Bass Fishing Feb - Mar 2018 | Page 52

GEAR SHORT RODS SHORTENING UP WHY SOME PROS BUCK THE TREND OF EVER-LONGER RODS L By Matt Williams PHOTOs BY D. W. ReeD II ong rods are all the rage these days. In fact, there are quite a few anglers who don’t even keep a rod shorter than 7 feet in their rod locker anymore. Evinrude pro-staffers Jim Tutt of Longview, Texas, and Terry Bolton of Paducah, Ky., aren’t among that crowd. Both veteran FLW Tour pros still make use of shorter sticks a high percentage of the time, largely because of the belief that shorter rods provide some inherent advantages not found in longer ones. “I use them so much that some of the guys on Tour make fun of me,” Tutt says. “You might sacrifice a little bit in casting distance with a shorter rod, but in my mind it’s usually not enough to offset the other advantages. The only time I might go to a 7-footer would be in obvious power situations, when I might need to make super-long casts to reach schooling fish with a topwater or when fishing swimbaits in really clear water.” Like Tutt, Bolton’s penchant for short sticks is based largely on factors like functionality, efficiency and personal preference. “I’m sort of old school,” he says. “I started out fishing with short rods, and they still have a place in my arsenal. I’m going to have a rod under 7 feet on the deck for something in just about every tournament – sometimes more than one.” Maneuverability, Low Trajectory 50 Both pros point out that short rods yield some definite advantages over long ones, especially when casting around docks or really tight cover like bushes or trees. One of the main benefits is maneuverability. According to Tutt, a long rod can be more of a hindrance than an asset when there are lots of bushes and other obstacles in close proximity to the casting deck and he’s making casting presen- tations versus flipping. “A shorter rod makes it much easier to get in there and bang around in the trees without hitting limbs on your backcasts or on a side pitch,” he says. “Plus, it makes it easier to make under- hand skips under docks. You can’t do that very well with a 7 1/2- footer unless you are really tall, because the bait will sometimes slap the water before it ever leaves the rod. It’s just easier for me to put a shorter rod in motion, and that enables me to make a quieter, more precise presentation with the bait.” Bolton agrees with the tall guy/long rod analogy and used the physique of his good friend and three-time FLW Tour Angler of the Year Andy Morgan of Dayton, Tenn., to illustrate. Terry Bolton prefers shorter rods when he’s fishing around docks or overhanging shoreline cover that requires more precise casts. FLWFISHING.COM I FEBRUARY-MARCH 2018