growing up, we had outboards. hitting floaters and deadheads in the river was common. there was also a submerged rock island that was 60 feet across, and only 4" below the surface. reading the depth finder kept you in the needed depth, however sometimes the prop or lower unit got damaged.
switching from outboards to stern drives, the draft was a bit more, the boats a bit deeper. so the skeg and prop were a bit further below the water line....however as indicated above, not hitting obstacles and running agound are the primary concerns.
watch your depth and know your water. on a river, stationary objects are easy to mark, however the transitory submerged objects are always a concern.... logs, sunken boats, etc.
depth finder transducer on my current boat is mounted 2.2 feet above the skeg and 1 foot below the static water line. I stay in the 4' plus area on the charts. when the alarm on the depth finder reads 2.5', I am starting to shine the props.
my old 16 -19 foot boats were about 1.5 feet from transducer to skeg,
for the hole shot, you will need about 4-5 feet of depth