





Matt Arey stuck with one of his greatest strengths during the Classic — a jig.


In his first Classic, JT Thompkins had a one-two punch with a vibrating jig and a flipping jig.



Representing the Strike King Bassmaster College Series, Louis Monetti also used a one-two punch with a vibrating jig and a jig.



Austin Felix applied a combination of finesse and reaction bait tactics for his chosen strike zone.




Tyler Rivet kept it simple at the Classic with a shallow running crankbait.


Brock Mosley also had a one-two punch of covering water and slowing down with a jig.



While Bryan New rotated through a variety of different baits, his main two players were a vibrating jig and a finesse jig.



Matt Roberson was the king of the big bite at the Tennessee River with a big swimbait.


Bob Downey covered water with a shallow running crankbait and slowed down with a flipping jig.



Brandon Card utilized a variety of different baits on the Tennessee River, but a jig played a big part in his success.


Lee Livesay kept it simple at the Tennessee River with a lipless crankbait.


Jason Christie used a skirted jig and spinnerbaits to cover isolated shoreline cover.




Representing B.A.S.S. Nation, Jonathan Dietz utilized a pair of reaction baits.



Like other Classic competitors, Caleb Kuphall covered water with a reaction bait and slowed down with a flipping jig.



Cory Johnston’s main lure choice was a jerkbait for triggering reaction strikes.


Greg Hackney used a pair of swimbaits to finish inside the Top 10 at the Tennessee River.


Jacob Powroznik targeted Tellico Lake with a simple plastic worm setup.


Brandon Cobb had a three-pronged approach at making fish react at the Tennessee River.




Jay Przekurat alternated between a bladed jig for covering water, and a skirted jig for slower presentations.



Brandon Lester developed a pattern for targeting prespawn largemouth beginning to migrate into spawning areas.




John Cox did what he does best, plowing through dirty water in search of largemouth staging on isolated cover.



Drew Benton targeted smallmouth and largemouth as both fish began prespawn movements.






Scott Canterbury dialed into a pattern designed to cover water to intercept migrating prespawn largemouth.





Bryan Schmitt targeted prespawn largemouth in key transition areas.





Gustafson relied on a familiar rig that has served him well on the Tennessee River, featuring a Canadian designed and made swimbait head, paired with a unique soft plastic swimbait.






A 3/8-ounce Z-Man Evergreen ChatterBait JackHammer, Clearwater Shad, with a Berkley Powerbait Power Swimmer Swimbait, Sexy Shad, were top producers for Avena. He also used a Berkley Frittside designed by crankbait guru David Fritts. The flat-sided crankbait is designed to combine the better of two worlds. “It casts farther and better than balsa without losing the unique action.”

Zaldain held nothing back, going for the win from the beginning. The entire week he threw 6- and 8-inch Megabass Magdraft Swimbaits, Albino Pearl Shad, featuring a big bass design that combines advanced engineering of a hardbait with smooth movements of a softbait. To prolong the bait’s time in the strike zone he added a 1/16-ounce nail weight behind the single treble hook. He also used a personally designed 3/8-ounce Santone Lures Z-Spin Head with a 5-inch hollow belly soft plastic trailer.

A crankbait, jerkbait and jig were top choices of Hawk. The lineup featured a Spro John Crews Fat John 60 Crankbait, Fire Craw, and a Duo Realis Jerkbait 110SP, Purple Mist.


A trio of baits produced for Palaniuk. A Rapala Balsa Extreme BX Brat Squarebill, Bone Craw, and modified with a marker for added strike appeal, was a top choice. So was a Rapala DT6, Brown Crawdad. He also used a 6.5-inch Zoom Z3 Trick Worm, Z3 Edge, rigged on a 1/4-ounce shaky head.

Strader rotated through a jig, crankbait, spinnerbait and Ned head rig. To make it he used a 1/16-ounce jighead with 6.25-inch Zoom Fluke Stick, Green Pumpkin. For more aggressive fish he used a hand-carved PH Custom Lures Lil Guy, designed for cold water and highly pressured fish. Strader also used a Zorro Bait Co. Flipping Jig with 3-inch Zoom Big Salty Chunk trailer, Flippin Blue. A white/chartreuse 3/16-ounce Zorro Wesley Strader Bango Blade Spinnerbait also produced strikes.

A brown 3/8-ounce unnamed flipping jig with 4-inch shortened Xzone Lures Pro Series Muscle Back Craw, Okeechobee Craw, was a top choice. So was a 1/2-ounce unnamed bladed jig with 3.25-inch XZone Lures Muscle Back Finesee Craw, Green Pumpkin Black Flake.

Daniels rotated through three baits to earn his keep. For reaction strikes he used red crawfish patterned Bill Lewis Rat-L-Traps.



A Rapala Ike’s Custom Ink DT6, Caribbean Shad, scored big for Iaconelli on a game-changing weekend raising his chances of winning a second Classic. Retrieving the lure into flat rocks produced strikes. Another game changer was a Rapala Flat 3 modified by Ott DeFoe.


Wiggins relied on a Jackall Bling 55, Crawfish, featuring a weight transfer system for longer and more balanced casts in a small profile, flat-sided crankbait.

Throughout the week Wheeler rotated through hard baits for a mixed bag of largemouth and smallmouth. A custom painted red craw Storm Arashi Vibe was a top choice. The lipless crankbait features a slow-speed, subtle vibration and sound, making it ideal for lethargic bass encountered in calm wind and post-front conditions. A Rapala Ike’s Custom Ink DT6, Ike’s Red Demon, was another choice.

A Storm Arashi Vibe, Rusty Craw, and a Rapala DT4, Crawdad, were top cranking choices for winner DeFoe. A key lure on Championship Sunday was a 3/8-ounce unnamed bladed jig, chartreuse white, with an unnamed pearl white, fluke-style trailer.