Jason Lambert Wins FLW Tour Kentucky Lake
Jason Lambert's Winning Pattern, Baits & Gear
Lambert spent very little on the front deck during the three-day practice session. With his iPod blaring a catalog of Eric Church songs, he idled for up 13 hours per day, staring at his Garmin electronics and hoping to find the key pieces to the post-spawn puzzle. FLW Tour pros are permitted to practice with a co-angler who's competing in the event, but Lambert chose to practice alone. He was careful when and where he decided to make a cast because he didn't want to give away anything to nearby competitors. Such is life now on the Tennessee River. "It's hard to stop anywhere because if you do, somebody will be fixing to hit that button," he said. What he saw were groups of fish on the move and they were showing up each day on different places. "I knew they were coming out," he said. "There were fish I didn't see Sunday or Monday that I saw Tuesday. I knew they were starting pour out there." While there were areas around the lake that held fish shallow and around docks, Lambert was committed to fishing the ledges the schools that had already made their post-spawn migration.
Competition:
Lambert spent the first 2 days starting with a crankbait, then transitioning to a 3-ounce, 8-inch spoon when the plug quit producing. If the spoon didn't fire up the groups he was targeting, he'd throw a 10-inch finesse worm on a big shaky head jig. He started each day of the event on a big school that fellow finalists Bryan Thrift and Terry Bolton also started on. The 18-09 he caught on day 1 was not the start he was hoping for, but he was able to fine-tune the tactic that eventually won him the tournament that afternoon. "I spent lot of time on day 1 caught up in history and throwing the spoon and cranking," he said, alluding to how well the magnum-sized spoons worked during the 2014 Tour event. "I caught a lot on the spoon, but it was a strategic change to go to the swimbait." He played around with a 7-inch straight-tail swimbait rigged on a big scrounger head on Thursday afternoon, just to see if he could figure out the cadence required to trigger bites. It's a set up he's used in the past, but hasn't talked about much. After catching 24-04 Friday to move into 2nd place - he caught three of his weigh-in fish on the swimbait - he figured the single-hook lure would be a better option on the weekend when he'd have to net his own fish. "The single-hook bait was a better way to get them in than a crankbait with trebles," he said. Continuing to target smaller groups of fish on the outskirts of areas that held much larger schools, Lambert surged into the lead on Saturday with a 25-05 bag. He focused his efforts Saturday in the mid lake section. "Saturday was kind of a test for the swimbait," he said. "I didn't want to crank or throw the spoon because I knew my chances of losing fish were greater. I caught a 5-pounder and two 4s on the swimbait in the morning and that built my confidence in it." With a 1 1/2-pound lead over Brandon Hunter entering Sunday, Lambert figured the lake would be mostly wide open on the final day. That meant he'd have access to popular community holes that he'd avoided because they'd been heavily pressured earlier in the tournament.
He started Sunday 3 miles from the dam on the same place he'd been sharing with Thrift and Bolton, but came away without a keeper bite. Then headed south and spent the majority of his day between Jonathan Creek to past Paris Landing. He checked an area where he'd marked a school on Tuesday. They hadn't been there since, but they were there Sunday morning and he caught a 5-pounder there. He picked up some 2-pounders a couple spots later and then a 7-pounder to give himself roughly 18 pounds before 11 a.m. "From 11 on, it got crazy," he added. He sorted through roughly 30 fish and threw back an estimated 20 pounds. "At one point, when I boat-flipped a 5 1/2-pounder, I told my camera guy, ÔThis is getting ridiculous,'" he said. "The lake was wide open. I could get on anything at any time." His decision to leave the smaller groups of fish that he'd worked on the first three days was based on the thinking that the bigger schools had had some time to regroup from the fishing pressure. "I fished the big community holes because nobody was on the water," he said. "When those fish have time to rest, you can smash Ôem."
Winning Pattern:
Lambert said the key to getting bites on the scrounger/swimbait combo was maintaining bottom contact. "It had to be grinding along the bottom," he added. "I had to slow it down and work it so slow. If it lost contact with the bottom, I would not get bit." Based on the how the appearance of the fish he caught on the weekend, it was apparent the fish had just finished up spawning. "The almost 7-pounder I caught Sunday, I promise she hadn't been out there more than 2 days," he said. "They're coming every day. My big fish Saturday and two biggest on Sunday all bled on my carpet."
Winning Gear:
Swimbait gear: 7'10" extra-heavy Duckett Fishing Micro Magic casting rod, Duckett Fishing 360 casting reel (6.3:1 ratio), 17-pound Vicious fluorocarbon line, 1-oz. scrounger jighead, 7" Castaic Jerky J (green shad). Spurning the traditional paddletail swimbait for a scrounger head is something Lambert has done for a while. "It's been pretty effective for a long time," he said. "I've tried to be real secretive about it, but I guess it's out of the box now."
Spoon gear: 7'8" double extra-heavy Duckett Fishing White Ice Terry Scroggins flipping rod, same reel (7.1:1 ratio), same line (20-pound), 8" Castaic Heavy Metal Flutter Spoon (nickel). The presentation on the spoon was simple: "Just throw it out and let it go to the bottom, then jerk the crap out of it," Lambert said.
Worm gear: 7'6" medium-heavy Duckett Fishing Micro Magic casting rod, same reel as swimbait, same line as swimbait, 5/8-oz. V&M Baits Pacemaker Series Mega Shakey Head, 10" V&M Baits J-Mag Worm (redbug).
Main factor: "Fishing up there enough to know which schools have better quality in them and knowing when some of those fish are showing up and also knowing where to look when you haven't seen them."
Performance edge: "My Garmin electronics. It was all about finding as many schools as you could find."
Brandon Hunter's Pattern, Baits & Gear
Practice involved a lot of idling and analyzing how fish were position on certain pieces of structure. His key depth range was 17 to 18 feet. "A couple places I fished were spots they'd get on when they first moved out," he said. "That was a key place." He came out of practice with little feel for what he could catch since he didn't do much casting, especially on areas where he marked numbers and quality fish. He had a milk run of spots that he hit the first two days on secondary and in-between areas as he totaled 41-14 to qualify for the weekend in fourth place. Included was an area where he finished his limit both days that he knew nobody else had fished. He wound up not fishing it on day 3 as he focused on a spot that he'd found Friday afternoon. He caught his two biggest fish Saturday on a 6-inch swimbait and the rest on deep crankbaits en route to a 24-12 stringer that pulled him to within 1 1/2 pounds of the lead. On the final day, he caught all of fish off main river channels with a giant spoon and the swimbait. "The only thing was, the spot I saved I never caught one there (Sunday)," he said. "I wish I would've fished there Saturday and tried to catch a big one there. I needed some 6- and 7-pound bites. It's hard to win these things, especially when a guy cracks almost 30. My performance, I felt like it was as good as I could've done." Where knowing too much about a lake has tripped up other anglers, Hunter felt like he used it to his advantage. "The reason I say that is if I see three boats on a school I want to fish, I can keep going," he said, "where somebody else without much history has no choice to pull in. I can go get away from the crowds. It's not that I know many more places because with GPS, guys find the same stuff, but I can get away from the crowds."
Spoon gear: 7'5" medium-heavy 13 Fishing Muse (prototype) casting rod, 13 Fishing Inception casting reel (8.0:1 ratio), 20-pound Sunline Super FC Sniper fluorocarbon line, Nichols Lures Ben Parker Magnum Spoon.
Jig gear: (hair or football): 7'1" 13 Fishing Envy Black casting rod, 13 Fishing Concept C casting reel (7.1:1 casting reel), same line (14-pound).
Swimbait gear: 7'6" medium-heavy 13 Fishing Muse (prototype) casting rod, same reel at jig (6.3:1 ratio), same line as spoon, 3/4-oz. Nichols Lures swimbait head, 6" Basstrix paddletail swimbait (various shad patterns).
Cranking gear: 7'11" 13 Fishing Envy Black Crankenstein casting rod, same reel as swimbait (5.3:1 ratio), same line (10- and 14-pound), Lucky Craft 3.5XD and 6.5XD (chartreuse blue and aurora citrus). He swapped out the stock hooks on his crankbaits to Mustad KVD short shank trebles (2/0 on 6.5XD and 1/0 on 3.5XD).
Dropshot gear: 13 Fishing Envy Black Spinning rod, unnamed spinning reel, 12-pound Sunline SX-1 braided line, 8-pound Sunline Super FC Sniper fluorocarbon line (leader), wacky-rigged 5" Gary Yamamoto Custom Baits Senko.
Main factor: "Knowing a few key areas where some big fish were getting and where they were moving to before getting out on main river. That was key."
Performance edge: "That HydroWave. That's one of those things when you're fishing deep, it does what it's supposed do. I had it on the ultra finesse setting with the volume way up."
Mark Rose's Pattern, Baits & Gear
Cranking gear: 7'11" heavy- and extra-heavy Kistler KLX Mark Rose Offshore casting rods, Team Lew's Pro Magnesium Speed Spool casting reel, 12- and 15-pound Seaguar InivizX fluorocarbon line, Strike King 6XD and 10XD (sexy herring, sexy shad, green gizzard shad, root beer). He swapped the stock hooks on his plugs for 1/0 Mustad KVD Elite Series 1X trebles. When cranking, maintaining bottom contact was key to getting reaction bites. "They seemed to want that this week," he said.
Swimbait gear: 7'6" heavy-action Kistler Z-Bone casting rod, same reel, same line (17-pound), 3/4- and 1-oz. Strike King Squadron swimbait head, unnamed 6" paddletail swimbait (shad patterns).
Main factor: "My history and background and sticking with what I know."
Performance edge: "My Garmin electronics were showing me shallower schools than I've ever been allowed to see. That's good for early on before they get way out."
Jayme Rampey's Pattern, Baits & Gear
Dropshot gear: 7'2" medium-heavy unnamed spinning rod, unnamed spinning reel, 6-pound Hi-Seas fluorocarbon line, 1/0 Roboworm Rebarb hook, Zoom Z-3 worm (morning dawn), 1/2-oz. unnamed dropshot weight.
Shakyhead gear: Same rod, same reel, same line, 3/16-oz. Buckeye Magnum Spot Remover jig, Zoom Magnum Trick Worm (plum). He also weighed in a few fish caught on a 3/4-oz. Buckeye football jig with a Zoom Z Craw trailer.
Main factor: "Just trying to find stuff that wasn't community hole-type places."
Performance edge: "Going down in line size made a big difference."
Scott Canterbury's Pattern, Baits & Gear
Swimbait gear: 7'6" medium-heavy Halo Fishing Twilite Series casting rod, Ardent Apex Elite casting reel, 15-pound P-Line fluorocarbon line, 1-oz. Dirty Jigs Scott Canterbury swimbait head, unnamed 6" and 7" hollow-belly swimbait (shad patterns). The key to his swimbait presentation was letting it sink to the bottom and a slow, steady cadence on the retrieve. "After you caught one or two, they'd bust up," he said. "After that, I wouldn't let it go to the bottom."
Cranking gear: 7'10" extra-heavy Halo Twilite rod and a new Ardent cranking reel with a 5.3:1 gear ratio. When he resorted to finesse tactics, he threw a 1/4-oz. jig head with a 9" NetBait Super T Mac worm (black). "That's what got me into the top 10," Canterbury said.
Main factor: "I didn't lose any fish. I fished clean and that's huge in a tournament like this."
Performance edge: "Just confidence in what I was doing and relying and trusting my Lowrance electronics. I did a lot of idling and looking and spent a lot of time staring at that screen."