View Full Version : 25 pound largemouth bass


striprman
03-21-2006, 12:03 AM
http://sports.espn.go.com/outdoors/fishing/news/story?page=f_fea_bass_world-record_Weakley_25.1

NIB
03-21-2006, 06:31 AM
Caught an released good job.He said he Had caught it before.at 21.7 lbs.Well there's a good reason to release it.May have missed out on a good amount of Cash.

afterhours
03-21-2006, 07:08 AM
sounds a little fishy.

NIB
03-21-2006, 07:43 AM
I remember when Paul Duclos caught an released one weighed on his bathroom scale.would have passed the world record.Had to be ten yrs ago now.Thier are this group of guys out thier that are hard core they live for this time o yr when the big girls are most vulnerable.They also believe in catch an release.They use tackle that mimics heavy striper gear.They got pics an video an witnesses to the actual hookup.the fish was released they don't want the cash just the fish whats fishy??
Perhaps ur right,I guess i believe in the good of man.

Back Beach
03-21-2006, 08:01 AM
That's an unbelievable fish for sure. As I always say though, show me the slip and I'll believe it. I wouldn't recognize it as the record unless its on an official scale. No doubt its a record fish by the looks and dimensions of it. It was also well documented, except for that ever important piece of paper.

Slipknot
03-21-2006, 08:01 AM
looks like he's hurting it hanging it like that, and that is a funny looking boat, unless he got off the boat to weigh it.
good for him
I am happy catching 25 lb stripers when I can, I can't even imagine a 25 lb largemouth.

pete santini
03-21-2006, 09:15 AM
It definately is the one the worlds been waiting for since 1932, however it will never qualify as a IGFA world record because of The fish not being weighed on a certified scale and also foul hooked if it was intentional it would also disqualify the fish. Pete Santini IGFA REP Still its one hell of a largemouth bass that millions of people would give their right arm for. What a slob!!!

MakoMike
03-21-2006, 01:15 PM
Well, 1st of all he probably killed it by hanging it like that. Secondly there is no way the IGFA will certify it without it being weighed on a certified scale. Somehow the whole thing sounds "fishy" to me.

Pete_G
03-21-2006, 07:17 PM
I remember when Paul Duclos caught an released one weighed on his bathroom scale.would have passed the world record.Had to be ten yrs ago now.Thier are this group of guys out thier that are hard core they live for this time o yr when the big girls are most vulnerable.They also believe in catch an release.They use tackle that mimics heavy striper gear.They got pics an video an witnesses to the actual hookup.the fish was released they don't want the cash just the fish whats fishy??
Perhaps ur right,I guess i believe in the good of man.

I agree. It's a tight knit group out there and when this time of year rolls round everything else takes a back seat to trying to catch big fish and break the record. Just as bad as us during a good fall run. Largemouth bass guys are famously catch and release. Most do almost anything to protect and preserve their fisheries. Very different ethic from a striper fishery. Of course largemouths don't taste as good as stripers.

I fished for largemouths EVERY DAY from ice out till the end of a season for a good decade as a kid since I lived on a great bass pond. All the fish I caught were released, that's just the way it's done. More then a few were taken in a livewell to be weighed in and then released. 2 of my biggest bass were the same fish, much like this story. Caught one day, hauled in a cooler to be weighed, released, and caught 2 days later.

Lastly holding largemouths by the lip is standard procedure and I think most of them handle it just fine. Is there a better way to hold them? Sure, especially if it's a bigger fish. I don't have any doubt about that. The fish I caught though and then caught again 2 days later was definitely held by it's lip, carted around in a livewell for 4 or so hours, and also had a hook from a scale carefully slid under it's gills. It was back on the feed 2 days later in the same exact spot (not on a spawning bed) even after that abuse.

So, bottomline, I believe the story and the size of that fish. The only oddity is that they didn't have an IGFA certified scale. It was only $25 or so when I had my Boga certified.

afterhours
03-21-2006, 07:21 PM
hey pete- was that the biggun you brought to normans?

Pete_G
03-21-2006, 07:25 PM
hey pete- was that the biggun you brought to normans?

I brought 4 or 5 fish there for weigh in, I can't remember if that was the one you saw. The repeat offender fish was 8 pounds.

tattoobob
03-21-2006, 09:40 PM
Thats a huge fish! you could put your head in it's mouth
I bet he really hurt it hanging it like that, He should have
supported the back end.

SocalStriper
03-21-2006, 10:34 PM
That's how we do it in socal, snag em in the back. lol

Lake is about 45min. from where i live, basically the only time you can consistantly catch fish there is during spawn because there is so much damn pressure. Right now people are raping bass and keeping most everything. It's to bad people are still so ignorant.

All I know is if i hooked that fish and it was "fouled" (nice word for snagged) I would not accept the WR or $$$. Who wants to be known for getting a snagged record? Kind of like the current world record in a way, there's no pictures.

Navy Chief
03-22-2006, 08:14 AM
This fish will never be recognized as the record.

It wasn't weighed and witnessed on an official scale

It was foul hooked. This by itself would not disqualifiy it, but it would be in violation of California law therefore making the fish ineligible.

This guy will have to catch this fish again and kill it for the record. Half the state will be at this lake now.

Swimmer
03-22-2006, 11:58 AM
I agree with you guys about it not being a record due to lack of a cert. scale. Nice fish though, huh.

Skip N
03-22-2006, 12:51 PM
I saw the home video of them weighing that beast on CNN headline news earlier today. What a beast! Its a legit fish as you can see on the video. To bad it won't be officially recognized as such. But the angler knows he broke the record so thats all that matters.

crash
03-22-2006, 02:12 PM
I wish I owned the B&T on that lake..... $$$ this weekend

stripercrazy
03-22-2006, 02:52 PM
he did the right thing, I'd like to think he didn't snag it. anyone know where it was hooked? I hope it was in the head. I'm hearing there decent guys, the storys are flying:lurk:

Mike P
03-22-2006, 05:06 PM
anyone know where it was hooked? I hope it was in the head. I'm hearing there decent guys, the storys are flying:lurk:

I read that is was hooked in the back, right in front of the first dorsal fin. The fish was on a spawning bed, according to the article. Possible that it wasn't trying to eat the lure, but rushed it and turned to whack it with her tail, and that's how it got foul-hooked in the back :confused:

Canalman
03-22-2006, 05:28 PM
Well, 1st of all he probably killed it by hanging it like that. Secondly there is no way the IGFA will certify it without it being weighed on a certified scale. Somehow the whole thing sounds "fishy" to me.

I dunno... did u see the pic from the last time she was caught? ANd she's still kickin...

I can't imagine catching a 25 pound largie.... :drool: I took an 8#12oz on a slug-go when I was 14... and I thought that was big.... MAN that 25 is huge :shocked:

stripercrazy
03-23-2006, 03:53 AM
Dock Watcher
Weakley's Catch As
Barnett Witnessed It

Tuesday, March 21, 2006





Photo: Mac Weakley
Mac Weakley's monster, held here by friend Mike Winn, was released from the dock at Lake Dixon.


Yesterday (Mon., March 20, 2006), California angler Mac Weakley caught a largemouth bass from Lake Dixon that could have been the new all-tackle world record.

On a handheld scale, shown through videotape evidence, the fish weighed 25-01, which was nearly 3 pounds heavier than the previous record of 22-04 set by George Perry of Georgia in 1932.

Weakley released the fish before it could be weighed on a certified scale, and without measuring the fish. The reason? It was foul-hooked.

Various news sources have printed differing accounts of what transpired yesterday morning. BassFan has yet to speak with Weakley, but what follows in an eyewitness account from 18-year-old Steve Barnett of Rancho Bernardo, Calif.

Sunday Spotting

The story begins not yesterday, but the day before, when the behemoth was found by a young angler. Barnett said his brother Dan was a witness that day.

"My brother Dan was there with his friend Boon and they were fishing and saw Kyle on the fish," Barnett said. "Jed (#^&#^&#^&#^&erson) and Mac (Weakley) and possibly Mike Winn were there. I guess they were out on the docks talking and Mac pulled out $1,000 cash and said he'd give it to Kyle, who was originally on the fish.

"Dan and Boon were standing right next to him, and Dan told me, 'Mac pulled $1,000 cash out, and said it's for Kyle if he gets off the fish.'"

So to recap, according to Barnett, his brother Dan was at Dixon on Sunday, where he saw the young angler Kyle (last name unknown) fishing to the potential world record, after which Weakley offered $1,000 to Kyle if he'd get off the fish.

Monday Morning

Barnett and his brother started high school at 9:30 a.m. on Monday morning, which gave them plenty of time to fish the first hour at Dixon.

"So we got up there super early – we were the first in line, ready to go in the lake," Barnett said. "Once the ranger opened the gate, we drove down to the lake and Dan jumped right out of the car with his rod – the fish was almost fishable from the dock.

"We got there and then Jed and Mac and Mike were already there. We thought, 'What the heck? What's going on?' We were kind of bummed out. Apparently they did it with some kind of camping pass, which lets you go before everybody else.

"All we could do was sit there and watch."

The Connection

From the dock, Barnett said he had a clear view of Weakley's presentation, hookset and landing. Note that the fish was bedding in clear water.

"After less than an hour, Mac swung for the first time," Barnett said. "He ended up swinging a total of five times, and on the fifth swing he got it. (The swings) were on separate casts. He'd do a flip here, a flip there, then a swing.

"I was counting. And he was using the same bait, which is really rare – for a fish to be so interested in the same bait.

"(#^&#^&#^&#^&erson) did throw his Mission Fish in there once, but didn't swing."

According to Barnett, Weakley connected on his fifth swing. "They got the fish and it went straight out to deep water – like a tow truck. They yelled, 'Get the net! Get the net!'

"Right before they netted it, Dan and I saw the fish. It was foul-hooked down the left side of the fish, right next to the dorsal fin."

The trio netted the fish about 10 feet away from the dock. "They were flipping out," Barnett said. "Then they said, 'We have to go talk to our lawyer.' So they went out to the middle of the lake.

"After 15 minutes they came back. I was talking with – I believe it was Mac, but I can't say I'm positive. It was either Mac or Jed. One of the two came up – it's the only blurry memory – and they were standing with me and Dan, and (Mac or Jed) said something like, 'Yeah, there's a weird mark on its side.'

Barnett added: "I don't know why he said that, because Dan asked him before what they were going to do with it because it was foul-hooked. I don't know – it was trippy, a little weird."







Photo: Jed #^&#^&#^&#^&erson
Weakley's fish is assumed to be the same fish Jed #^&#^&#^&#^&erson caught in 2003 (pictured here).


Barnett said his brother Dan then brought attention again to the foul hook. "They said, 'I don't know about this mark – what's up with that?' But Dan's like, 'Yeah, that's where you foul-hooked it."

At that point, Barnett noted there was some silence, then he remembers Mac saying, "Hey, just let the fish go – get rid of it."

But there had not been a photo taken of the fish yet, nor measurements. And it hadn't been weighed on a certified scale, which would have been delivered to Dixon on request.

Barnett said: "Everybody's saying he's got to get a picture, but Mac was getting antsy to get the fish back. They even asked him to get a measurement. Mike Winn said they had to have a measurement. Mac said they didn't need it – they'd already gotten one a couple years ago (see Notable)."

Barnett said of the release: "They let it go and it went straight down. It was the biggest fish I've ever seen in my life. And it was obviously the biggest one I've ever touched. I took the rope stringers off for the picture, and Mike Winn was holding the fish.

"When the thing was sitting in the water, an inch or two of its back was out of the water. When it was breathing, water was just rushing out back of its gills."

After the release, Barnett noted that he, Mac and the rest of the people on the dock "talked for a little while. It was cool. They're pretty cool guys."

Fair or Foul?

There's no doubt the fish was foul-hooked. Weakley has readily admitted that. But was it intentionally foul-hooked?

Barnett said: "Every guy I've spoken with has asked me that same question. All I can say to every person is, they were working their jigs and doing sweet stuff. They were doing some pretty enticing things with their jig – shaking it pretty good.

"A lot of times they were working it into a bed, then dead-sticking it for a while, then they'd start working it again. All they told me at the end of it was, 'When you get a big fish like that, that noses up on your bait, you don't want to take the chance – you have to swing."

Barnett added: "I didn't say anything to that, but I didn't agree with it. I would have felt the fish before I swung, but I don't think he tried to snag it."

Notable

> BassFan will conduct an interview with Weakley in the near hours, but he was quoted in the San Diego Union-Tribune as saying he released the fish because, "We figured that was the right thing to do. I didn't want to put it on the dock, measure it and then take a chance it would die."

> Most assumed that tiny 70-acre Dixon would be a madhouse today, but Barnett said he spoke with an angler on the lake. "Nobody's there. I thought it would be full – packed – but nobody's there."

> Weakley's fish is thought to be the same fish #^&#^&#^&#^&erson weighed in 2003 (21-11), and the same fish Mike Long caught twice before that. The small black spot on the lower jaw is the telltale sign. Long did a scale-sample study that he said conclusively linked his fish to #^&#^&#^&#^&erson's 2003 catch.

> Can the catch be considered for the new IGFA all-tackle world record? Yes, the IGFA considers every application, and would consider Weakley's if he files it. Is it likely to be accepted as the new record? No, because his "take" (or possession) of a foul-hooked fish is a violation of California fish and game regulations.

> Bas:lurk:

stripercrazy
03-23-2006, 04:06 AM
I don't like it, offering money then beating the kids to the fish, then snaging it, these guys are big fish hunters, what were they thinking. I can't think of paying a kid 1000 bucks and then catch a million dollar plus fish, who would want to catch the record like that, cheating a kid. I hope the grand was a joke, but I'm a pessamist.:lurk: we'll never really know