Bass Fishing Feb - Mar 2020 | Page 23

spawns. Sometimes it’s not so much the flurries that get my attention as do the sudden lulls. At Lake Conroe last year, the fish-catching pace was fairly consis- tent, but I remember several midday funks during the week where activity was nil for an hour or so – like every bass in the lake got the memo that the kitchen was closed. For years in pro tournaments, anglers left the ramp, fished and weighed in, and no one really knew when they caught their fish. But now, with SCORETRACKER and other resources like the FLW Live Leaderboard, we can see, literally minute- to-minute, swings in fish activity. Because anglers on the Bass Pro Tour know when their competitors catch fish, they’ve already become adept at using real-time information to their benefit in tourna- ment strategy. Pros such as Ott DeFoe, Jacob Wheeler, Jordan Lee and Michael Neal recognized SCORETRACKER’s value immediately in the real-time scoring for- mat. They learned pretty quickly that you don’t want to be running down the lake when the SCORETRACKER is blowing up. However, lulls provide a prime opportu- nity to explore new water or try other lures without getting behind. Even some pros who did not take to SCORETRACKER immediately have learned to embrace it. Bass Pro Tour points champion Edwin Evers admits that initially he didn’t care to hear SCORETRACKER updates in his ear every five minutes. Now, he can’t get enough of it. He wants to know about any changes at all times because it pro- vides valuable information about the overall fishing rhythm of the day. One thing is for sure: Real-time scor- ing in tournaments represents another opportunity to learn about bass and their daily habits. In the coming years, we should be able to use the fish-catch data from these events to generate charts illustrating the definitive peaks and valleys in each fishing day to better understand the flurries and the funks. FEBRUARY-MARCH 2020 | MAJORLEAGUEFISHING.COM | FLWFISHING.COM 21 scoring began to truly uncover the lakewide ebb and flow of tournament fishing days. In those events, marshals called in weights in real time on VHF radios. Pro anglers were the first to real- ize the daily radio traffic would some- times go from quiet to an all-out five- alarm blaze in a matter of minutes. The intensive radio flurries would last 15 to 30 minutes before squelching back down to normal levels. I remember having conversations with pros about this phenomenon following TTBC events, but I was still skeptical until I was given SCORETRACKER at the very first MLF Cup in 2011. Since then, I’ve spent thousands of hours with SCORE- TRACKER in my hand at MLF Select, Cup and Bass Pro Tour events, watching as fishing activity waxes and wanes through- out the day like coastal tides. Sometimes, there are logical explana- tions for it. At the Bass Pro Tour event on Smith Lake in 2019, there is no doubt the flurries were tied to morning shad