Jiggin' Johnsons' 7.5" Legend Worm Soft Plastic Bait

Availability:
Ships with tracking in 1-2 business days from Iowa.
Pack Quantity
Pack quantity is 8 worms
$3.49
Current Stock:
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On-the-water overview (demo copy)
This is placeholder text for Jiggin’ Johnson’s new template shell. Once we’re happy with the layout and behavior, we’ll plug in real product descriptions, rigging tips, and JJ-specific language.
Specs & build (demo copy)
Specs & build (demo copy)
Care & storage (demo copy)
Care & storage (demo copy)

Best ways to fish it (demo)

Swim Jig Trailer Shallow grass, slow roll
Texas Rig Pitching to cover
Ball Jig Head Dragging sand or rock
Split Shot Natural subtle glides
Link to custom color order form
Length
7.5" Legend Worm with a long ribbon tail for easy, steady action.
Best for
Largemouth and smallmouth bass, plus walleye when you want a slow, tempting meal near bottom.
Style
Segmented body that drags clean and a tail that keeps waving without needing speed.
Where it shines
Weedlines, laydowns, dock edges, rock transitions, and points when fish are nose-down and picky.
Old-school confidence: this is the kind of worm you can fish all day. Keep it simple—slow down, stay in contact, and let that ribbon tail do the talking.

Top 3 ways we fish it

Quiet presentations that catch real fish.

Texas Rig in the Cover

A clean, snag-resistant setup for wood and weeds.
  • Use a bullet weight that matches the depth and thickness of cover.
  • Pitch tight, let it settle, then crawl it a few inches at a time.
  • Pause often—the tail keeps working even when the bait is barely moving.

Carolina Drag on Edges

Cover water while keeping the bait down in the zone.
  • Drag along points, flats, and transitions instead of hopping.
  • Let the weight do the work while the worm trails and waves behind.
  • When you feel a tick or mushy pressure, lean in and keep reeling.

Slow Bottom Glide

A patient, near-bottom crawl for calm conditions.
  • Fish it like a “creep and pause” instead of a hop.
  • Use gentle lifts to move it forward, then let it settle.
  • Works especially well when walleye and bass are set up on rock or sand transitions.