Florida man catches possible world record fish

Texas Game Wardens Arrested the Whole NORML Boat at Red Bull’s Cliff Dive Event
June 9, 2015
14-Foot-Long Rare Oarfish Washed Up On A Californian Island Shore
June 9, 2015

635692834015939364-IMG953212Just when Alex Newman was ready to give up and declare defeat at a charity fishing tournament Saturday, history hit his line.

The fish that took the Bonita Springs man’s hook turned out to be a specimen that could break a 12-year-old world record.

Newman managed to land the 124.18-pound fish to win the 3rd Annual Offshore Rodeo Fishing Tournament to benefit Ronald McDonald House Charities Southwest Florida.

The tournament was held out of Bootleggers Waterfront BBQ and Salty Sam’s Marina.

Anglers took to the Gulf and vied for prizes in 10 different species including African pompano, cobia, dolphin, grouper (excluding gag, goliath and Warsaw), hogfish, kingfish, snapper, triple tail, tuna and wahoo.

Newman said he and his crew fished for about 2-and-a-half hours. “We thought we were defeated,” he said. “Then all of a sudden our luck changed.”

Newman’s grouper weighed 124.15 pounds and was measured at 57 inches with a 48 inch girth.

“That was a trip,” Newman said Sunday. “I wasn’t even expecting it to be a record-breaking fish.”

Newman said that he and his crew on the Honey Money, a 33-foot Invincible, at first thought the fish was about 90-pounds.

“But when we were lifting it up we couldn’t lift it,” he laughed. “I fish the Gulf a lot. This is the biggest fish I’ve caught. When that thing popped up it was like a dinosaur.”

According to the International Game Fish Association, which collects and verifies world records worldwide, the current record for a black grouper is 124 pounds caught Jan. 11, 2003, in the Gulf of Mexico off Texas.

“They fight hard,” he said of the black grouper. “They’re heavy. You need a big reel and stay on the fish.”

He said an angler also needs a lot of luck.

“Everything has to come together and luck has to be on your side,” he said. “You have make sure it doesn’t run into a shelf or tie up in a wreck.”

Newman, 30, owner-operator of Executive Woodworks of Fort Myers, has fished in the tournament previously and this year was using a custom bent-butt rod built by Sewell Custom Rods of Fort Myers.

His crew on the Honey Money included Eli Mendez, who owns the boat, Denny Watkins, Jason Schreyer and Louis Santagata.

“We worked hard at it,” he said. “We kept a lot of large fish, fish people dream about catching.”

Newman said he has been scoping out the area where the fish was caught for more than 2 years. “The fish move a lot out here so you never know,” he said. “I never thought I’d get this fish here.”

Newman’s grouper is going through the proper avenues for it to be considered a true world’s record.

“It would be great to get a world record for Fort Myers,” he said. He said the fish is a state record and he will see how it goers for the world record, acknowledging that going for a world record through IGFA means “jumping through a lot of hoops.”

More than 400 people participated with 32 boats in the tournament, Angela Katz, development director for the local Ronald McDonald House charities, said.

Those taking part caught more than 1,200 pounds of fish with Newman’s boat accounting for more than 182 pounds of that total.

“Everything weighed was donated to the charity,” Katz said. “That was cooked as the meal for the dinner. It was the freshest grouper you can get.”

Katz said the goal for the tournament was to raise $80,000 for the Ronald McDonald House. A figure should be known by the end of the week and Katz said that a raffle with a 2015 Kia Soul remains open until Saturday.

Source: WTSP

 

Loading

Comments are closed.