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A Reel Whopper [of a Fish Story!]
Dallas Morning News ^ | 6/8/03 | Ray Sasser

Posted on 06/08/2003 9:53:52 AM PDT by harpu

Plano (TX) man casts his name into the record books with giant tuna from Gulf

Ron Roland of Plano accomplished the unthinkable on May 23. He landed the biggest fish ever documented caught on a rod and reel in the Gulf of Mexico. The fish was a 1,152-pound bluefin tuna, an unusual species for the Gulf and a fish known as a ferocious heavyweight fighter.

Roland is an experienced saltwater angler who was fishing aboard a 50-foot Hatteras owned by Roland's friends, Mike and Paul Ippolito of New Orleans. Also aboard was Patrick Fitzmorris of New Orleans. They were fishing a weedline about 35 miles offshore.

"Mike was on the flying bridge, and he spotted some surface activity in the distance," Roland said. "About that time, another fisherman came on the marine radio and said that he'd spotted some bluefin tuna jumping."

The fishing buddies were ready for a big fish. They'd been trolling for marlin. They reeled in their lines and headed for the distant action. Roland was sitting in the air-conditioned salon when his friends put lures back in the water.

Teamwork is required to catch a big fish, and the anglers had fished together often and had a plan of action. Luckily for Roland, it was his turn on the rod.

"As soon as we put the lures out, we got a strike – bam – just like that," Roland said. "I grabbed the rod and climbed into the fighting chair and got hooked up. We had five other lines out, and Patrick and Paul were reeling them in when we suddenly realized that strategy would not work. Within a few seconds of the strike, the fish had spooled 700 to 800 yards of line."

The huge reel held about 1,000 yards of 100-pound test line. The boat had to start immediately backing up or the fish would take all the line. Roland's fishing partners cut two lines rather than taking the time to reel them in.

Most big bluefins are caught along the eastern seaboard in relatively shallow water 200 to 300 feet deep. Off the mouth of the Mississippi, the continental shelf falls off quickly. Roland's fish bit in water that was 3,000 feet deep, and there was every danger that the fish would head straight for the bottom.

Aided by slick, calm seas, the crew spent the next hour steadily backing up on the powerful tuna.

"The fish was hooked up for an hour before we felt like we were even in the fight," Roland said. "It was that long before we had some semblance of control. By control, I mean we had regained enough line that one run probably wouldn't empty the reel."

The big-game rigging featured 18 feet of double line and a 15-foot leader. After 90 minutes on the rod, Roland had regained all the lost line and his crew was preparing to land the fish.

Roland had not seen the fish and was beginning to wonder if it was as big as his friends thought. From his perch on the flying bridge, Mike Ippolito was yelling to be careful with the green (undefeated) tuna. Roland was strapped into the chair, but one of the crew would have to grab the line, and Ippolito was concerned he could be jerked overboard.

He was also worried about putting the big green fish in the boat where it could destroy gear and people alike. He need not have worried. The tuna was just coming up for a look. It apparently didn't like what it saw. The fish turned and made a steady run that lasted five to eight minutes and peeled off 500 yards of line.

Three hours into the fight, the fish made a third impressive run. Roland's hands were blistered and his arms and legs alternately cramped. He focused on the rhythm of pumping the massive big-game rod and reeling as much line as possible as the rod tip was lowered.

About 8 p.m., the tuna made a final run – straight down. If the giant fish had started its fight by sounding, it would have won within minutes. Four hours of fighting against the drag had taken its toll.

Roland wasn't in such great shape, himself. The seemingly endless sea was pitch dark, and Roland considered giving up. Mike Ippolito came down from the bridge, relieved by his brother. Though all the anglers were seasoned, Mike had the most experience with big fish. Sensing a once-in-a-lifetime catch, he and his New Orleans mates yelled everything from insults and death threats to encouragement to keep their tired comrade in the game.

"It was getting ugly," Roland said. "I was caught between the 50-foot boat and the 1,000-pound fish. I was in pain, but I decided to deal with it. The rod was completely doubled over and the line was stretched so tight that it made a sound like a banjo as it creeped off the reel."

Ippolito decided it was time to go for broke. He instructed Roland to lock down the drag. Either the fish would break off or it would give up. For the next 45 minutes, Paul Ippolito would gun the boat's powerful engines forward for 10 seconds, then back up as fast as possible. Each maneuver allowed Roland to gain three or four cranks of line.

Roland could feel that the fish was about done. It shook its head occasionally, but that's about all the fight it had left. Roland was able to gain line at a reasonable rate. When he finally reeled the huge fish to the surface, his crew got a flying gaff in its head and a rope on the tail.

That's when they discovered a new problem. There was no way to get the fish aboard. Four men could not slide it through the transom door on the big Hatteras. In an effort to lift the tuna, they almost burned up the anchor winch. They finally gave up hopes of boating the fish and headed for Port Eades, near the mouth of the Mississippi, towing the tuna like a dingy behind the Hatteras. The fight took 5 hours and 15 minutes. Chugging along at five knots, the boat ride to port required six hours.

At 1,152 pounds, Roland's fish unseats the Texas record tiger shark (1,129 pounds) as the biggest fish reported caught on rod and reel from the Gulf of Mexico. It easily beats the old Louisiana record bluefin tuna, a 1981 catch that weighed 891 pounds. Roland's fish measured 10 feet, 10.5 inches long by 8 feet, 2 inches in girth.

The International Game Fish Association all-tackle world record for bluefins weighed 1,496 pounds and was caught off Nova Scotia in 1979. IGFA has no line class record category for 100-pound test line. The world record for 130-pound test line weighed 1,170 pounds. The 80-pound test line record is 974 pounds, six ounces.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: bigtuna

1 posted on 06/08/2003 9:53:53 AM PDT by harpu
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To: harpu
Ernest Hemingway move over. That fish story beats "The Old Man and the Sea".
2 posted on 06/08/2003 9:58:15 AM PDT by xJones
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To: tuna_battle_slight_return
Here's the real deal!
3 posted on 06/08/2003 9:58:24 AM PDT by Tijeras_Slim (A bad day FReepin' beats a good day workin'.)
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To: xJones
SALTWATER HEAVYWEIGHTS... Here are the all-tackle records for selected fish species (the record great white shark is the largest reported fish ever caught on a rod and reel):

Species, (then) Record weight
Great white shark...2,664 lbs
Tiger shark...1,780 lbs
Greenland shark...1,708 lbs
Black marlin...1,560 lbs
Bluefin tuna...1,496 lbs
Atlantic blue marlin...1,402 lbs, 2 oz
Pacific blue marlin...1,376 lbs
Swordfish...1,182 lbs
Shortfin mako shark...1,115 lbs
Sixgilled shark...1,069 lbs

4 posted on 06/08/2003 10:04:32 AM PDT by harpu
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To: harpu

5 posted on 06/08/2003 10:07:45 AM PDT by csvset
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Comment #6 Removed by Moderator

To: harpu
This guy is going to be eating tuna sandwichs for a year....

Wait a minnit - did the Enviros just publish a study that no big fish were left in the ocean? It was a giant desert, devode of life - because of fishing....
7 posted on 06/08/2003 10:36:43 AM PDT by ASOC (Does real air superiority begin with good radar or better LO technology?)
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To: csvset
WOW!!!! thats a tuna fish??????
8 posted on 06/08/2003 10:40:37 AM PDT by MetalHeadConservative35 (The Stanley Cup Will Reside In East Rutherford NJ not Anaheim Kalifornia!)
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To: csvset; harpu; nicmarlo; maxwell; Ragtime Cowgirl; xJones; dutchess; dansangel; ...
A whale of a story ! Now THAT'S a FISH !!!


9 posted on 06/08/2003 10:51:38 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP (Bu-bye Dixie Chimps! / Check out my Freeper site !: http://home.attbi.com/~freeper/wsb/index.html)
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To: harpu
Neato factoid - Tuna's are the only teleostian fish able to regulate body temperature...
10 posted on 06/08/2003 11:03:28 AM PDT by Axenolith (<This space for rent>)
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To: Prof Engineer
ping
11 posted on 06/08/2003 11:17:21 AM PDT by msdrby (I do believe the cheese slid off his cracker! - The Green Mile)
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To: Axenolith
Tuna's are the only teleostian fish able to regulate body temperature...

You're really Alex Trebek aren't you? :)

12 posted on 06/08/2003 11:18:51 AM PDT by Tijeras_Slim (A bad day FReepin' beats a good day workin'.)
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To: Grampa Dave
Dolphin Free PING...
13 posted on 06/08/2003 11:31:28 AM PDT by tubebender (What kind of bait should I use on my tag line...)
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To: harpu
Great story! I love fishing, and the only tuna I've caught were about 10 pounds.

Bluefin:


IGFA All-Tackle Record Bluefin Tuna (Thunnus thynnus) weighing 1496 pounds, caught by Ken Fraser of Prince Edward Island in Aulds Cove, Nova Scotia, Canada on October 26, 1979.


Bluefin leaping.


14 posted on 06/08/2003 11:33:03 AM PDT by HighWheeler
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To: HighWheeler

It was sooo big.

15 posted on 06/08/2003 11:56:45 AM PDT by tictoc (On FreeRepublic, discussion is a contact sport.)
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To: tubebender; fish hawk; steelie
I wonder if this tuna was up north in the Dean River last September.

A friend, who good sized and a great fisherman was Spey fishing for the Dean River Steelhead.

He hooked a huge fish that went back downstream and ripped his new 16' T&T Speyrod out of his hands. He lost the rod, the reel and the spey line and running line. The guide had never seen anything like it. They had no ideal what the fish was and how big.
16 posted on 06/08/2003 12:04:21 PM PDT by Grampa Dave (Evil Old White Devil Californian Grampa for big Al Sharpton and Nader in primaries!)
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To: MeeknMing; harpu
Thanks for the ping and the post. Great story.

We have some fair fishing on our side of the Gulf, but a 1200 lb. blue tuna? Wow. No Jonah, I hope. (^;

Florida SportsmanFishing


17 posted on 06/08/2003 7:03:07 PM PDT by Ragtime Cowgirl ("The American people are proud of you and God bless each of you." Rummy to troops in Iraq)
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To: harpu
My arms are tired just reading this!!
18 posted on 06/08/2003 7:10:43 PM PDT by Exit148 (Just added another $3.06 to the Loose Change Club collection bag for the next Freep-a-thon!)
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To: csvset
That's a lot of sushi hanging there.
19 posted on 06/08/2003 8:32:28 PM PDT by anymouse
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