Categories
The National Angler

META BAMA RIG

What is "META BAMA"?

In 2021, the pro-staff of EVERGREEN unveiled META BAMA. “META BAMA” stands for METAL-vibration (Blade bait in Japan) + Alabama-rig. It is a blade bait that uses LAST ACE 80F and possesses excellent swimming action. A bait ball rig that does not require dedicated tackle. This is “Meta Bama”!

I realize that this might not be new to you. However, the name is new to me and that is the reason I wanted to share this. I would love to know if you have used this in the past and had success. Let’s here from you below and what you think!

Check out the awesome video from Evergreen International at the bottom of the page!

How to rig META BAMA

To create a META BAMA, insert each hook of blade bait into a dent of LAST ACE 80F and exit hook from the bait’s head. That’s it!

Try different combination

The inventor recommends people use META BAMA as a combination. However, he also suggests using different blades and soft-plastic baits, which might be better than those in his variety. 

So many different combinations could make up an excellent META BAMA rig. Choice in various styles and sizes of blade baits, to an enormous selection of soft plastics and different hook combinations. While blade baits would make the most ideal starting point, don’t overlook possibilities of using a lipless crankbait, to include some of those that suspend as this could help with the rate of fall and keep your set-up in the strike zone longer. Here are a couple of options for suspending style lipless that you might consider. The 6th Sense Quake Suspending Lipless Crankbait, Bill Lewis Floating Rat-L-Trap, and the Ima Suspending Vibration Lipless Crankbait.

 

When selecting the suitable soft plastic, that is totally up to you. Choosing soft plastic jerk baits and drop shot baits to make your search easier should prove most valuable. Remember the size of your hooks when selecting baits and consider the movement they will make and how hard or easy it makes hooking and keeping a fish on the hooks. 

 

Hooks are my last consideration as some baits just don’t have the right or quality level of hooks. There are so many options available to choose from, but there are options to give more flash, add on a 4 bard Quatro hook, and go with a frog-style hook with two barbs for a more weedless Snagless approach. 

Jackall Keeburn Blade Bait
Damiki Vault Blade Baits
Megabass Vibration X Dyna Response Blade Bait
Molix Trago Vib Blade Bait
Silver Buddy Blade Bait
Zoom Tiny Fluke 20pk
Fish Arrow Flash J Split Tail Shad
Berkley Powerbait Maxscent Flatnose Jerk Shad 10pk
Duo Realis V-Tailshad
Jackall iShad
Mustad KVD 1x Strong 2x Short Triple Grip Treble Hook
Mustad KVD Elite 1x Strong Triple Grip Treble Hook
Decoy Quattro X-S21 Hook
Decoy Blade Treble Hook Y-F33BT 2pk
Decoy V-F52 Double Hook

GO BIG OR GO HOME!

Now if you are into big swimbaits or big baits in general then maybe give this combination a try. This setup is sure to grab the attention of your local lunkers. A 5.5in Silver Buddy and Zoom Super Flukes with some upgrades treble hooks should get the job done!

Silver Buddy Big Gamefish Series Blade Bait
Zoom Salty Super Fluke
Owner Stinger STX-58 Treble Hooks

SHOP TACKLE WAREHOUSE & BASS PRO SHOPS FOR ALL THE GREAT GEAR ABOVE

Categories
Major League Fishing - Bass Pro Tour/Cup Events

MLF Senior Director of Operations Bill Taylor Announces Retirement

I had the opportunity to meet Bill this past summer at the MLF Pro Series event on the Potomac. I’m truly thankful for that opportunity. Seeing his passion not only for the sport of bass fishing but for the anglers and in my mind the most important part of any tournament, the staff. Bill had a natural ability to talk with people and that was evident by the number of people who knew him and spoke about all the years of working with him. I’m sad to see you leave and happy for you to enjoy a well-deserved retirement. Thank you for everything you have done for the sport and it truly is a better place because of you

Joe, The National Angler

BENTON, Ky. (Jan. 7, 2022) – For the past few seasons, with words and actions, Major League Fishing (MLF) Senior Director of Operations Bill Taylor had laid the groundwork for his departure from the duties he’s overseen and controlled since 2001. Taylor made it official this week, as MLF announced that the longest-tenured tournament director in the company’s history is stepping away.

Taylor, who was the tournament director for the Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit (formerly FLW Tour) for more than 19 seasons, officially announced his retirement as of January 1. It marks the end of an incredibly successful reign during which Taylor helped usher in numerous tournament eras, from the first wrapped trucks and boats to the internet age, to expanded live-streamed tournament coverage, and through the acquisition of Fishing League Worldwide (FLW) by MLF in 2019.

“I told Kathy Fennel some time ago that I’d know when it’s time – and it has been such a fun ride – but it is time,” said Taylor, who turned 74 in August. “Those 4 a.m. wake-up times are getting pretty tough. I was blessed to have a great job that allowed me to do a little bit of fishing and hunting each year. But being tied up for several weeks each year, away from my family, my phone always ringing – it’s weighed on me quite a bit over the last few months. I’m happy that I am able to retire and I’ll have more time to spend with my family and do a little more fishing and hunting.”

A decorated tournament angler in his own right, Taylor fished in the first-ever Operation Bass (precursor to FLW) tournament in 1980. He worked full-time as a UPS driver for 30 years, from 1970 until he retired from the company in the year 2000. He first began working for Operation Bass in 1989, helping out at the Red Man Tournament Trail events as part of the operations staff. When Operation Bass was acquired by Irwin Jacobs and re-branded as FLW in 1996, Taylor was brought along as part of the operations crew and worked the inaugural season of the FLW Tour, using PTO time from UPS to fulfill his tournament duties. After his retirement from UPS, he was promoted to full-time tournament director of the FLW Tour in 2001, a role he held through the 2019 season. In his final two seasons with MLF, Taylor served as Senior Director of Operations, working with all of MLF’s tournament directors to help with planning logistics, venue selection, angler recruitment, on-the-water coverage and anything else that needed to be done to make sure the tournaments were successful.

“There are so many people that I want to thank and recognize, and if I tried to mention them all it would take a novel. But I need to thank my family – especially my wife Barbara – for always supporting me 100%, even when it would sometimes take me away for weeks at a time,” Taylor said. “I want to thank Charlie Evans and Kathy Fennel for giving me my first opportunity to work as a full-time tournament director. And I want to thank MLF, for allowing me to stay with the company through the acquisition of FLW and finish my career. I wish everyone at MLF nothing but the best, they will always have my support, and I will continue to be a strong ambassador for the company.

“It’s been a great run,” Taylor went on to say. “I got to work front and center with the best fishermen in the world. To be a part of this industry – working alongside the anglers and sponsors, making decisions, creating rules – it has truly been one of the most rewarding times of my life.”

“Bill Taylor is the most dedicated person that I have ever met,” stated MLF Executive Vice President and General Manager Kathy Fennel. “He is incredibly thorough and always prepared. He is not a procrastinator. It’s a quality that our staff has respected, admired and even joked about all of these years – you’re not going to beat Bill Taylor to the ramp in the morning. He was the first person there, every single day, and is the hardest-working person that I know. The man loves fishing – both working and on the other end of it with a rod and a reel in his hand. And that’s what has made him such a great tournament director. He has a huge heart, and he truly cares very much.

“More importantly, Bill is an amazing family man. He doesn’t put anything ahead of his family, and he’s the same way with his work family,” Fennel continued. “No matter the situation or task, I knew that if I called on Bill he’d be there to help me figure out a way to get it done. His honesty, integrity and passion has elevated not just our organization but the entire sport of professional bass fishing.”

MLF co-founder and longtime tournament competitor Boyd Duckett echoed Fennel’s sentiments.

“Bill Taylor is an individual that has as strong of a passion for the sport of bass fishing as any human that I’ve ever met,” Duckett said. “I’ve fished tournaments since 1977, and only a few tournament directors that I have worked with have the character needed to make the really tough decisions, no matter what anyone else thought. Bill Taylor is one of those individuals. Bill always had the answer, and it was always fair and never influenced.

“After the acquisition of FLW, I got to work alongside Bill on the business side of the sport and I was really impressed on how focused he was. Any problems or any ideas we had – Bill was 24-7. His lifetime passion for bass fishing is an impressive quality, and we thank him for his time at MLF.”