Gene,thanks for jumping on.I would mount it forward on the port side.The hardware they sell with the motor pad is only set for that.They sell the control with up to 14 or 15 foot cable,which you could make a turn,say 3' diamater,under or over the forward combing then to the starboard side.Direction would be reversed,in that when you push the lever forward,you would make a right turn,and vice versa.The throttle,electric start,etc are another matter.If you set this up on a small motor .say 10-15 hp,I believe the tillers on most newer motors have some kind of friction adjustment,whereby you could set the throttle ,go forward and steer,then in manuvering situations go back to the tiller.Would be great for navigating a long open twisting river or lake,with islands, where you had a couple miles to get to your set-up.Another thing would you could stand,and steer with weight forward in say an Estuary.I'm finding out that with a small motor set down on the stern mount,the tiller doesn't have a clear sweep if you have decoy bags loaded on the stern deck.You do get more room if you stack the decoys in the rack,without bags,but it sure would be better to flip the tiller straight up and have an EZ glide stick steering.
The old timers didn't have this problem;no motor.As an aside,the electric trolling motor with a tiller extention and 36" shaft,places the control head high enough to clear any bags set on the stern deck,and you have F/R and speed on the tiller.If they just had more power with 12V.I have mine rigged both ways.(no EZ glide though)