Bass Fishing Oct 2018 | Page 16

COLUMN FOR THE RECORD COLIN MOORE S 14 Frank Owens Calls it Quits ervice aside, friendships made over the years are the main reason Ranger Boats service technician Frank Owens will be missed. Owens ended his career at the Costa FLW Series Championship. After thousands of miles on the road, after helping hun- dreds of anglers pursue their dreams, after seeing tournament fishing blos- som into full flower, Owens is finally closing up shop. His 34 years of watch- ful service were acknowledged during the banquet that preceded the Forrest Wood Cup in August. When the Arkansas native started working for Ranger Boats, terms such as “GPS,” “touch pad,” “onboard com- puter” and “waypoints” weren’t part of the fishing lexicon. Many of the bells and whistles that characterize today’s high-performance fishing platforms were somewhere in the future. At the time the 63-year-old Owens arrived on the scene in the ’80s, bass tournaments were solidifying their posi- tion as America’s favorite fishing sport. As a result of their growing popularity, major players in the fishing industry began to flood the market with upgraded versions of what came before. Their latest and greatest usually were just that, but even the best equipment had its oops! moments. Tournaments were the prov- ing grounds for innovation, and if a bug appeared in a product, generally it popped up before or during an event when it was being put through its paces. Service Goes on the road In those days, anglers had two choices for quick fixes: repair stuff themselves, or take it to a local dealer. As equipment became more useful, it also became more complicated, and anglers became less competent when it came to basic repairs. Coincidentally, the tournament scene also fostered a service lag. Business was good and getting busier for boat dealers, to the point they couldn’t drop everything at a moment’s notice to work on a small flood of tour- nament boats and risk alienating some of their loyal and local customers. Guys like Owens came along to fill the service vacuum. Various manufac- turers with a lot at stake began staffing major tournaments with road teams whose technicians could repair even the most complicated products. Call them the pit crews of the tournament world; the people who made sure that the fish- ing stars would never fall from their lofty perches because something crapped out at the most critical moment. Without naming names, Owens has helped stave off disaster for a number of successful bass and walleye pros through the years, and witnessed some major events in competitive fishing. One major observation on his part relates to the dif- ference between the anglers of yester- year and today. “For one thing, back when I started the pros that had the most and biggest sponsors were the ones that won or placed high in tournaments a lot,” he observes. “Nowadays, it’s not so much the guys that win as the guys that work hard to promote products and do the best job at it. Winning is a bonus, but not absolutely necessary. Also, today’s tour- nament fishermen are a lot more pol- ished when they speak on stage; they’re very organized and businesslike.” ranger tough Maytag used to run a TV ad depicting one of its washer and dryer repairmen as being “the loneliest guy in town” because of the dependability of its prod- ucts. When it comes to repairs on Ranger’s bass boats, the same could be said of Owens. As a serviceman for Ranger, Owens hasn’t exactly been cov- ered up with work at any of the bass and walleye tournaments he’s attended. Time-wise, Owens has averaged about 25 to 30 weeks a year on the highway, covering events for Ranger. A battery gone bad here, a livewell aerator pump conked out there is about all he sees at the Ranger service trailer. Since the days when hot rods such as Hank Parker and Jimmy Houston ran Rangers through stickups like they were Sherman tanks, the company has improve its gel-coated hulls to make them virtually bulletproof. The rigging and the Ranger Trail trailers likewise have been beefed up to take a pounding and still perform. Every Ranger fan has his favorite hull. Owens’ is the 360 Comanche of the late ’80s, followed closely by the current Z521L. His preference relates more to looks and performance rather than to how easy they are to work on. Down through the years, Rangers simply haven’t needed a lot of maintenance. FLWFISHING.COM I FALL 2018