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Home > Kota Kiriyama Pro File
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Kota Kiriyama
Refining Your Drop-Shot
It's more than just finesse
By now most anglers are
tired of reading all the articles on the drop-shot. The secret finesse
technique is no secret at all. After the initial fascination anglers had
with the drop-shot technique many brushed it off as a technique only
useful for those times nothing else was working; only in emergency
situations. But the
effectiveness of the drop-shot technique knows no limitations, it’s not
only a finesse application nor does it only catch small fish. It’s
become the mainstay of my arsenal because of how many unique uses I find
for it and simply put it may be the most universal fish catching technique
ever invented.
It’s not an easy
transition going from tournament to tournament on the elite series, many
of the professional anglers find themselves trying to force feed the fish
with techniques or patterns they had success with in previous tournaments.
Fishing in the moment has become a popular theme and seems to best
describe what an angler must do in order to be successful at all the
different bodies of water. My success can really be attributed to
versatility, at even more specifically the versatility of the drop shot.
When the elite series
made its stops at Champlain and
Oneida
I found myself searching for smallmouth on my graph and then dropping the
bait down to them. As I watched my bait sink on the graph I would see the
fish moving up and grabbing it; it was almost like playing a video game.
At
Lake
Toho
and
Lake
Amistad
I bulked up my gear to a higher pound test fluorocarbon line and stouter
casting rods in order to sight fish bedding bass. The bait would just sit
on the bed right about eye level with the fish. The fish had no chance and
couldn’t help but get the intruder away from its bed. At the California
Delta I even used the drop shot for flipping sparse tulles, dissecting
patches of tulles very subtly I attracted bites from the fish that were
maybe a little more finicky.
For all the uses of the
drop shot the anglers must remember to change their equipment according to
the structure and situation they are using it for. Line size, rod
strength, and sinker weight are all small variables that greatly affect
the presentation and bait movement with the drop shot. The technique is
not one that you ask what can you use it for, it’s what can’t it be
used for.
The bait selection has
been another key to the success of the technique. I think that many
anglers seem to neglect how important the falling action of the bait is,
the bait is often hit just as it touches the bottom so the bait must
appear natural as it falls. The bait I use for all of my drop shotting is
the Jackall Cross-Tail
shad. The
bait is just a bit different than the most commonly used straight tail
plastic worms; this bait has more body and the movement is so lifelike. If
you look through your most productive baits, most of them are ones with
subtle action because that is how the real forage moves most of the time.
I find myself letting the
bait sit still most of the time because as the water moves and as you
naturally move the bait will move very subtly and the tail will shake due
to the design of the body. It doesn’t take much to make the bait wiggle
and draw attention from any fish nearby. The color selection shouldn’t
be overlooked, but if you were to use just one I would recommend the
watermelon color as it has a general look of many forage fish.
The gear I use does vary
but most commonly I will use a 6’8” Shimano Final Dimension rod and a
Shimano Stella 2500 reel, but if fishing heavier cover or sight fishing I
will move up to a Stella 3000 in order to put on a high pound test line. I
will use high quality fluorocarbon like Gamma Edge and I try to keep the
weight and hook as light as possible in hopes that the bait will appear
more natural.
The most important thing
I try and do when drop shotting is keeping my focus and really
concentrating on how the bait looks in the water when I am fishing it. I
think that this can be said with any technique, but with the drop shot I
will focus in order to make very fine movements. A jump of the bait is
sometimes necessary, but as you do that you must understand what you are
presenting to the fish. You also will begin to understand what the optimal
bottom composition is and what it is that are making the fish bite; and
that’s when a pattern is formed and you will catch many more fish. |
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