9:13 a.m. Sumrall rigs a brown craw Little John on another cranking rod and dredges it across a nearby point. âIâd rather be throwing that spinnerbait, but sunny and calm arenât great spinnerbait conditions.â 9:20 a.m. Sumrall enters a shallow, tree-studded cove and returns to the spinnerbait. He removes the lureâs trailer âso itâll have less vibration and swim a little deeper.â 9:25 a.m. Sumrall retrieves the spinnerbait down a shaded log, gets a solid strike and swings aboard keeper No. 2, 3 pounds, 14 ounces. âWhat a chunk! She crushed it!â
4 HOURS LEFT9:30 a.m. A bass swats at the spinnerbait but doesnât connect. 9:37 a.m. Sumrall moves deeper into the cove with the spinnerbait. âThis is the only lure thatâs worked so far, so Iâm sticking with it.â 9:45 a.m. Upon reaching the back of the cove, Sumrall slow rolls the spinnerbait across submerged stumps. No luck here. 9:52 a.m. Sumrall has vacated the cove and runs to Lake Mâs dam, where he cranks riprap with the citrus shad Little John. 10 a.m. Having struck out on the dam, Sumrall moves into a nearby cove and tries the spinnerbait on a shaded bank. Whatâs his take on the day so far? âThese high-pressure conditions are definitely making the bite tough, but Iâm convinced that targeting docks and shallow wood with the spinnerbait, crankbait and jig is a solid approach, one capable of catching a really big fish. So Iâll probably spend the remainder of my time keeping my head down, covering lots of water and grinding away with those baits.â 10:08 a.m. Sumrall drops the jig down a steep channel bank. 10:14 a.m. He moves to another cove and repeats his presentations to scattered wood cover. 10:25 a.m. Sumrall blasts back to the shallow bank where he began his day and hits the seawall with the spinnerbait.
3 HOURS LEFT10:30 a.m. Sumrall retrieves the ChatterBait inside a boathouse. A small bass nips the lureâs trailer.
10:38 a.m. Sumrall rigs a watermelon red Missile 48 finesse worm wacky style (small hook through its midsection), inserts a tiny nail weight in one end and casts it to shaded docks, using a sink/shake/twitch presentation. 10:44 a.m. He cranks the craw colored Little John down a gravel secondary point. 10:50 a.m. Back to dock fishing with the wacky worm and jig. âI caught my first keeper early off a dock. I read in Bassmaster that docks only get better as the sun gets higher, but Iâm beginning to think thatâs BS.â 10:53 a.m. Sumrall gets a half-hearted tap on the jig next to a pontoon boat. âYou know the bite is tough when they wonât eat that little jig.â 11:01 a.m. Sumrall slides into a shallow canal leading to several docks and zeroes out with the spinnerbait and jig. 11:17 a.m. Sumrall rockets back uplake to pound a rock bank and an adjacent seawall with the Little John MD.
2 HOURS LEFT11:30 a.m. He tries the craw crank on the seawall. 11:39 a.m. Sumrall slow rolls the spinnerbait around a shallow flat peppered with laydown wood. âI keep seeing that Â9-pounder roll off a log to bust this thing!â 11:46 a.m. The flat has failed to yield a fish. âThereâs an offshore hump I passed over this morning. Letâs go check it out.â 11:53 a.m. Sumrall idles around the hump he spotted earlier. âThere are a few fish down there at 18 feet. I donât know if theyâre bass, but Iâll try to find out.â He rigs a watermelon dawn Roboworm above a drop-shot sinker, lowers it straight down and shakes it. 11:58 a.m. The mystery fish have scattered. Sumrall quickly locates a brushpile on the hump; he drags a Carolina-rigged watermelon Missile Craw Bomber through the gnarly cover.