Great Classic Expectations for (and by) Chris Lane
OutdoorHub 01.07.14
Chris Lane’s dream of winning the 2014 GEICO Bassmaster Classic is different than the dreams of the other 55 anglers in the game.
Sure, every qualifier hopes to win the world championship of professional bass fishing. A win molds a pro career and changes your life, and not just because of the $300,000 first prize.
As the 2012 Classic champ, Lane knows that to be true. Yet this time around would be different. In 2014 — his fourth Classic — he’s not only a competitor, he’s the hometown entry.
Florida-born, Lane now lives on Lake Guntersville, the famed Alabama fishery where the Classic field will compete Feb. 21-23, with weigh-ins in Birmingham at the Birmingham-Jefferson Convention Complex.
Friends, neighbors and fans in his adopted hometown of Guntersville are looking to Lane to take a second Classic title — this time for them. Fans everywhere assume he has a home-water advantage and expect more of him.
“There’s added pressure when it comes to fulfilling the expectations people have of you because you’re fishing at home,” Lane said. “I think my biggest challenge will be time management, using my time each evening preparing for the next day’s competition. It’s hard to put everything else aside when you’re at home.”
Recognizing what’s ahead of him, Lane set to work as soon as he nailed a Classic qualification by winning the final Bassmaster Elite Series event of the 2013 season. His mission: Sew up a gaping hole in his lake knowledge.
“In the five years I’ve lived here, I haven’t fished the lake much from December to March because I’ve had other things scheduled,” he said. “I knew I needed to learn a lot to give myself a chance to do well.”
A Lake Guntersville crash course was made easier because he could go to school at home.
“I could just takeoff from my own dock, get back for lunch with my kids and be home every night,” he said. “I was able to put in a lot of time on the water right up until cutoff on Dec. 31.”
Lake Guntersville has been off limits to Classic anglers since that date. Lane drives over the lake bridge to take his kids to school, but those teasing glimpses are as close as he can get to the water until the official practice period begins in February.
Then, he said, get ready for a slugfest.
“The lake has a lot of big fish,” Lane said. “The 30-plus-pound bags are here.”
By February, the lake’s bass will have been feeding to get in shape for the spawn, and they’ll be as fat as they’ll get all year, Lane said. That means a limit of five big bass a day will be needed to top the leaderboard, he said, and the game could easily change from one day to the next.
“Anyone could come from behind with a huge sack and take over,” Lane said. “This will be a Classic that’s a nail-biter to the very end.”
He predicts the winning weight will be about 83 pounds. That would easily break the Classic record of 69 pounds, 11 ounces set in 2011 on the Louisiana Delta.
Lane made his predictions with a disclaimer: “Weather permitting. Water clarity will be a big factor in the weights.”
Only one angler has won a Classic in his home state. Interestingly, the state was Alabama, and Boyd Duckett triumphed in the 2007 Classic on Lay Lake, 120 miles from his Demopolis home. But no angler has won a Classic in his home town.
Lane wants to be that angler: “It was so sweet to win a first Classic. Winning this one would be just as sweet, being at home.”