Bass Fishing Oct 2017 | Page 46

A Championship Script What made Atkins’ victory in the 2017 Cup so impressive was how effort- less he made it look. From his dominant pattern and technique, to his class and polish with the media, to his cool-head- ed demeanor during the high-pressure event, it was as if Atkins, 27, had script- ed the storyline for the 2017 Forrest Wood Cup long before it began. Indeed, the Florence, Ala., angler had rehearsed this championshi p-win- ning experience in his head a thousand times. He didn’t necessarily know it would happen at the Forrest Wood Cup. He had no idea it would take quietly honing his fishing craft on the water. However, once he toted the Forrest Wood Cup home from South Carolina, Atkins became a bit more vocal about what his intentions have been all along. “This is what I was meant to do,” he adds. “I don’t know how else to explain it. Financially, I went out on a limb this year just to fish the Tour. I feel like God has a plan for me, and I have faith in His plan.” Following Atkins’ ninth-place show- ing in his FLW Tour debut on Lake Guntersville this year, his name quickly surfaced on pro fishing’s new-talent radar. 44 place at Lake Murray. And he certainly had no clue that chucking a pencil pop- per over cane piles in 25 feet of water was going to earn him $300,000. All he really knew, without a shadow of a doubt, is that someday tournament bass fishing would be his profession. “It was just meant to be,” Atkins says candidly about his win. “Becoming a professional bass angler is all I’ve want- ed to do since I was a kid.” Atkins is well aware that professing that his destiny was to be a professional bass angler could be mistaken for arro- gance, which is why he’s kept it mostly to himself for the last 10 years while FLWFISHING.COM I OCTOBER 2017