Fishhound Magazine 007 | Page 13

E lite Series Pro Casey Ashley brought a handful of techniques & fundamentals that he learned at age 18 to the 2015 Bassmaster Classic on Lake Hartwell. On Sunday afternoon, he held up the trophy for his hometown crowd. Here’s the easy-to-follow formula – and baits – that have made him a winner! Don’t let the looks fool you. There’s a lot of old treasure buried beneath that youthful Country and Western star veneer! “I guess I’m what you would call ‘Old School,’” said Casey Ashley as he dropped his trolling motor and eased his Triton into a cove on Table Rock Lake. “I like to keep things simple!” That was several years ago. At the time, I wasn’t sure if the remark was philosophy, trademark, disclaimer or apology, and “smart” self-marketing today calls more and more for personal branding, so I look on self-summary with suspicion. When we docked the boat four hours later, however, I knew that “Old School” was a moniker befitting the man! “Growing up, I fished with my dad all the time. I figured out things that would work for us, and that’s what we did all the time. For me, going out on a body of water that I have no knowledge at all about patterns and the stage the fish are in, I (at least) want to be confident in what I’m using. It may not always be the best thing to be using at the time, but at least I will be fishing with something that I have confidence in.” – Casey Ashley still pretty simple as far as my bait selection and approach…still using the same stuff. I’m just on the water more and have been in more tournament situations now. It’s not like I am doing anything different. I am just learning to be more efficient at what I do! The more simple you keep it, the better off you are.” That’s not to say he hasn’t added to his game. Take his Bassmaster Classic victory on Lake Hartwell as evidence. A pro with a preference for plucking bass from shallow water targets, he caught the lion’s share of his fish from deep water. He even fought off an almost haunting conviction that his best chance to win would be fishing a jig before yielding to a deep pattern, using a Zoom Super Fluke Jr. and a homemade spinner jighead fashioned by his father. At our first meeting, he had said: “I like to stay with my particular strengths, but if I have to do something else to win, that’s what I am going to do, whether I am good at it or not.” That theme had not changed years later in the wake of his Bassmaster Classic win following a 2014 season that included an FLW Tour Victory. “The reason I am where I am today is that I’ve stuck with a basic, simple arsenal to break down any fishery – a few baits I have confidence in when they are in my hands and a few colors I have confidence in.” Here’s how bass fishing’s current King of the Hill covers all bases with four basic “confidence” baits. Casey Ashley, the latest Bassmaster Classic champion, remains as immutable today in the middle of a wildly cheering crowd and cloud of confetti as the 18-year-old kid who learned to chuck a Zoom Fluke to the edge of a school of thrashing blueback herring with his dad. “I’m pretty relaxed all the time. I don’t get too uptight….Before a tournament, I’ll go out in my boat, straighten out my tackle, remove stuff I don’t need…and get a feel for what I’ll be doing. It’s not really meditating, but it is somewhat like that. – Casey Ashley “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it!” he laughs, now with better reason than ever to rest comfortably in that “Old School” conceptual armchair. “I’m Fluke Much has been made of the handmade “horsehead spin,” a Road Runner-style bait that Big bass monthly | Page 12