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10 Things You May
Not Know About Kevin VanDam
By
now, you likely know that Kevin VanDam accomplished the following feats by
winning last week’s CITGO Bassmaster Classic in Pittsburgh: He becomes just
the fifth pro to win multiple Classic crowns; he joins Roland Martin as one
of just two anglers to win three consecutive BASS tournaments; and his BASS
career earnings total is just $33,500 from overtaking 18-time Classic
contender and 1998 champion Denny Brauer’s $1.9 million lead.
But here are 10 things about the Kalamazoo Kid you may not know:
10. A 22-year-old VanDam burst onto the BASS scene with an impact matched
previously by only Martin. Working in his dad’s construction business and
his brother’s sporting goods store, VanDam saved $23,000. “I knew I could
fish for a year with that,” VanDam recalled. “Pay my entry fees and expenses
and all that, and not have to sleep in my truck or cut any corners. That's
when I figured I'd give my life savings a whirl at it.”
He has never had to worry about cutting corners. Finishing third in his
first professional tournament in 1990, VanDam won a boat valued at $20,000.
From there, he went on to finish in the money in the next 22 BASS
tournaments he entered.
9. Other anglers saw something special in VanDam. A few years after VanDam’s
debut, four-time Classic champion Rick Clunn said: “I think he's the
ultimate student of the sport. He's had a total commitment from a very early
age. I think that's his strongest point. He's got youth on his side. He's
intelligent. He's confident.
“He's yet to meet his greatest tests. But a lot of people never get to that
stage. He will get to that. And that is when you've accomplished all of your
goals — and I think Kevin has — and there's nothing else to shoot at, but
yourself, can you shoot at yourself? When you first get started, you're
shooting at other things, like the Classic, Angler of the Year, you're
shooting at Roland Martin or Rick Clunn. But once you've shot all of those
down and you become the target, then it's a little bit harder.”
8.
VanDam is one of just four anglers to win three or more Bassmaster Angler of
the Year titles (joining Martin, Mark Davis of Arkansas and Tennessee’s Bill
Dance).
7. VanDam has a taste for the culinary arts. “I absolutely love to cook,” he
said. “In my family I’m known as the grill master. I love to grill. I’m not
a full-course meal cooker. I cook the meat or the main course. I take pride
in that.”
6. There is another passion in his life that rivals bass fishing. “Most
people probably know that I love to deer hunt. But I am a very serious
trophy deer hunter to the point to where it drives my wife crazy. About
mid-November in the peak of the rut, my neck swells up. I start banging into
trees and things like that. I get hard to be around.”
VanDam laments that he has never killed a buck the meets the minimum
requirements to be recognized by the Boone & Crockett Club. “That’s a real
goal of mine,” he said.
5. On tournament mornings, VanDam sets the tone for his mindset by listening
to heavy metal and hard rock music, including Metallica, Kid Rock, Limp
Bizkit, POD and AC/DC. “That’s one of the things that gets me hyped up and
prepared. I’m pretty high strung in the mornings.”
4. VanDam lacks business skills. “People don’t know what a bad business
person I would be without my wife,” he said. “Sherry does so many things to
make me look good, from my clothes to the way that I speak to the way I deal
with the media to preparing all of my business materials to handling
sponsors. What that really does is allow me to concentrate on fishing.”
3.
His best trait: “Probably that I don’t get too wound up about anything. I
learned a long time ago to not make knee-jerk reactions to anything. Like
bad situations, when you lose a fish, or to anything. I wasn’t always that
way. But that is something that has come to me with age — to really sit back
and think and listen before I make a comment or make a decision.”
2. His worst trait: “All my friends and all of the other anglers will tell
you this, that everything I do or have is the best. I’m very confident in
that. I can cook better. My tackle is better. My line is better. My lures
are better. Everything that I’ve got or the way that I do it is the only
way. My wife is on me about that — that I shouldn’t be that way.”
1. You should never expect VanDam to master a time-consuming technique like
drop-shotting. That is just not his style. “He can out-cast the rest of us,”
Davis said. “What I mean by that is, he will make enough casts to productive
water, figure out what the fish are doing, and he will just out-cast you.
It's a casting contest as far as Kevin's concerned.”
From BASS
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