Bass Fishing Article
Fish Your Strength
By Dale Meddock
Pro Mark Meddock of Woodland, Calif., caught a two-day total of
10 bass weighing 40 pounds, 9 ounces to win the Stren Series Western
Division event on Lake Shasta. (Photo by Jeff Schroeder)Swim or
sink Young Meddock on the mark as he swimbaits into nearly 23 pounds,
victory at Stren Western Lake Shasta.

REDDING, Calif. – Mark Meddock led a youth movement at
Lake Shasta this week that showed off guile in the face of adversity,
pitted bravado against experience and, above all, proved that swimbaits
are the hottest bait out West.
In Saturday’s final round of Stren Series Western Division
competition at Shasta, the 23-year-old pro from Woodland, Calif.,
caught the heaviest limit of the week – 22 pounds, 14 ounces – totaled
40-9 over the last two days and won $10,000 plus a new Ranger 519
VX for first place.
“I feel great, man,” said Meddock. “This is
the biggest win of my career.”
Three factors played key roles in the young pro’s victory:
the weather, his strategy and his bait.
All week long, Meddock was quietly crowing about how well the
prespawn spotted bass in Lake Shasta were biting thanks to the
unseemly weather. The clouds, wind and incessant rain only picked
up steam as the week wore on, and – while creating dismal
conditions for outdoor fun like fishing – that only turned
on the bass bite even more.
“This lake is just unreal right now. All of these big spotted
bass are coming up and eating,” he said. “I’ve
probably caught 20 bass over 5 pounds during the last week, and
that’s unbelievable.”
What’s especially unbelievable is that all of those 5-pound-plus
bass were spots. Saturday, Meddock came in with a kicker spotted
bass weighing about 6 ½ pounds, which he caught early in
the day. He filled out his limit with two more in the 4- to 5-pound
range and another one that went over 5. He said, with those fish
in the livewell by 8 a.m., he spent the day trying to cull out
his smallest spotted bass, which was still a sizable 3 ½ pounds.
He didn’t ultimately get to cull it out, but he didn’t
need to.
“I was saving those fish all week,” he said. “I
didn’t think anybody else would find them because they were
suspended over about a hundred feet of water. I was fishing up
in the Sacramento (River) Arm and at the mouth of Pit River. I
was just hitting the tops of islands, and if they didn’t
eat within the first three of four casts, I’d just move on
to the next stop.”
Meddock said he had about 10 locations where his big spots would
bite and replenish themselves each day. He saved his best spot
up the Sacramento Arm, however, for Saturday.
“I caught my first fish on my first cast, that 6 ½-pounder,” he
said. “I knew it was going good from there.”
While those fish were, in fact, there for the taking for everyone,
Meddock believes it was his bait that did the trick in getting
them to bite. He said he caught all of his fish this week on an
8-inch Huddleston swimbait. He, along with runner-up Jeff Michels,
came in with their swimbaits blazing the last two days to take
over the final round from the worm anglers.
“It’s a custom color, and that’s the reason
it’s getting bit,” said Meddock, who was initially
reluctant to reveal the bait’s “rainbow trout” color. “A
lot of people throw the Huddleston here and they don’t get
bit, but that color is key for me. I would just cast it out and
slow-roll or twitch it. It runs about 10 to 20 feet deep.”
Michels Second
Michels lands second-heaviest limit, still falls to second. You
would think that, if you caught the second-heaviest limit of the
entire week while leading on the final day of a tournament,
it’s a pretty good bet you’d win.
Not so for Michels. The day-three pro leader from nearby Lakehead,
Calif., caught 19 pounds, 10 ounces Saturday and finished second
thanks to Meddock’s massive, near-23-pound stringer. Michels,
who led Meddock by under a pound coming into the day, finished
with 38-1 and claimed $10,000 for second place.
“I thought I had it, I really did,” Michels said. “Mark
and I were fishing right next to each other on that last stop.
With almost a 1-pound lead on him, I didn’t think he had
anything over 21 pounds. But I’m extraordinarily impressed.
On the fourth day, for him to find that quality of fish – he’s
a great fisherman.”
Michels used a similar sandbagging strategy as Meddock. He made
the cut by catching fish on Senkos then turned to Mission Fish
swimbaits Friday and Saturday, making milk runs up and down the
Sacramento and McCloud river arms of the lake.
“It’s not a bad finish,” Michels said. “I’m
just happy to be here.”
Veteran Nollar third
While the young guns blazed away with their swimbaits into first
and second place, veteran pro Dave Nollar of Redlands, Calif.,
finished third and won $8,900 by twitching 30-year-old stinger-rigged
plastic worms on darthead jigs.
“I’m going on a campaign to outlaw swimbaits,” Nollar
laughed, “because swimbaits aren’t really fishing.”
Nollar caught 18 pounds, 7 ounces – which tied Michels day-three
weight as third-heaviest of the week on the pro side – and
finished with 36-8.
“I’ve fished for a lot of years, but I’ve never
had more fun than I had in the last two days. It was just awesome,” he
said.
Townsend fourth
Bill Townsend of Redding landed a hefty kicker spotted bass Saturday,
weighed in a limit worth 13 pounds, 13 ounces and finished fourth
with a final weight of 26-6. He earned $7,900.
“I started out on swimbaits. I was just throwing it out
into deep water and reeling it in,” he said. “Then
I went to Yum Dingers in green-pumpkin with purple flake and Woolly
Buggers in the same color as my backup pattern.”
Riley climbs to fifth
After a disappointing Friday, opening-round pro leader Jim Riley
of Shasta Lake, Calif., climbed back into the fifth slot with a
13-pound, 1-ounce limit. He finished the finals with 23-15 and
earned $7,400.
“It was a pretty good day. I lost one good fish and another
one on a swimbait,” said Riley, who caught his non-swimbait
fish on Yum Dingers rigged on dartheads.
Fishing Articles - Swimbaits For Spotted Bass.
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