>>881224Swimbaits are good. You can Texas rig those with a regular EWG worm hook or get the swimbait specific weighted hooks. If you are going to swim them (retrieve them not on the bottom) then I reccommend the paddle tails. I like these KVD ones a lot but they are pricey so you can go with Zoom Super Flukes (split tail is good for drop shots or fishing them on the bottom) or Swimmin Super Flukes (paddle tail for swimming) and they also have the Jr's which are a little smaller.
You can rig all the baits different ways. Texas rigging with a bullet weight and weedless offset worm hook is normally fished on the bottom and you kinda twitch it and hop it along. Really good in the summer. Drop shots rigs you hook through the nose or wacky rig for worms, there are pics for that on the imgur. Drop shot rigs will keep it off the bottom a bit. You could fish the lizards weightless and run them on or near the top. Or you could just swim them all. Texas rigging is the main one I do since the largemouth love to snatch up baits that are wiggling on the bottom so you let the bait sit for a couple seconds between twitches and when you feel a bite, give the fish a second or two to get the whole bait in its mouth, and then set the hook.
And for Senkos, you could pretty much interchange those and the Finesse Worms. The Finesse Worms are a little thinner though and seem to have more movement but Senkos are popular for wacky rigs.
Pic related is pretty much what I described earlier except I didn't feel like digging for the Junebug Baby Brush Hogs so just grabbed Sprayed Grass. You normally want a natural color (watermelon red), a bright color (chartruese pepper), and a dark black-blue-purple (junebug or sprayed grass) because different colors work well in different conditions. Natural for clear water, dark for murky or muddy water, and then bright for whenever those aren't working.