Bass Fishing Apr 2017 | Page 29

TAKEOFF ANGLER PROFILE THE UPS AND DOWNS OF DAVID DUDLEY LESS THAN A DECADE AGO, THE VIRGINIA PRO FACED BANKRUPTCY AND AN UNCERTAIN FINANCIAL FUTURE, BUT THROUGH FAITH AND UNMATCHED RESILIENCY, DUDLEY TURNED HIS HARDSHIPS INTO THE KIND OF MOTIVATION THAT HAS PRODUCED By Rob Newell SOME OF BASS FISHING’S GREATEST ACCOMPLISHMENTS. PHOTOS BY KEVIN BLACKBURN D avid Dudley knows bet- ter than most the ups and downs of the pro fishing roller coaster. During his 25-year career, Dudley has ascended to the very peak of the tournament ride, only to plunge straight down into an abyss so deep he wasn’t sure he’d ever climb back out. The peak came in the early 2000s, when the Lynchburg, Va., pro earned $1.2 million in just two years by winning the Ranger M1 Millenium tournament and the Forrest Wood Cup, mak- ing him one of professional bass fishing’s youngest mil- lionaires. And then came the abyss. By 2010, in the wake of a crippling national recession, Dudley, like many others, found himself in dire finan- cial straits. He struggled just to feed his family as creditors looked to foreclose on his properties and liquidate his assets. Dudley had to end up selling most of his rods and reels and much of his tackle just to keep the lights on. To an ordinary angler, the situation could have been career-ending. But Dudley is no ordinary angler. Through faith, grit and sheer determi- nation he battled his way back from the brink of bank- ruptcy with back-to-back FLW Tour Angler of the Year wins in 2011 and 2012. In that same timespan, Dudley post- ed an impressive eight top-10 finishes in FLW Tour Major, FLW Tour Open and Forrest Wood Cup competition, won two Tour events in 2012 and banked more than $600,000. These days Dudley is back on solid financial ground. Through debt consolidation measures he managed to hold on to most of the vaca- tion rental properties in which he’d invested, and in recent years Dudley has started several new success- ful business ventures. On the water, he notched his sixth consecutive top-25 AOY fin- ish in 2016, matching the longest such run of his career. Despite great uncer- tainty and against seemingly insurmountable odds, Dudley has managed to climb his way back out of that abyss, and in the process, he’s become stronger both on the water and off. Rock Bottom About the time Dudley raised his first FLW Tour Angler of the Year trophy in 2008, the bottom fell out of the nation’s economy. Shortly thereafter the bottom also fell out of Dudley’s fishing per- formance. His earnings on Tour tapered off, and in 2009 Dudley missed qualifying for the Forrest Wood Cup for only the second time in his career. Another tough season in 2010 didn’t help matters, and by the start of the 2011 FLW Tour season, Dudley’s financial situation had become so dis- mal that he had to borrow rods, reels, tackle and expense money just to fish the events. “I’m not going to lie — it was a pretty rough time in life, a real wake-up call,” he recalls. “I couldn’t even afford groceries. Friends and family from the community had to bring us milk and bread to eat. I had to put water in the milk to make it last longer.” The irony of Dudley’s financial fallout was that he was still being touted as a fishing millionaire. Dudley, who has today earned more than $3.4 million with FLW, David Dudley's billboard business has become a lucrative part-time enterprise for the Virginia pro. APRIL 2017 I FLWFISHING.COM 27