Top 10 Baits from Lake of the Ozarks - Major League Fishing

Top 10 Baits from Lake of the Ozarks

Jigs and topwaters were the key players
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Shane Long Photo by Jacob Fine.
October 11, 2020 • Sean Ostruszka and Jacob Fine • Toyota Series

Jigs and topwaters – that’s pretty much all you need when it comes to fall in the Ozarks.

Sure enough, nearly every angler in the top 10 utilized one or both. Though, there were a few wrinkles thrown in the help set anglers apart.

Here’s a look at what the best of the bunch were throwing.

Complete results 

Corey Cook’s winning pattern

Top 10 patterns 

 

1. When his boat broke down at the start of the final day, Corey Cook only grabbed two rods and a tiny tackle box when he hopped in the second boat because that’s all he needed. And really, he just needed one rigged up with a homemade ½-ounce football jig with a green pumpkin Zoom Super Speed Craw trailer. He flipped it to brush he’d sunk around docks and never did anything else on the way to the win.

 

Jeremy Lawyer

2. Nearly pulling off a massive comeback the final day, Jeremy Lawyer utilized a “perchy looking” Bullet Weights Tungsten Skirt Punch Weight with a Zoom Z Craw Jr. trailer to upgrade his weights every day. He’d flip it on 25-pound Sunline Shooter fluorocarbon to docks with brush.  He also caught a few the first day on a Freedom Tackle Buzzbait, and he caught two key fish the final day on 5/16-ounce JaKKed Baits J-Law ShaKKer HD head with a Zoom Magnum Trick Worm (green pumpkin blue).

 

Shane Long

3. There’s no secret about what Shane Long likes to do on Lake of the Ozarks. He likes to run up the river a ways and throw a ½-ounce JaKKed Baits DoKK RoKK with a Strike King Rage Craw trailer. He alternated between brown and black and blue jigs depending on water clarity.

 

Andy Newcomb

4. Making his fourth top 10 in five years of FLW tournaments on Lake of the Ozarks, Andy Newcomb says the majority of his weight came on a ½-ounce black-and-blue homemade jig with a BioSpawn Vile Bug trailer, which he flipped to docks where the backs were in 4 feet of water or less. He also threw a River2Sea Whopper Plopper 130 (bone) to larger shoreline rocks for his bigger bites.

 

Roger Fitzpatrick

5. While he started “down home” near takeoff the first day, Roger Fitzpatrick ended up making the farthest run of the top 10, going all the way to the 90-mile marker. Up there he flipped an Omega Flippin’ Jig with a Zoom Ultra Vibe Speed Craw trailer to anything shallow. He also mixed in an Omega Alpha Shad Buzzbait trailered with a Stanley Ribbit and an Omega Genesis Ti Spinnerbait in a custom color.

 

Lawson Hibdon

6. Generations of history on Lake of the Ozarks allowed Lawson Hibdon to run all over the lake for three days. Regardless of where he fished, he caught the majority of his fish on a ½-ounce homemade jig with either a green pumpkin or black-and-blue Strike King Rodent trailer. He also mixed in a homemade football jig with a Strike King Rage Craw trailer and a Reaction Innovations Vixen.  

 

Brent Chapman

7. There was nothing fancy about Brent Chapman’s pattern. He threw a shad-colored ½-ounce vibrating jig with a swimming trailer and “kept it wet,” burning down rocky banks.

 

Brian Wilson

8. Brian Wilson turned his first trip to Lake of the Ozarks into a good one by milking a shallow rock seam with a Cumberland Pro Lures Pro Caster and a ½-ounce Cumberland Pro Lures Football Jig.

 

Joe Wieberg

9. Offshore brush burned a lot of anglers this week. Joe Wieberg wasn’t one of them, as he managed to catch enough each day in the Gravois arm cranking a Norman DD22 with a Crank Wraps crappie pattern on it or dragging a ¾-ounce Missile Baits D Stroyer (California love).

 

Takayuki Koike

10. Takayuki Koike hails from Japan, where some of the more famous and unique finesse presentations hail. Sure enough, he used one of them this week. Often called the “free rig,” Koike rigged a green pumpkin Yamamoto Kut Tail Worm with the tail dyed chartreuse on an offset worm hook, but instead of Texas rigging it with a bullet sinker, he put a sliding ¼-ounce drop-shot sinker out in front, which gives it a different action. Koike also caught a few fish on 1-ounce Deps spinnerbait.