Casting Techniques: Overhead, Sidearm, Pitching, and More

A rod that loads properly and releases cleanly is doing most of the work — the angler's job is to understand which casting form puts the lure or fly exactly where it needs to go. Overhead, sidearm, pitching, flipping, roll casting, and a handful of specialty variations each solve a specific problem of distance, accuracy, or obstruction. Knowing when to use each one separates a day of tangled branches and spooked fish from a day that actually produces.


Definition and scope

A casting technique is the coordinated sequence of rod movement, line release, and follow-through that propels terminal tackle to a target. The mechanics vary enough between methods that switching from an overhead cast to a pitching motion isn't trivial — each places the rod tip, the arc of the lure's travel, and the angler's body position in a fundamentally different orientation.

The scope here covers the six techniques most commonly encountered in North American freshwater and saltwater fishing: overhead (or overhand), sidearm, pitching, flipping, roll casting, and the skip cast. Fly fishing operates on its own casting grammar — the false cast, reach cast, and mend — and is addressed separately, because fly line weight drives the delivery rather than lure or sinker weight. For everything else, the rod and reel system on the fishing rods and reels page provides the mechanical foundation these techniques depend on.


How it works

Every cast, regardless of style, exploits the same physics: energy stored in a flexed rod (called "rod load") releases into kinetic energy that carries terminal tackle forward. What changes between techniques is the plane of the cast, the timing of the release, and how that energy is directed.

The six core techniques, compared by key attributes:

  1. Overhead cast — Rod travels in a vertical plane, tip moving from roughly 2 o'clock at the backcast to 10 o'clock at the forward stroke. Produces maximum distance. The default technique for open water with no overhead obstructions. Works with spinning, baitcasting, and spincast reels.

  2. Sidearm cast — The same loading principle as overhead, but the rod plane rotates 90 degrees to horizontal. The lure travels low and flat, clearing overhanging branches or dock roofs. Accuracy drops slightly at distance compared to overhead, but the trajectory advantage in tight cover is significant.

  3. Pitching — A short-distance, low-arc delivery designed for precise placement within roughly 20 to 40 feet. The angler lets out line, holds the lure at roughly reel height, and uses a pendulum swing rather than a full rod stroke to lob the bait. Minimal splash on entry makes it ideal for spooky fish in shallow cover.

  4. Flipping — The tightest technique in the group. The angler strips 7 to 10 feet of line, raises the rod tip to swing the bait forward, then lowers the tip while the bait descends almost vertically into the target. Designed for placing a jig or soft plastic into the precise center of a dock piling or a gap in laydown logs at distances under 15 feet.

  5. Roll cast — A fly-fishing-adjacent technique that works without a backcast. The angler lifts the rod to form a D-loop of line behind the tip, then drives forward. Essential in streams where vegetation walls the backcast zone. Spinning rod anglers sometimes use a modified version for similar obstacles.

  6. Skip cast — A sidearm delivery that intentionally bounces the lure across the water surface — one, two, sometimes three skips — to reach targets underneath docks or overhanging brush that no direct cast could access. Flat, hard lures like jerkbaits or finesse-rigged soft plastics skip most reliably.


Common scenarios

Bass fishing under floating docks accounts for a disproportionate share of casting creativity. The combination of shade, structure, and ambush-ready predators makes under-dock fishing extremely productive, but the geometry eliminates overhead and high sidearm casts entirely. Anglers working dock-heavy fisheries often cycle through pitching, flipping, and skip casts within the same 30-minute stretch.

Surf fishing sits at the opposite extreme. A productive surf cast often needs to carry a weighted rig 60 to 100 yards past the breakers, which demands an overhead cast with a long rod — commonly 10 to 12 feet — and a pendulum or modified off-the-ground loading technique to maximize rod flex.

Ice fishing removes the casting variable entirely — but the brief open-water shoulder seasons before freeze and after ice-out on inland lakes put anglers in tight conditions where flipping and pitching dominate because the fish concentrate near the last available structure.

For fishing for beginners, the overhead cast is the standard starting point precisely because it builds the clearest intuition about rod load and release timing before any other form introduces additional variables.


Decision boundaries

Choosing the right cast comes down to four factors evaluated in roughly this order:

The broader context of where the fish are — covered in depth on reading water — should inform which technique gets employed before the rod ever comes off the rod holder. Presentation choice and cast choice are decisions made in the same moment.


References