Tire pressure will help a lot. Remember tire pressure when the truck is sitting in the pits means nothing. One of the big reasons people get wheel hop (if already have some sort of traction bars) is front to back tire pressure.
So many people run higher pressure in the front than the back, why? Because it looks right when the truck is sitting still, this is wrong. You have already lost by creating a poor front to rear gear ratio. When the truck launches the rears take a lot of the hit, basically reducing the diameter. The front lifts and the front tire now expands, increasing the diameter. Thus you have created two different gear ratios. The fronts now have to spin or break the t-case. Once the fronts spin, the rears have to follow and you have created a bouncing hobbie horse.
With stiff/short side wall tires, I would recommend trying equal psi to start and work the opposite of what most will tell you. Go-Pros will tell you a lot if you hook one up to see the tires during a run.
Also don't deny physics by trying to stop weight travel. Make it work in your favor. You have 4 tires on the ground, racers should give this some thought. Once you start picking up the front tire, then new tactics will need to be applied.