Bass Fishing Oct 2017 | Page 103

Hicks also picked up a bunch of weight in pads border- ing the channel in the back of Potomac Creek on day one. On days two and three, he finished his limit up north with a split-shot rig and the TD Pencil by focusing on shallow depressions with a clean bottom and current in the flats in the backs of creeks. The Virginia angler didn’t make a special effort to fish places that he had to himself, and he didn’t commit to ham- mering one or two grass beds as others in the field did either. In the end, his decision to move around left him on top when his competitors ran out of fish on their primary spots. keys to victory Hicks didn’t focus exclusively on running the tide, but as usual the Potomac’s tidal fluctuations did factor into his deci- sions, more so in the afternoons than in the mornings. On day one he fished the back of Potomac Creek as the tide was dropping, staying so long that his motor overheated five times from idling through mud as he worked back out. He also ran to areas with falling water to finish out days two and three. On the final day, the first depression he hit in the after- noon had no water movement, and rather than staying, he left it in search of a falling tide. Another critical component of Hicks’ success was being adaptable. He picked up a swim jig on the final day after chugging his Rico along for an hour or so with no results. Two casts later he put a 4-pounder in the boat. Later in the day, Hicks dropped the Rico in favor of the super-subtle TD Pencil to finish his limit with three more quality fish. Both bait changes had history – swim jigs are killer on the Potomac, and Hicks enjoyed success with the TD Pencil in previous years. Even so, with the water being calmer and clearer on the final day, he needed to adjust. He made the right call. On day three, Hicks was the only angler to break the 12-pound mark. With 16-14, he got the win in style. WHAT mESSED UP THE FISHING? After a summer of truly excellent fishing on the Potomac, most anglers figured the fishing would be really good for the Northern Division finale. That was definitely not the case, as only win- ner mike Hicks brought more than 12 pounds in on the final day and several of the Potomac’s heavy hitters, includ- ing Chris and Cory Johnston and Bryan Schmitt, failed to muster a limit on the second day of competition. The theories about why the fishing was so tough varied considerably. For most anglers, the blame landed on the dirtier water up near Washington, D.C. and the seldom-heard complaint of “too much grass.” Particularly, the Johnston brothers would have pre- ferred canopies of milfoil rather than the huge and impenetrable hydrilla mats that covered swaths of some of the bays. OctOber 2017 I fLWfIshIng.cOm CO-ANGLER CHAmPION Name: Richard Perez Hometown: Naples, Fla. Winning Weight: 28-03 (12 fish) Winning Program: Perez won his title with a pair of time-tested Potomac sta- ples: a Yamamoto Senko on a Texas rig with a 1/8- or 1/16-ounce weight and a black Lobina Rio Rico popper, which produced his bigger bass. “If it was bright and sunny out I couldn’t get bit on the topwater, but as soon as it got cloudy or there was a lit- tle bit of wind I’d pick it up and wouldn’t put it down,” says Perez. “That’s when the better bites came, and that’s what did it for me.” Hicks believes a summer of pres- sure simply got to the bass. “All of the tidal rivers do this when you start getting toward August,” he says. “Those fish stay in their summer places from the end of may until the middle of September. So they have a lot of chances to get beat on, and they get educated. I just think the fish are a lot smarter than what we give them credit for.” Schmitt believes the issue was the tides, excess grass growth and a slight high-pressure system. “It was bad because something with the solar eclipse had the tides running extra hard, and then there was a slight high-pressure change,” says Schmitt. “It was pretty good in practice, and even the day before the tournament it was really phenomenal, but anytime you get a full moon or a new moon [the new moon was a coupl