Bass Fishing Dec 2019 - Jan 2020 | Page 66

WHAT’S THE SECRET TO THRIFT’S GREATNESS? AFTER SPENDING SEVERAL DAYS SHADOWING THE NORTH CAROLINA PRO, THE AUTHOR REALIZES IT’S By Joe Balog NOT WHAT YOU THINK B Editor’s note: In 2020, Bryan Thrift will compete on the Major League Fishing Bass Pro Tour. 64 ryan Thrift is the best competitive bass fisherman in the world. For some time now, I’ve held on to that belief, and Thrift’s performance has easily proven my point. Consider his record since 2015. He has 19 FLW Tour top 10s and 10 top-10 finish- es in the Costa FLW Series. Six of those events resulted in victory, with the latest coming at the 2019 FLW Cup. Thrift makes the Cup religiously and always performs. He’s earned 10 top-10 Cup finishes in his career, including consecutive top 10s from 2012 to 2017. Frankly, there has been no more domi- nant record in pro fishing in recent history. In February 2019, six months before Thrift became the Cup champion, I set out to determine what makes him so good. As Thrift’s assigned press observer for the Lake Toho FLW Tour event, I spent three days, mainly in silence, observing him dur- ing both competition and the pre-tourna- ment practice period. It was somewhat unnerving for us both. Truth be told, immediately following the event, I was a bit disappointed. Nowhere did I find Thrift’s lucky horseshoe or magic lure. Perhaps I wasn’t privy to the good stuff, I thought. Maybe he held back a bit. But numbers don’t lie, and, despite what I personally observed as a mediocre practice, Thrift somehow took the last spot in the cut and went on to win $10,500. I spent much of the spring pondering that tournament, wondering where it was I went wrong. How did I let Thrift’s secrets slip through my fingers, despite devoting 30 hours with the man in the heat of battle? And then it hit me: The answers were there all along. No Room for Error I’d heard Thrift had a reputation for being incredibly versatile, and on the first day of practice he didn’t let me down. Thrift began the morning with 28 rods at the ready. He stowed seven next to the passenger seat because they wouldn’t fit on the front deck. “My biggest fear is not being ready for a situation in practice,” he said in reference to his rod selection. Later, I’d find the key word in that state- ment was “practice,” as it seems Thrift’s practice never ends. Thrift’s rod abundance assures he never second-guesses his actions while tournament fishing. If something feels right, he tries it – every time. Later, during the event, Thrift purposely stopped his boat and dug out a punching rod, making a grand total of one cast before putting it back in the locker. He understands the numbers game. “You just need to make five good casts, two days in a row,” he told me. Thrift’s practice methods appeared unusual at first. Rather than fish the end- less miles of shoreline vegetation like his competitors, Thrift spent the vast majority of his practice time on Toho idling in an attempt to find subtle offshore haunts where an overlooked group of fish might have taken up residence. It’s been a key method in the past. “You win tournaments when you find fish doing what they’re not supposed to be doing,” he said. “Ideally, I like to have a couple groups of fish located in practice, FLWFISHING.COM I WINTER 2020