

The color is likely to be named Guntersville Craw, Howell believes.
âIt runs 8 to 10 feet deep and has a big, wide wobble,â Howell said. âIt puts out a lot of vibration and has an electronic baitfish sound.â
Howell fished this bait with a 7-foot, 2-inch medium-heavy, Tatula rod and 14-pound Gamma Edge Fluorocarbon.

âThat rod has a shorter handle than other cranking rods,â Howell said. âItâs a better choice for shallow cranking and lipless crankbaits.â







âI used a 5.2:1 gear ratio reel to help me slow down,â Evers said.

âI was fishing it over shallow milfoil and hydrilla in backwater pockets,â Evers said.




A Fenwick Elite Tech baitcasting rod, a Pflueger Supreme 5.4:1 reel and 10-pound Berkley 100% Flourocarbon was his workhorse outfit.




Tharp mated the bait with a 7-foot, 4-inch medium-heavy Halo cranking rod, a Shimano Core 100 reel with a 6.2:1 gear ratio and 14-pound Gamma Fluorocarbon line.

âThat baitâs been very good to me over the years,â Tharp said.



Ashley fished the RTO 150 slowly over a mix of hydrilla and rocks 2 to 3 feet deep with a 7-foot, 4-inch Quantum KVD Cranking rod, a 6.6:1 gear ratio Quantum XO reel and 14-pound fluorocarbon line.




