"I watched this large fish turn and engulf my hookbait" - Rich Wilby
“A couple of weeks after catching a 2lb 6oz rudd from a crystal-clear Norfolk pit, I returned in an attempt to catch a much bigger one. Considering it was another hot day, I was confident I’d get them shallow on corn fished under a short, loaded waggler.
“It didn’t take me long to spot a shoal of big fish with my polarised glasses and by being stealthy, I managed to position myself behind some cover and began feeding them with corn. Once they were preoccupied, I cast out my rig and had a bite straight away!
“In a crazy hour I had seven rudd over 2lb to 2lb 14oz. It was a fantastic sight, watching the largest fish turn and engulf my corn hookbait, and with steady pressure I was able to steer it into my net.”
Rich Wilby and his 2lb 14oz rudd
Drennan Cup Champion donates his winnings
DRENNAN Cup victor Richard Wilby has revealed to Angling Times that he will be gifting his entire £2,000 winnings to the Make a Wish foundation.
Rich Wilby with an 11lb-plus tench which helped him on his way to lifting the Cup
The all-rounder from Norfolk enjoyed one of the most convincing wins in the competition’s history, scooping eight weekly Drennan Cup awards along the way, but says that it was always his intention to donate any money he won for bagging the prestigious title to a great cause.
He tells us:
“For me the Drennan Cup has never been about the money, and last year I donated my runner-up cheque to another charity called SWAN UK.
“I just love the thrill and pursuit of catching specimen fish, and to win the cup has always been a personal dream. Make a Wish is a charity close to my heart and I made the decision long ago that if I won anything this time around, it would go to them.
“The charity specialises in making the wishes of critically ill children come true, so I couldn’t think of a better cause, considering that my wish has just become a reality too.”
How to get involved
To donate to the Make a Wish foundation or for more information, visit www.make-a-wish.org.uk
‘What I wish I’d known at 20’ - Rich Wilby
Hindsight is a wonderful thing, so for this series we asked some of angling’s stars what nuggets of wisdom they would share with their 20 year-old selves and why. It makes interesting reading...
Rich Wilby - 2020 Drennan Cup Winner
“I’d say enjoy every moment spent on the bank and do not become obsessed with just catching. The fish will eventually come along, so don’t worry about blanking because that’s all part of specimen angling.
“Back in 1999 I was a broke art student at Staffordshire University. I only had my spinning rod with me at uni because I shared a tiny house, but I’d fish as much as I could every time I returned home to Norfolk in between terms.
“I would fish for all manner of species on local gravel pits and ponds. In winter, though, I loved spending time on the River Waveney targeting pike.
“My good friend Paul and I would walk miles, leapfrogging along the river and catching nice fish. It was a good way to walk off all those Christmas and New Year party hangovers.
“If I could go back in time I would also tell myself to go on more short trips and make the effort to get out of bed earlier for first-light morning sessions – I still struggle with getting up before 6am!”
1999 20lb-plus River Waveney pike
2020 a 40lb Stillwater sturgeon
Wilby crowned Drennan Cup Champion!
Richard Wilby, from Norfolk, has been crowned winner of the UK’s most prestigious specimen fishing competition – the Drennan Cup.
“Every time I think about it, I can’t stop smiling. It really is a dream come true,” says Richard,
Richard Wilby with a 2lb 9oz roach
who as well as getting his name engraved on the hallowed trophy also scoops a cheque for £2,000 as reward for completing the most convincing win ever recorded in the cup’s 36-year history.
Anglers submitted their specimen captures to Angling Times, and Drennan considered each one for a weekly award worth £80. Those winners were then featured in the magazine. When the season ended, a full list of the contenders was showcased to weekly Drennan Cup award-winners from the last five years, and they voted for who they thought should be crowned champion.
This involved listing their top four anglers and awarding four points to their top pick, down to one point for their fourth.
Richard Wilby 16lb 2oz bream
This year, Richard Wilby notched up no fewer than eight weekly Drennan awards, and a total of 166 points from his peers gave him a clear lead over his nearest rival Daniel Woolcott, on 128.
“I didn’t set myself a target number, I was just thinking of individual fish I really wanted to catch,” Richard tells us.
“Last season, I finished the competition second with five awards, so I upped my target to six this time around. To get eight was beyond my wildest dreams.
“Doing a lot of homework on tactics and location certainly helped, but luck played a huge part too. For example, I had the bream and rudd early on in the season but caught the tench and eel within the space of a week during opportunistic trips.
“With the tench, I felt it was my last chance of the season to bank a really big one, so I drove 70 miles through the night to reach a southern stillwater which I knew held some specimens. I settled into my swim at midnight and baited up lightly with casters, hemp, red maggots and groundbait before casting my worm kebab heli-rig over the top. At first light I had the all-important bite and an 11lb 11oz tench was soon netted.
“A week later I landed the big eel and by the end of July I had four awards, so those two catches were definitely the turning point for me. With a huge chunk of the season left to go I decided to pile on the pressure and catch as many big fish as I could. Luckily it paid off. I can’t thank everyone enough who voted for me.”
Rich Wilby 11lb 11oz tench
For runner-up Daniel Woolcott it was a brace of tench that proved to be the defining moment in his pursuit of the Drennan Cup.
Before May 2019, the angler from Kent had already won two weekly awards for a 3lb 4oz roach and a brace of eels, although tench catches of 10lb 12oz and 11lb 11oz ensured he had three under his belt before summer, autumn and winter arrived.
“I got off to a fantastic start with the roach and eels but I thought I had a really good chance of winning it when I had the tench,” he says.
“Finding out I’d come second made my day and I’ve been buzzing ever since, but I take my hat off to Richard, who deserves it with the season he’s had.”
Daniel Woolcott brace of 3lb-plus Rudd
With a total of 81 points, Hertfordshire specialist Joe Royffe was voted into a well deserved third place after ending his season with five weekly awards. He admits that his 15lb 10oz bream was the fish that inspired him to have a go at competing.
“I never dreamt about getting close to the Cup until I submitted my 3lb 2oz rudd in July,” he says.
“The turning point was when I got a second award for the bream, as I was confident I could get a third by catching a big perch in winter.
“I then had the huge dace, followed by the big roach a few weeks later. To come third is a great personal achievement, especially after such an unsuccessful winter.”
Joe Royffe 15lb 10oz bream
Voting saw Buckinghamshire all-rounder James Champkin take the final spot with a respectable 63 points.
Despite a couple of near-misses, James ended a sublime season with four weekly awards, and reckons it was the catch of a 3lb 2oz rudd that gave him hope.
“That fish put me on three awards by the middle of the summer and suddenly made me feel that I had a realistic chance of taking home the Cup,” he explains.
“That was my first rudd session of the season so it really felt like I was gaining momentum, and with the whole autumn and winter to look forward to I was confident of hitting a few more targets.
“After dreaming of winning the Cup for years, I’m delighted to have taken a major step forward by securing fourth and having my name etched on to the trophy among some of the all-time great big-fish anglers.”
James Champkin with a brace of 3lb-plus roach