Expect Rapala® DT®-6 and Lipless Cranks to put bass in Classic competitors’ boats

Whether the fish move shallow or remain around offshore cover and structure this week on Lake Guntersville, Bassmaster Classic competitors will catch many big bass on Rapala® DT® series crankbaits, top pros agree. Other go-to baits will include Rapala and Storm lipless crankbaits and Rapala jerkbaits.

“A lot of those baits that will be key this week are your standard, classic springtime baits,” said Rapala Pro Seth Feider, a three-time Classic qualifier from Minnesota. “I don’t know if that will change, even with changing conditions. The colors you tie on might change if the water gets real dirty. But I can guarantee some fish are going to get caught on a DT-6, no matter what.”

First-time Classic qualifier Patrick Walters agreed.

“DT-6, of course,” said Walters, a second-year Elite Series Rapala pro from South Carolina. “Some DT-10 too. I think your key baits are going to be shallow- to mid-diving crankbaits and lipless crankbaits. I think we’ll be getting reaction strikes on something moving fast with trebles on it.”

DT stands for “dives to.” A DT-6 dives to a max depth of six feet; a DT-10 to 10 feet. Built of balsa wood, Rapala’s signature material, DT-series cranks wobble while swimming and deflect off cover to trigger bites from big bass around both grass and rock.

If stable or falling water positions Guntersville’s bass this week in offshore, submerged vegetation, Classic competitors will swim DT’s over the top of it, making occasional contact and ripping free. If rising water draws the bass to the bank, the pros will cast them around hard-bottom shorelines, making constant bottom contact on the retrieve and caroming off wood and rock cover.

The lipless crankbaits you’ll see Rapala pros slinging in the Classic are Rapala Rippin’ Raps and Storm Arashi Vibes. Those baits, along with DT-6’s, are “pretty traditional, Guntersville-type baits,” said Cody Huff, a collegiate Rapala pro-staffer competing in his first Bassmaster Classic. “You’re going to catch ‘em on those.”

Fellow first-time Classic competitor, Bob Downey said he will be among the Rapala pros slinging DT-6’s and Arashi Vibes this week. “The DT-6 I don’t think will be a surprise to many people,” said the first-year Elite Series pro, a Minnesota native. “I’ve been catching some pretty good fish on it – good quality keepers and some that are above average.”

Rapala pros in the Classic agreed also that Rapala Shadow Rap jerkbaits could help fill their five-bass limits each day in the three-day tournament.

Offshore Grass or Shallow Banks?

Tournament rules allowed Classic competitors to practice on Guntersville for eight hours yesterday and all day last Friday, Saturday and Sunday. The tournament does not begin until tomorrow morning. Today, the anglers are participating in Media Day and making appearances at sponsor events. This atypical schedule makes it difficult to settle on a gameplan until late in the day today. Especially in the spring, when weather and water conditions can change quickly, bass tend to move a lot.

“The more the water level drops, the more fish are going to be caught around deep water, with deeper-running crankbaits, towards the main river,” Walters predicted. “The more it comes up, the more they’ll be caught in pockets and up on the bank.”

The Rapala pros, when interviewed on Monday, said they were expecting higher water by Friday, because a lot of rain had been forecasted. Higher water, they said, would likely pull bass away from offshore grass in which many were found last weekend in practice. Although not all the Rapala pros want that to happen.

Feider, for one, said he hoped water levels wouldn’t rise, because that would keep offshore grass in play.

“I’d rather fish in the grass versus around the bridges or the riprap,” he said.

Huff expressed similar wishes.

“What I’m really hoping for is that we don’t have too much rain,” he said. “I hope the river continues to drop, and not rise. If the river continues to drop, they’ll start to group up really good on some of those good offshore places in the grass, where you don’t have to just catch one here, one there. It’s a lot more fun when you can pull up, make one cast to get the school fired up, and then catch ‘em one after another.”

Walters, on the other hand, will be happy if rain helps put previously dry shoreline cover into the strikezone.

“That’s what I’m hoping for,” he said Monday. “I’m a bank-beater by heart.”

If the bass move to the bank late today or early Friday, Walters said, those fish could be relatively unpressured – a rarity on a popular tournament and recreational-fishing reservoir like Guntersville. “They’ll be up there and we’ll kind of get the first stab at them,” he said.

Interviewed Wednesday evening after his eight-hour final practice round, Downey said water levels and conditions had not yet changed dramatically in his areas.

“I caught most of my fish today similar to how I caught them last weekend,” he said. “So it didn’t really change a lot for me yet.”

Later Wednesday evening, more rain rolled through the area and rain is expected to continue through mid-afternoon today. Currently, clear, sunny skies are forecasted for Friday and Saturday with clouds returning on Sunday.

No matter how the weather ends up positioning the fish, Rapala pros agreed they will need to tailor their gameplans to prevailing conditions.

“All I can do is start where they were and then just kind of let the day unfold,” Feider explained. “I’m just going to have to keep an open mind and adjust.”

“I enjoy fishing pretty shallow,” Downey said. “If they pushed shallow – more towards the banks – I wouldn’t mind that at all. But I would have to make some adjustments.”

See Rapala® DT® Series

See Rapala® Rippin’ Rap®

See Storm® Arashi® Vibe

See Sufix® Advance® Fluorocarbon

Write A Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.