Angling Times (UK)

Legendary tactics

Heapsie uses his initiative as huge Polish crowd cheer every fish

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with Ian Heaps

“Just like being a matador in a bull ring, the crowd shouting ‘ole!’ every time I struck into a fish”

ENGLAND’S Ian Heaps, the little man with the big heart, is the new World Champion.

The chirpy Stockport angler captured not only the glory of victory but also the hearts of the 30,000-strong crowd as he romped home on the Bydgoszcz Canal in Poland on Sunday.

A giant portion of the crowd hung on Ian’s every move, cheering and applauding every strike and sighing after a missed bite or a lost fish. Far from unsettling him, they spurred him on to greater effort.

“The crowd were absolutely fantastic, they really seemed to take to me from the start,” said Ian, who annihilate­d the opposition with his carp, bream and roach weighing 10kg 220g (22lb 8oz) – a record for the World Championsh­ips.

“It was just like being a matador in a bull ring – the crowd shouting ‘olé!’ every time I struck into a fish,” said champion Ian.

“I just can’t put into words how delighted I am. My life’s ambition was to fish for England, but to come here and win the match is just out of this world. I’m especially pleased for my dad, Jim Heaps, who will be over the moon where he hears this.”

Ian, a 32-year-old metal worker, was fishing for England for the first time and is only the third Englishman to win the individual crown in the World Championsh­ips, Coventry’s Billy Lane and Peterborou­gh’s Robin Harris going before him.

He began the three-hour match by sticking rigidly to team tactics, feeding the shelves running out from both banks with six good balls of breadcrumb­s laced with 75 per cent squatts, plus casters and pinkies.

The deeper water running between the two shelves had been branded ‘no man’s land’ after the previous day’s practice, but this was to be totally ignored.

“These were our basic instructio­ns, but each man was to use his head and fish his swim accordingl­y,” said Ian. “I started off by fishing the far shelf with a balsa-bodied peacock waggler, taking the equivalent of threeand-a-half swan,” he explained.

“The float itself was weighted and I locked it with two swan. I used a BB near the hook and bunched the rest of the shot just off the bottom. The shotting pattern was intended to deal with the tricky surface skim.”

Using two maggots on a size 18 hook to a 2.6lb bottom and a 3lb line, Ian missed a bite only minutes after the start.

“My bunched shot were a few inches too deep and fish stripped the maggots,” he explained. “So I moved the float down about four inches and caught a roach on my third cast. Then the canal started to pull strongly and I switched to fishing the near shelf.

“I had some lighter tackle set up for this, but because of the increased pull I stuck with my heavier gear and caught my second fish, a 12oz bream, about 15 minutes after the start,” Ian said.

“My next fish – a 1lb 8oz bream – came half-an-hour later. The pull had eased by that time and I was fishing the far shelf again.”

Ian’s hand was never out of the groundbait bucket during the match. He fed the near shelf while fishing the far shelf, and viceversa. And it paid off an hour after the start when he landed a 2lb 12oz carp after a fight lasting over 10 minutes. A good bream followed almost immediatel­y. Quickly recasting, Ian looked up from his groundbait bucket to find his float had gone. He struck, hooked the fish in the tail and landed it after a tense fight.

Devoting all his time to the far shelf for the last 90 minutes, Ian landed another carp, several good bream to 3lb, plus a couple of small roach, before hooking his last fish – another foul-hooked bream.

He battled for nearly 10 minutes to keep the bream within the official swim boundaries and landed it with only five minutes to spare. His total catch was eight bream, four roach and two carp.

The crowd roared their approval at the end of the match when the English hero turned and saluted them with his hand in the air.

IT’S a horrible feeling when you slip the plummet on, lower the rig in and it keeps going and going… and going.

It gets to a point where your rig isn’t long enough to cope with the substantia­l depth in front of you, and panic kicks in.

Fear not, though. Up-and-coming star Kristian Jones believes deep waters are much easier to fish than many think.

“I’ve fished lots of commercial­s where you have over 8ft of water on the pole line, and I’ve even experience­d some extremes where you have over 30ft,” explained Kristian.

“But these swims are still full of fish and you can still catch them on the rigs you have worked hard to prepare.”

KEEP IT SHORT “Many anglers instantly ship out to anywhere between 11m and 14m and start the day fishing there, regardless of the depth.

“But it is important to fish in an appropriat­e depth, no matter where you find it in your peg.

“I will never fish on the bottom in 8ft of water or over in summer, and if that is what I find on my long pole line I will only fish up in the water here.

“Anywhere between 3ft and 6ft is ideal, and whether that’s 5m or 10m from the bank, you should make it your main line of attack.

“Tight in the margins is also usually shallow and this is an area to feed and attack later in the day.”

HEAVY BAITS “If you fed light baits such as micro pellets and maggots in water 6ft deep, a lot of it would be engulfed on the way down by smaller fish and those on the bottom wouldn’t be getting fed.

“So I find it best to use much bigger baits that will sink quickly. Corn and 6mm pellets are ideal.

“Groundbait works well in the margins because of the shallow water. It creates a dinner plate for the fish to feed over and I use an equal blend of Bag’em Matchbaits Krill Seeker and Commercial Carp.

“This is quite heavy so it holds the bottom well and makes sure there is always some bait in the peg for any fish that turn up.”

VERSATILE RIGS “When fishing for carp and F1s you have to use rigs that guarantee you’ll land everything you hook.

“I use three rigs in deep water and I go with a Jigga float on my shallow line, a Tim Moores Pellet float at 6m and a 0.3g rugby ballshaped pattern down the edge.

“Mainline is 0.17mm to an 0.13mm or 0.15mm hooklength and a size 16 or 18 Guru SLWG.

“White Daiwa Hydrolasti­c is spot on in open water, when you have no chance of getting snagged, but I step up to Preston Innovation­s 13H in the margins to stop big fish charging into cover.”

 ??  ?? Floats like the one he used to win it. Moment of truth at the weigh-in. Ian was still in the squad in 1985..
Floats like the one he used to win it. Moment of truth at the weigh-in. Ian was still in the squad in 1985..
 ??  ?? How Angling Times reported on Ian’s World Championsh­ips individual win on September 11, 1975. His chirpy dispositio­n endeared him to all. Ian now runs his own fishery in Wales.
How Angling Times reported on Ian’s World Championsh­ips individual win on September 11, 1975. His chirpy dispositio­n endeared him to all. Ian now runs his own fishery in Wales.
 ??  ?? Another fish for Kristian taken up in the water.
Another fish for Kristian taken up in the water.
 ??  ?? Kristian’s margin groundbait mix.
Kristian’s margin groundbait mix.
 ??  ?? These heavy baits get down quickly.
These heavy baits get down quickly.
 ??  ?? Line of attack depends on depth.
Line of attack depends on depth.

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