I have UL baitcasters 6'7" (1 pc) for bass, and 8'2" (2 pc) for inshore.
Interesting, both will cast 2 g to 100' (more weight farther) - the reel set up gets most of the credit - but they fish very differently. The longer rod is much easier to aim long casts consistently, and of course, the shorter rod is easier to aim in close. They both can cast and fish a very wide lure weight range. Noteworthy, the longer rod is lighter by 20 g.
While both are progressive taper, the longer small game rod fights fish like a fly rod, and the bass rod is much more like a bass rod.
You didn't mention any length measurement, only something is too long and something else is long.
Here are some UL baitcasters that Shane posted recently -
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=72011 - to me, these are pretty short, and the two shorter rods are definitely stream rods.
Just looking at diameters on the sections, Shane's shorter rod looks deep-flexing - the para taper we grew up with on short UL rods. My rods that I opened with both have stout butts, fast mids, and it's tough to tell the tip of the bass rod flexes at all (rated and delivers 1/16 oz).
I think we'd need more details to be able to compare expected rod action and use, and I guess none of us posting here so far can offer specific insight on Graywolf bait rods.