May 19, 2012
Catching a break
Year away from pro bass circuit went long way toward Putnam native's Elite Series win
John McCoy
By winning his second Bassmaster Elite Series tournament, West Virginia's Jeremy Starks has joined the select group of only about a dozen anglers who have won more than once on bass fishing's most prestigious professional circuit.
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SCOTT DEPOT - Taking a break sometimes helps.

Professional bass fisherman Jeremy Starks is walking, talking proof. After taking an entire year away from the Bassmaster Elite Series tournament circuit due to health problems, the Kanawha County native has returned with a vengeance.

On May 6, Starks captured the Douglas Lake Challenge in Dandridge, Tenn., and also locked up a berth in the prestigious 2013 Bassmaster Classic. With four tournaments remaining in the current season, Starks ranks a lofty 13th in the Bass Angler Sportsman Society's Angler of the Year standings.

"I've had a great season," Starks said as he relaxed in the living room of his Scott Depot home. "I'm one of only eight guys who have made every cut. And now, with the win, I've become one of only 12 or 13 guys who have won at least two Elite Series events."

Starks began competing on the Elite Series circuit - professional bass fishing's Major Leagues - in 2006. He won the 2008 Southern Challenge on Alabama's Wheeler Lake, and in the process became the first West Virginian to capture an Elite tournament.

All along the way, however, Starks found himself battling periodic migraine headaches, dizziness and blurred vision that got worse as time went along. In 2009 and 2010, he earned prize money in only three Elite tournaments.

Finally, in 2011, Starks asked B.A.S.S. officials if he could take a year off from the circuit to address his health problems.

"Through medication and some dietary changes, things got a lot better," he said. "I felt good enough to make a go of it again this year. I was really looking forward to getting back out there."

His first test came in March on Florida's St. Johns River.

"My first day out, I was in 60-something place and it wasn't looking too good," he recalled. "But then I caught a bunch of fish on the second day and moved up into the 30s. I've fished with confidence ever since."

Starks won $10,000 at the St. Johns tournament and followed that up with $10,000 winnings at Florida's Lake Okeechobee and $10,000 more at Arkansas' Bull Shoals Lake. Then came the Douglas Lake tournament.

"More than anything, I'm proud that I was able to figure that lake out all by myself," Starks said. "Going into the tournament, I had never read anything about the lake, I didn't get any [fishing hotspot GPS] waypoints from anyone, and I didn't pick anyone's brain for information.

"I showed up with no expectations. I looked at a map and decided where I would like to fish. I felt the tournament would be won out of that part of the lake, and as it turned out I was right."

In the three days of practice competitors are allowed before each event, Starks used his boat's sophisticated electronics to find schools of bass. He discovered that the bass were lying deep, often in 40 to 45 feet of water, and he also figured out that they weren't responding to jigging, drop-shotting and other tried-and-true deep-fishing techniques.

"I figured that since subtle presentations wouldn't work, I'd try to rip a crankbait past them and try to trigger reaction strikes," Starks recalled.

The problem he faced was getting a crankbait to run deep enough.

"That's when I thought about long-lining," he said.

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