Jump to content
  • GUESTS

    If you want access to members only forums on HSO, you will gain access only when you Sign-in or Sign-Up .

    This box will disappear once you are signed in as a member. ?

I guess fisherman are athletes afterall


Scott M

Recommended Posts

Also from ESPN writer Sam Eifling

Anyone who has attended more than a couple of Bassmaster Elite Series events in 2007 is likely to have seen Ken Hoover, and just as likely not even to have noticed him.

BASS Communications

A trim, bespectacled man of 57, with salt-and-pepper hair tucked beneath a cap, Hoover is the gentleman holding plastic sacks laden with lunches, waiting calmly at the launch dock, waiting to feed the pros.

He's there, handing out meals to Aaron Martens, John Crews, Shaw Grigsby, Peter Thliveros, Jason Quinn and Gerald Swindle, among others, because he's convinced that few people — anglers included — recognize the physical demands of professional bass fishing.

He arrived at that conclusion after outfitting anglers with heart monitors this season to observe their calorie consumption. And even to him, the data have been "scratch-your-head numbers."

For instance, Thliveros burned 4,800 calories on Day Two of the Empire Chase. Martens burned through more than 5,800 during a day on Lake Guntersville, "throwing a spinnerbait all day," Hoover said.

They're the sort of figures that give lie to the old notion of pro fishing as a sport full of guys "patiently waiting for the camera to turn away from them so they can chug another Pabst from the Styrofoam cooler hidden under their tackle box," as a San Francisco Examiner columnist recently dismissed it.

Rather, the calories burned at the heart rate anglers maintain during the day is closer to jogging five miles in an hour, then lifting weights for an hour — then repeating that process four more times.

"He knows what an average professional angler takes to keep going," angler Shaw Grigsby said of Hoover. "That was the start. It's not just a sedentary activity."

Hoover, who has made a career of consulting for health clubs and various fitness-minded celebrities and athletes, hopes to convince BASS of the need to treat its competitors more like athletes. His dream, he says by phone from Fort Worth, Texas, is to garner sponsorships that would allow him to develop a "fitness trailer" like those that follow the PGA tour.

If golfers need an athletic support system, Hoover figures, bass fisherman do as well. While part of his mission has been to show how much abuse anglers inflict on their bodies, he has also been convincing anglers to repair that damage, by snacking.

"They will take the time to eat," Hoover said, "if you can put it in a form that they can deal with, which means brief and doable and tasty."

For the Elite Series pros to replace the calories they burn, Hoover has been pushing sandwiches (usually beef, chicken or peanut butter and jelly), apples, pineapple, rice cakes, protein bars and shakes. Sounds simple enough, but it has at times been a hard sell to anglers accustomed to fishing and driving their boats every available second during a tournament.

Hoover recalled the first time he approached Thliveros with a bag of food. "He just held it up and he said, 'You want me to eat that?'" Hoover confirmed that that was the plan. "And he said, 'Today?'"

Like many of the pros, Thliveros arranged his days around wasting no motion, and that included eating. His normal routine was to grab a quick breakfast, eat a light snack on the water, weigh in his fish at the end of the afternoon, then wolf a humongous dinner right before bed. "That," Thliveros said, "is just terrible for you."

The pro found that he was losing strength during the course of tournaments. Essentially he was making himself "fatter and weaker," Hoover said. Crews found that he lost 15 pounds during the 2006 season, and Swindle, 14 pounds. On those guys — both of whom are dedicated gym rats — that represents a loss almost wholly of muscle and sinew.

"No grown man wants to give up pounds of lean tissue," Hoover said. "We work too hard to get an ounce of muscle to give it back for lack of attention."

Hoover didn't attend the Bassmaster Memorial in Syracuse, N.Y., in July, but by then, Thliveros was feeding himself better in the boat, and his monitor demonstrated why that was a good thing. During the four days he fished, Thliveros burned 18,300 calories, Hoover said — the highest number that he's seen in monitoring anglers this season. Granted, that exertion was across about 10 hours each day, but Thliveros' average daily caloric consumption was still akin to what a runner burns during a marathon.

On the last day, Thliveros said, he didn't ingest anything more than some sports drink. But he credited an improved diet of protein shakes, fruit and granola bars with helping his stamina and concentration through the tournament — which he won, incidentally, earning a $250,000 check for his troubles.

"If you're hungry, and your body's telling you it's hungry, until you're able to overcome that feeling, then it's distracting you from what you should be doing," Thliveros said.

At the Sooner Run on Grand Lake, Grigsby accepted a lunch from Hoover, and said it kept him as alert as his normal regimen of energy drinks and multivitamins.

"It was fabulous," Grigsby said. "I couldn't believe it. I never had a letdown all day. It proved to me right off the bat that absolutely your diet can elevate you and keep you at the level you need to be to compete."

Amateurs who hunt and fish will find that their caloric demands are far lower than those of men competing for their livelihoods. Still, you should remember to mind the belly. "Everything I've ever put in the bags for those guys was bought the night before at Wal-Mart," Hoover said. "I'm not doing exotic things."

With that in mind, here are some points to remember:

• "The best thing for people to take with them," Hoover said, "is what they're going to eat, as silly as that sounds." In other words, it's a waste to take food you'll have to force upon yourself. Pack something you enjoy.

• That said, it should be healthy: lean proteins, fruits, carbohydrates. "History is, 'Let's put some Vienna sausages and some white bread in the boat and let's go,'" Hoover said. "That's participating in kicking your own (Contact Us Please)."

• A minimum daily recommendation of water is three liters. Hoover recommends that you add to that twice the volume of any caffeinated beverage you drink, to compensate for caffeine's diuretic properties. That comes out to another half-gallon of water if you imbibe two cokes. "Caffeine's pretty much a devil in that area," he said. Alcohol consumption requires the same offset, just not to the same extent.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I always new that I burned calories when out fishing. I fish the river in a small boat. While fishing I am constantly casting, oaring , standing up, sitting down, starting the motor, pulling up the anchor, etc, etc. for 8 hours at a time quite often. And I usually go fishing 2 times a week (year round with ice fishing.)

But you should see my doctors eyes roll when she asks me if I get any regular exercise and I tell her I go fishing on a regular basis. I know I could stand to lose 10 or 15 lbs, but I look like an 'athlete' compared to most of the nurses and doctors I know.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.


  • Your Responses - Share & Have Fun :)

    • got this tackled today took about 3 hours to get both sides done. Didnt even get to use a torch....   Thought I was golden with just jacking it up and I could get to everything but no luck. Had to remove the entire axle hub and brake assembly to get to what I needed. Was a pain but still better then taking off the entire pivot arm.    Axle bearings were already greased and in great shape thankfully. Got both leaf springs installed and its ready for the road again.   Probably going to have my electric brakes checked, I am not touching anything with the brake drums. Based on what I saw it doesn't look like my electric brakes have been working anyway. Brakes are nice to have if its slippery out
    • By The way that didn't work either!! Screw it I'll just use the cellular. 
    • It’s done automatically.  You might need an actual person to clear that log in stuff up.   Trash your laptop history if you haven’t tried that already.
    • 😂 yea pretty amazing how b o o b i e s gets flagged, but they can't respond or tell me why I  can't get logged in here on my laptop but I can on my cellular  😪
    • I grilled some brats yesterday, maybe next weekend will the next round...  
    • You got word censored cuz you said        B o o b ies….. haha.   Yeah, no… grilling is on hiatus for a bit.
    • Chicken mine,  melded in Mccormick poultry seasoning for 24 hours.  Grill will get a break till the frigid temps go away!
    • we had some nice weather yesterday and this conundrum was driving me crazy  so I drove up to the house to take another look. I got a bunch of goodies via ups yesterday (cables,  winch ratchet parts, handles, leaf springs etc).   I wanted to make sure the new leaf springs I got fit. I got everything laid out and ready to go. Will be busy this weekend with kids stuff and too cold to fish anyway, but I will try to get back up there again next weekend and get it done. I don't think it will be bad once I get it lifted up.    For anyone in the google verse, the leaf springs are 4 leafs and measure 25 1/4" eye  to eye per Yetti. I didnt want to pay their markup so just got something else comparable rated for the same weight.   I am a first time wheel house owner, this is all new to me. My house didn't come with any handles for the rear cables? I was told this week by someone in the industry that cordless drills do not have enough brake to lower it slow enough and it can damage the cables and the ratchets in the winches.  I put on a handle last night and it is 100% better than using a drill, unfortatenly I found out the hard way lol and will only use the ICNutz to raise the house now.
  • Topics

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.