Bass Fishing Oct 2017 | Page 38

36 bass, and support a boatload of “fruit jar” tournaments. The fish are seldom cooperative, and an angler has to devel- op a solid set of skills to catch bass from them consistently – just the kind of chal- lenging proving grounds for up-and- coming fishermen. “They weren’t great lakes,” Floyd says of his original home waters. “The fishing was tough. Sometimes we’d go to Lake Erie or the Ohio River, but we mostly fished those two lakes.” While those small lakes were perfect places to start a career, Floyd soon found himself learning the secrets of bass fishing on two of the most storied fisheries in the sport – Kentucky Lake and Lake Guntersville. Years before the FLW spotlight began to shine on him, Cole Floyd shared the front deck of his father Steve’s Ranger with his two brothers, Dalton, 22, and Wyatt, 18. There, the Floyd boys would spend summer days flipping Kentucky Lake’s shallow bushes with their dad, an accomplished tourna- ment fisherman who’s fished more than 120 FLW Tour, Costa FLW Series and BFL events since 1995 and scored top- 10 finishes in more than a fourth of them. In June, Steve placed 23rd in the same Costa event where his middle son finished second. Fishing Kentucky Lake, about 400 miles southwest from Paint Creek and Rocky Fork, was a vacation of sorts over the years for the Floyds. Whenever they could, the family would burn a path down the Western Kentucky Parkway to Paris, Tenn. Eventually, dad’s lessons taught in the grass beds, brush piles and bank cover at Kentucky Lake would merge with others from another Floyd outpost on the Tennessee River farther south- east: Lake Guntersville. “That’s where I learned to ledge fish,” Cole says of Guntersville. “For about 10 years, my brothers and I would go down there and stay with my grandma during spring break. I kind of taught myself how to ledge fish out there. It was ridiculous at first. I only used down- imaging. I had no idea what side-imag- ing was for, and I’d spend hours out there just idling around trying to learn how to read graphs.” Guntersville wore a groove in Cole’s mind. In one stretch at age 15, he spent 40 days graphing, learning and fishing the big lake in the Alabama hills. Every trip south meant another opportunity to grow, and he seized as many chances as he could. The Tennessee River has shaped Floyd’s skill set, from flipping bushes to fishing ledges. The FLW Trail Back home in Ohio, Cole skipped the high school fishing circuit, but kept fish- ing local derbies, using the lessons learned on his home lakes as well as Guntersville and Kentucky Lake to claim his fair share of victories. All the while, his family spent a lot of time cruising up and down the Western Kentucky Parkway. “We kept going back to Kentucky Lake,” Cole says. “My parents bought a house in Paris [Tenn.], and when it came time to go to college, I knew I wanted to be by the lake.” The lure of Bethel University’s high- profile fishing team drew him to nearby McKenzie, Tenn. Now, he’s juggling class- es in business management with the school’s collegiate bass fishing program, the BFL trail and the Costa FLW Series. Cole says the winnings – more than $30,000 this year, so far – are all going back into college expenses and tourna- ment entry fees. “The ultimate goal is to fish profes- sionally for a living,” he says. “If I can’t get there, I want to use that business degree to land a job in the fishing industry.” Of course, it’s a long, winding road from those nondescript Ohio lakes off of Highway 50, but if Cole’s star continues to rise, the same road that carried him to the Tennessee River lakes will soon bear the weight of his FLW Tour rig. “He’s so much better than I ever was,” says Steve, who spent three years on the FLW Tour. “I’m tickled to death. I’m proud to see him doing so well at such a young age. “I told him his day will come,” adds the proud father. “I told him if he gets that degree, he’ll always be able to get a job in the fishing industry, whether he’s on the Tour or somewhere else.” FLWFISHING.COM I OCTOBER 2017