Ryan: Here are some thoughts for you from my perspective. Like said here before...in most cases you will not have a say in where you fish....but in some cases you may draw a boater that his fish have gone dry or is not on fish and will listen to you..so don't be afraid to share information with your boater if rules allow.
Don't show up on tournament morning with 15 rods and two suitcases full of tackle..don't laugh...it happens all the time.
Do make sure you give your fair share of money to the boater for gas expenses...if you stiff him you will get a reputation that will spread among the boaters like a fire and that won't help you at all in the long run.
Go in with the understanding that in most pro ams...unless you are fishing the Elite 50 or FLW Tour..that the person in the front of the boat may know a lot less than you know...in fact you will find in most lower level pro/am tourneys there are just as many folks in the front of the boat without a clue as there are folks in the back of the boat without a clue. As was told me years ago by one of the top dogs in the FLW organization...the only difference between a pro and an amatuer in most cases is entry fee.
Last: if you are wanting to learn....take your money and hire a guide that has a reputation for teaching....you will learn more in one day in a boat with one on one instruction with a good teaching guide than you will in a year's worth of watching someone else throw a lure whose focus is catching fish and not teaching. Case in point: For what you will spend to fish 2 bfl's as a co-angler by the time you pay for food, lodging, gas etc you can hire a teaching guide for one day, have some money left over and get 8 hours of one on one instruction.



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CHUCK ROUNDS
..... Ky lake co-angler legend....That cat has the majic stick....Jarrod