Bass Fishing Aug - Sept 2020 | Page 23

ILLUSTRATION BY JOE MAHLER Rose stares down his target on his electronics. Then, he intently scans the horizons, head rotating side-to-side, peering over his shoulder as if making sure no one is going to steal a base – or move in on his ledge. Rose then lightly lifts his cap up, twice, and sets it back perfectly on his head. He delivers a slider with his 6XD, right down the middle of a ledge, and those Tennessee River bass swing for it every time. I have covered Ott DeFoe on the professional circuits since his first year on the FLW Tour, and his on-the-water demeanor has always been the same: extremely relaxed while maintaining acute focus. His fishing presence reminds me of a rhythm guitar player in a band. While the singer screams and the drummer smashes cymbals, DeFoe is barefoot, laid back, keeping time on a six string and always in the groove. Given today’s young guns who make the run-and-gun style of fishing look cool, I still respect the old-school ways and enjoy watching veterans of our sport at work. Two originals I have taken a lot of notes on through the years are Mark Davis and Larry Nixon. Both of these decorated pros remind me of great blue herons in how they still truly stalk fish. In the way a heron exhibits the principles of patience while wading a bank for dinner, both Nixon and Davis have a way of hunting bass – waiting them out and forcing them to surrender. While the youngsters blitz the banks and the graphing wizards idle for mega-schools, both Nixon and Davis can be found lurking in between, slowly but surely closing in on their quarry. Due to Jacob Powroznik’s recent phenomenal success on the Bass Pro Tour and in the MLF Cups, I have grown to enjoy watching him fish. When Powroznik goes toe-to-toe with a bedding bass, it reminds me of a barroom brawl. It’s as if the bedding bass made some kind of insulting gesture at Powroznik. He then shakes his head in disgust, picks up a rod and bows up to the fish. The fish taunts him one too many times, and the gloves come off. A few chaotic moments later, P-Roz has the fish pinned to a Brecknell scale. SCORETRACKER® update: Jacob, that 6-pound, 10-ounce bass will put you in the lead. Aaron Martens is by far one of the most entertaining pros to watch fish. Martens is a dynamo, and his ability to multitask while fishing is his signature. He probably covers more ground running back and forth in his boat than most people walk in a day. He once had the nickname “Spin” for his boundless energy. While fishing, Martens can also neaten the rods on the deck, clean his sunglasses, investigate a “weird funk” in the rod locker, straighten out his toe socks, closely examine some kind of bug that just landed in his boat (Whoa, stink bug, bro!), clean water spots off his gunwale and count the number of flakes in a plastic worm. It always leaves me wondering how he even has time to reel in so many fish. Aaron, you are truly one of a kind. You’ve got a lot of people out here praying for you, bro. AUGUST-SEPTEMBER 2020 | MAJORLEAGUEFISHING.COM | FLWFISHING.COM 21