Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Formula for Success



This is the topic I planned to address last post before I was sidetracked, so here it is: my formula for success.  I believe, and yes this is my opinion, that this formula will help anyone looking to succeed at anything.  As I explain the formula, keep in mind that each part varies for each person.  No two people are alike, some pick up parts faster than others while others pick up different parts faster than some.  My wife reminds me periodically that I only know one way to do anything, ALL IN.  Keep this in mind as focus and determination will affect how quickly you improve.

(e + c) * P
        E

Interesting isn’t it!  Here it is again.

( experience + confidence ) * Preparation
                        Execution

Intrigued?  I’ll explain each part, why it is important and most importantly, how the math relates to the formula.

Experience
            This one is attainable by anyone, but definitely the most time consuming.  Experience is irreplaceable and there is no substitute or shortcut.  The more time spent improving skills, increasing knowledge and understanding the intricacies, the more you improve your chance of success.  In fishing, if you’re flipping and pitching skills are poor (accuracy), then spend a few minutes each day flipping and pitching at targets in the house, garage or yard.  I like to use a 5’6” casting rod with braid for practice.  The short rod works in the house and braid is much easier to use.  As you become more proficient, this skill will translate to a different setup quickly.  If you struggle deep, spend time reading how to use your electronics better and spend time on the water using them.  This one is very hard for most anglers as the desire to fish often wins.  To prevent this, leave the rods at home.  Another tip is to remove anything that relates to other techniques so you are forced to stick with your plan.  Attend seminars, fish with other anglers, read articles (by experts) and experiment. 
We all become complacent in our strengths, but you must reach outside the box to progress.  Remember, a chain is only as strong as its weakest link.  This is true as it relates to yourself or your team.  If you have skills that are raw or lacking, they will slow your progression and actually hurt you by affecting the second element in the Formula.

Confidence
            This part is perhaps the most difficult to obtain and more importantly, to maintain.  Confidence can erode over time, or in an instant.  It is generally gained through success, but lost in failure.  The key here is to identify failure, because often we lose confidence when we shouldn’t.  If you follow the elite tournament pro’s, you’ll often hear them say, “I had one in the box by 2, but caught 4 in the last hour”, or “I know I’m in the right area, I just have to wait for the right timing”.  I have a couple of examples.  First, in a tournament last year with a friend, I sensed he was growing restless when he went without a bite for over 2 hours (in the morning).  I simply said, “Just be patient, they’re here.  We’ll catch them.”  We went on to win that day. 
Sometimes our failures can actually strengthen our confidence.  At McConnaughy this year, on the second day, I was fishing in a steady rain for shallow largemouth in dirty water.  I knew the bass were there and the forecast was for clearing skies.  I committed to the area and tried my best.  It never stopped raining and I finished fifth.  Success?  Not hardly, but it didn’t shake my confidence because I made the best call based on the information I had and it gave me the best chance to win.  If the skies cleared, it could have changed everything. 
This doesn’t mean that I don’t lose confidence, but rather that I manage the times that it is shaken.  You must be confident in your abilities to catch fish, or whatever it is that you do, because you aren’t competing against anyone but yourself.  In everything, all you can control is how you react to adversity.  You fish to catch the bass, not be concerned with others.  You can’t control what they do. 

Preparation
            This is the key ingredient to whatever you are trying to succeed at.  There is no substitute for a good plan.  Someone once said, “The only bad plan is no plan”, prophetic words.  Quite often, the better prepared angler will succeed over the more confident and experienced angler based on this alone.  Teams don’t enter a game without a game plan, a CEO doesn’t enter a board meeting without a presentation (plan) and good bass anglers don’t enter a tournament without doing their homework.  Homework consists of many things, but some of my favorites are Google Earth, Topo maps, prior tournament results (history) and weather information.  Time of year (pre/post spawn) and water conditions are additional factors that must be considered.  If you go into a tournament guessing, you’ll lose valuable time trying to scramble.  Develop a good plan, refine it during practice and execute it during the tournament.  Yes, often you must make adjustments, but rarely do you have to scrap everything and start over.  Be prepared; cover contingency plans for unexpected conditions.  Have an idea before the unexpected happens so you can recognize it early.

Execution

            Mistakes are often the downfall to finishing second or lower.  Missed fish (net mistakes, break offs, etc) are usually the culprit, but this can also include missing a key characteristic that prevents making an adjustment, forgetting something or a multitude of other things.  The key here is to limit the mistakes.  Sometimes one or two mistakes can be managed, but multiple mistakes are much harder to overcome.  This doesn’t mean that you should give up, but rather refocus as it is harder to succeed.  Keep your head down and concentrate; you can still salvage a respectable day.  Blow your cool, and you may be done.

The Math
             Now that you have the pieces, let’s put them together.  Experience plus Confidence (these are both important), add together to define your skill as an angler.  The more you have of each, the more it inflates your chances.  Together, multiply these against your Preparation to get your enumerator.  Yes, experience and confidence are big indicators, but lacking preparation exponentially affects your outcome.  Divide this by your Execution factor (number of mistakes) and you get your chance of success.  Notice that I say “Chance of Success”, not just success.  Also, division by zero is not possible, but I’d argue that by default, we all start with one.  We are all human and by nature are not perfect.  Division is important here, because in any competition, every error significantly reduces your chance to succeed.

The more you increase this number, the better your chance to succeed.

All the experience and confidence multiplied by your preparation and executed flawlessly may not be enough.  Recall that I said you can’t control others.  You can maximize your chance of success and bring in 25 pounds only to see someone else hoist 25 and ½ on the scales.  That is why it is calculated as a chance.  Winning anything is difficult, especially as the competition gets tougher.  Winning a tournament often is more a factor of everything going just right, that is why I pray!  Do this enough (maximize your chances) and you’ll win your share. 

More importantly, you’ll improve your consistency.

God Bless and Good Fishing!

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Legislating Preference




I planned to cover another topic in this post, but was sidetracked by another “Banning”.  While some anglers will be happy to hear it, others will not, but I’ll argue that they should all be concerned.   In this case, the PAA (Professional Anglers Association) just announced that the umbrella rig (Alabama Rig, etc.) will be banned for all future PAA events.  On the surface, it seems like another reaction to a hotly debated topic; however, underneath simmers an even greater intrusion, erosion of our “Angler Bill of Rights”. 

The umbrella rig has been nothing short of controversial since it debuted on the tournament scene nearly two years ago.  At first, all the talk was about how the rig would revolutionize the fishing world.  The assumptions were that anyone could catch big limits on the rig and that fish just couldn’t help themselves.  However, that hasn’t panned out.  Since the introduction of the “Rig”, only a handful of major tournaments have been won with a rig, and these were exclusively on deep, clear, highland reservoirs during cold water periods.  Not an impressive list considering the Strike King 6XD has accounted for more money won during the same period (not to mention other crankbaits).  What we have learned is that the rig is a cold water technique that excels in clear water situations.  That’s it folks, it’s a technique!  You still have to determine the best configuration, which bait styles, colors, size and more importantly, where and how to use it.

So why are we banning the umbrella rig?  Is it legal? Yes.  Is it damaging our fisheries?  No.  Is it an unfair advantage?  Absolutely NOT, it is available to anyone!  So why then?  Simply, preference.  Umbrella rigs are available to everyone (with enough money to purchase, they are expensive) and they are not magic.  These are the primary complaints/arguments from tournament fisherman.
1)      Anyone can catch limits using them.
Really?  Then why doesn’t everyone?  Because it is a technique (like any other) that must be learned.
2)      I hate throwing them, they wear me out!
I can relate to this one, they are a load to throw.  However, the rig can be adjusted to limit the weight.
3)      They snag a lot of fish and they appear mangled.
This is probably the only legitimate reason.  However, this can be managed by adjusting the rules (similar to sight fishing for bedding bass).  Mandate all fish caught outside the mouth be immediately released, or simply limit the number of baits with hooks to ONE.
4)   Allowing the use of the "Rig" will damage the integrity of our sport.
Just the OPPOSITE!  Banning the technique actually does more harm to the integrity of our sport.  Fear of anything, the unknown, rumors, etc drive our desire to eliminate the source of our discomfort.  Become educated, learn to manage not destroy.  Banning a technique that is legal causes division and actually exposes our sport to other bans outside our control by showing that we are willing to give something up.
5)   One Rod, One Bait.
We can accomodate this.
LIMIT THE USE OF THE UMBRELLA RIG TO ONE BAIT WITH HOOKS!
This is a simple solution to all the arguments.  Will the technique still dominate (occasionally), yes.  However, this is no different than the sight fishing technique.  There are tournaments every year that if an angler does not sight fish for bedding bass, then they are not going to win, period!  How about crankbaits?  In 2012, Douglas lake (sight of this years PAA controversy) was dominated by deep crankbaits.  Why not apply the same argument here?

Slippery Slope

So why should we all be concerned?  Many anglers actually prefer eliminating it.  Because we are legislating preference.  We are changing the rules to favor some, not all.  The recent PAA ban was decided by a survey result of 65% for, 35% against (the ban).  So what we are saying is that 35% of the anglers have just had a tool removed from their toolbox in favor of the 65% who do not like the tool.  What follows next?  Do we ban sight fishing for bedding bass?  I bet if you polled this technique, you would get similar results.  Do we ban plastics to prevent accidental ingestion (kills fish, Maine has tried this)?  Do we cordon off areas to prevent fishing for released fish?  This is as controversial as the umbrella rig.  What about electronics, do we eliminate them because some have an edge?  How about your bass boat?  Should we limit horsepower to even the playing field? Banning is not the answer!  

The primary foundation that Ray Scott built B.A.S.S. on was one of integrity and sportsmanship.  How far we have come when our desire to eliminate something overtakes our responsibility to manage it!  I do not want to win a tournament because I successfully lobbied to eliminate a part of the competition.  Call me old school, antiquated, history or whatever.  Our great sport is built upon the tradition of fair play and honesty.  What ever happened to shaking the other anglers hand, congratulating him/her and meaning it.

What legacy will we leave for the next generation?  What are we teaching our children?

So next time you hear someone talk about banning the umbrella rig or any other technique, remind them of the consequences.

Monday, June 3, 2013

Harlan County Reservoir Bass Tournaments

Harlan was steady as expected this weekend, though results were a little less than anticipated.  Overall weights were affected by the post-spawn as many of the fish were thin, but still as good as any lake in the region.  Patterson Harbor hosted the Western Nebraska tournaments this weekend and the tournament directors did a fantastic job running the event.  You can see more photo's on Facebook at: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Patterson-Harbor/101707373362

Saturday was a tough day for everyone, although a lot of fish were caught.  35 plus mph winds from the northwest make Harlan a rough ride.  Boats were greeted with large rollers (waves) leaving and entering the launch cove.  You know it's going to be a battle when the large Walleye boats are struggling in the surf!  Cold front winds, cloud cover (some light rain) and cooler temps hampered the bite, but the anglers found the fish.  The dock talk after weigh-in had most anglers reporting a solid spinnerbait bite.  Weights were down a little, but first was just under 19 1/2 pounds.  My good buddy Cort and I finished second with 18.90 lbs and it took 17 to get a check.  Pretty good fishing if you ask me, despite the tough conditions.


 
Harlan County Day One Results
1. T Miller S Pavelka             19.52 
BAXTER BIG BASS  5.27    
2. D Padgett C Heimsoth      18.90
3. M Leibehart T Williams    18.10
4. A Cochran A Wright        17.80
5. T Sadd B Gregory              16.96
6. R Ellis Jason Frink             16.38
7. B Pavelka G Pavelka          15.66
8. P Cordova J Jordan           15.65
9. J Williams A Deets            12.59
10, M Wagner D Willis         11.00
11.T King H King                  10.70
12. K Gloe M Burke                9.02
13. C Armstrong C Stroup     8.49
14. D Kohl C Cottam               7.84
15. B Bank J Smidt                   3.74
16. C Graff T Powell                 2.74
17. J Kohl L Barrientes


Sunday offered much better weather with light winds and sunny skies, although cold temps in the morning hampered the early bite.  While the active bite was sporadic (productive for some early), the day was mostly dominated by flipping to targets.  We had a slow start as it took a couple of hours to get the sun out, but once it did the bite improved throughout the day.  We culled throughout the day catching 15 to 20 keeper size bass flipping Moman Tubes, ending the day in first with 22.96 lbs.  Many of the fish would have been a pound heavier if the tournament was pre-spawn, but overall the lake is still producing well. 

Harlan County Day Two Results
1. D Padgett C Heimsoth         22.96
2. T King H King                    17.14
3. A Cochran A Wright           16.87
4. J Jordan P Cordova             16.81 
BAXTER BIG BASS 5.99    
5. D Nichols K  Propp             16.52
6. T Sadd B Gregory               16.35
7. C Cochrane R Collins         14.66
8. F Strong J Strong                14.60
9. K Gloe M Burke                 14.04
10. T Miller S Pavelka            12.85
11. Al Deets J Williams          12.46
12. R Ellis J Frink                   11.53
13. M Wagner D Willis            9.98
14. M Leibehart T Williams     9.32
15. M Vollmar A Christ           7.71
16, R Zogrow B Pavelka G Pavelka C Armstrong C Stroup


Next up is the Nebraska High School State Tournament July 27th.  The kids should have a good tournament, although I'd expect weights to run much less as it will be mid-summer and the kids are not as experienced.