Bass Fishing Aug - Sept 2018 | Page 58

The Path Not Taken On the last day of practice at St. Clair, Rose and fellow Arkansas pro Greg Bohannan located an area that was swarming with fish in the 3- pounds-plus range, and a few that topped 4 pounds. Rose also had found a spot offshore where the fish he caught were bigger, but more random. Given that there wasn’t much wiggle room between him and two of the most formidable competitors in the FLW Tour ranks – Martin and Thrift – Rose opted to plan his tournament around the surer thing. “ “Based on past tournament statis- tics, I felt like I could catch 17 or 18 pounds a day and do what I needed to do,” recalls Rose, a slugging center field- er for Arkansas State University in his college days. “Fast-forward; if I had known it was going to be a homerun derby I would have dug in a little deeper in the box. I wouldn’t have choked up on the bat at all. I would have just been me and swung a little harder, which is what I usually do. It almost cost me, but it did- n’t. I lost a few key fish – one 4-pounder broke off, and another just pulled off I WOULDN’T HAVE CHOKED UP ON THE BAT AT ALL. I WOULD HAVE JUST BEEN ME AND SWUNG A LITTLE HARDER. ” — MARK RosE 56 right at the boat. If I had caught them, it wouldn’t have been so close.” Until now, St. Clair provided equal measures of insult and injury to Rose’s resume. In 1999, his third-place finish in a Tour event on the Mississippi River convinced him that he was ready to turn pro and make the big bucks. Subsequently he quit his day job as a district executive for the Chickasaw Council of the Boy Scouts in Memphis and prepared for the life of a tourna- ment angler. A month later, a 147th- place finish at Lake St. Clair disabused him of the notion that he was on a meteoric rise to fame and fortune. Such results have not defined Rose’s 20 years as an FLW Tour pro. Seven top-10 seasons bespeak his con- sistency. Monetarily, 2018 marked the third time Rose has cashed checks totaling more than $200,000. The AOY championship earned him $100,000, he’ll earn a new boat through the Ranger Cup program and the Forrest Wood Cup is still to come. He’s collect- ed nearly $2 1/2 million overall in his career and, at 46, should have several productive years ahead of him. FLWFISHING.COM I AUGUST-SEPTEMBER 2018