (and Alabama resident) Clent Davis loaned him earlier this summer. "Clent gave it to me a couple months ago at an Airport Marine tournament back home and I just left it on the rod," Daniels said. "I just pulled it out and it looked good so I started fishing with it."
Winning Gear:
Cranking gear: 7'2" medium-heavy Kistler Feel & Reel cranking rod, Cabela's Arachnid 100XD casting reel (8.1:1 gear ratio), 10-pound Seaguar Tatsu fluorocarbon line, Duel Hardcore Crank 4+ (gizzard shad, baby bluegill).
Daniels went against convention cranking wisdom and opted for a high-speed reel due to the aggressive nature of the smallmouth. "They don't want it slow," he said. "They wanted it coming by fast. It was a knee-jerk reaction type of deal."
Dropshot gear: 7' medium-action Kistler Helium 3 spinning rod, Cabela's Verano 2500 spinning reel, 15-pound Seaguar Smackdown braided line, 8-pound Seaguar Tatsu fluorocarbon line (leader), #1 Owner mosquito hook, 3.5" Poor Boys Baits Erie Darter (Steigers Ice), Z-Man StreakZ (smokey shad).
Main factor: "I was in a situation where I needed a good tournament here. I had to pull myself up and go for it instead of going the conservative route. When I did that, I fished more comfortable and got in a zone."
Performance edge: "The Power-Pole Drift Paddles were absolutely critical for me and controlling my drifts. I'd never used them before, but now I'm a believer."
BASS Lake St Clair 2-5 Patterns BassFan 8/30/17 (Todd Ceisner)
Jordan Lee's Pattern, Baits & Gear
The areas where he caught his bigger fish were gathering spots for baitfish. He said when his sonar screen would indicate bait in the area, it wasn't long before he'd get bit. He relied mainly on a dropshot rig using a fluke-style bait. The bigger profile seemed to attract the magnum smallmouth. "St. Clair is full of short grass and that area had spots where it got thicker," he said. "You could barely see it on the unit. The key to that area was a lot of bait on the screen. You didn't see that anywhere else." He spent his whole practice in St. Clair based on historical tournament outcomes and He didn't catch many on a vertical presentation of the dropshot. He often had to hop the rig pretty aggressively to get a reaction strike. "They seemed to hit it in the first couple hops," he noted. "The last few days I really worked it. I'd pitch it out and shake it a couple times and they'd have it. As the week wore on, it got slower."
Winning Gear:
Dropshot gear: 7' medium-heavy and 7'4" medium-action Quantum Prism spinning rods, Quantum Smoke Inshore 30 spinning reel, 10-pound Seaguar Smackdown braided line, Seaguar Tatsu fluorocarbon line (leader), 1/0 Roboworm Rebarb hook, 5" Strike King 3X ElazTech Z Too (ice), 3/8-oz. Strike King Tour Grade Tungsten dropshot weight.
He also caught several key fish early in the tournament on a Strike King Dreamshot.
He used a longer than normal dropper to keep his bait up above the grass.
Main factor: "The biggest key on St. Clair is being patient and not running around a lot. I've stunk here before and ran around. This week, I ran around on day 1 and decided to stop and fish. That was the biggest key for me Ð just get in an area where you think there are fish and fish it out."
Performance edge: "My Lowrance Carbon 16. Just being able to see the details of the bait and seeing the fish in the grass, you can decipher a lot with that, even the subtle stuff."
BASS Lake St Clair 2-5 Patterns BassFan 8/30/17 (Todd Ceisner)
Matt Lee's Pattern, Baits & Gear
"When (Larry) Nixon won here (in 2012), he threw (a fluke)," Lee said. "Last time, some guys caught them on it. In practice, Kelley Jaye was near me and I had it rigged up already, but I saw him catch a 2-pounder on a fluke. "I wasn't getting any fewer bites with bigger baits. I caught some real big fish on it. I wasn't dead set on it when the tournament started, but the morning of day 1, I shared my first place with Jaye and Jesse Wiggins and I caught a 4-pounder on it. Then I got more dialed in on it. I threw a (Strike King) Dreamshot and a tube, but my first with that I'd get a bite. There was a little more stain in the water and I think I needed something they could see and get their attention." He was fishing the dropshot with a rigorous action as opposed to dragging the weight along the bottom. Most of the areas he caught fish were 12 to 17 feet. "I never caught a fish where there was another one with it," he added. "They were randomly scattered. You had to get it around one and let them know your bait was there. I was not fishing a school so I had to fish quick."
Winning Gear:
Dropshot gear: 7'4" medium-action Quantum Tour KVD spinning rod, Quantum Smoke Speed Freak 30 spinning reel, 10-pound Seaguar Smackdown braided line, 8-pound Seaguar Tatsu fluorocarbon line (leader), unnamed 1/0 straight shank finesse hook, 5" Strike King 3X ElazTech Z Too (ice), 1/4- and 3/8-oz. Strike King Tour Grade tungsten dropshot weight.
Lee tried other techniques, such as crankbaits, jerkbaits, Ned rigs, wacky-rigged worms on a dropshot, but all 20 of his weigh-in fish came on the fluke-style dropshot.
Main factor: "Getting away from everybody and finding places to myself that had isolated schools of smallmouth. I'd get two bites next to each other in practice. I'd mark them and go back to it and go three hours without a bite. Then I'd go back and catch 18 (pounds) in the tournament. I had four or places like that that I could rotate."
Performance edge: "That new four-blade Fury prop from Mercury was key for me. It kept the nose of my boat up. I don't like rough water and that helped a lot."
BASS Lake St Clair 2-5 Patterns BassFan 8/30/17 (Todd Ceisner)