Kingdom Titanium Spinnerbait with Willow Blades
Specifications
| Type | Willow blade spinnerbait |
| Weight | 5g / 7g / 10g / 14g |
| Frame | Titanium alloy |
| Blade | Willow, metal |
| Action | Flash and vibration on steady retrieve |
| Hooks | Single exposed hook, skirted |
| Best for | Largemouth and smallmouth around cover and stained water |
Product description
This spinnerbait pairs a titanium alloy frame with willow-shaped blades for a bait that flexes under pressure and holds its shape cast after cast. The titanium frame absorbs the shock of hookset and fights better than standard steel wire, so it keeps running true even after contact with cover or an aggressive bass. The willow blades throw flash and vibration on a steady retrieve, mimicking baitfish moving through the water column.
It comes through grass, brush, and rocky cover with fewer hang-ups than open-hook baits, making it a solid choice around bass holding tight to structure. Fish it in stained water for reaction strikes or slow-roll it along drop-offs when bass are less active. The skirted body adds bulk and movement that draws attention even at slower retrieve speeds.
How to fish it
- Cast past the target cover and count down to the depth you want before starting your retrieve.
- Use a steady retrieve for a consistent thump, or slow-roll it near bottom when bass are holding deep.
- Bump it off rocks, laydowns, or grass edges to trigger reaction strikes from nearby bass.
- Vary retrieve speed on repeated casts until you find the pace that draws the most strikes that day.
Frequently asked
The 7g or 10g size covers most largemouth situations in moderate depth. Go lighter (5g) for shallow, clear water and heavier (14g) for deeper water or windy conditions.
Gold and darker blades work well in stained or murky water where more flash and contrast help bass locate the bait. Silver or nickel blades tend to perform better in clearer water.
A medium-heavy casting rod with 12 to 20 pound fluorocarbon or braid gives you the backbone to work the bait through cover and set the hook solidly.
Spinnerbaits produce well in spring and fall when bass are actively feeding, and in any stained or low-light water where flash and vibration help bass find the bait.