Hauraki-Coromandel Post

It was an offer they couldn’t refuse

Team Godfather reels in $460,000 win at Coro comp

- Al Williams

The Kubota Billfish Classic fishing competitio­n in Whitianga saw several teams reel in massive wins over the weekend.

Team Godfather - Matt Hallowes, Angus Johnson, Hadley Greenhalgh and crew, of Northland - had the biggest catch, winning the top cash prize of $462,350.

Team Mid Life Crisis won $350,000 for the heaviest billfish, a blue marlin, weighing in at a whopping 256.5kg, and Team Nirvana received the Kubota U48G excavator valued at $112,557.

The Kubota Billfish Classic, now in its fifth year, is the largest fishing competitio­n of its kind in the world, say organisers.

It’s hosted by the Mercury Bay Game Fishing Club, with 420 boats taking to the waters of Whitianga on the Coromandel Peninsula across the three-day event.

Teams competed for more than $1 million in prizes in total – the largest sum in the competitio­n’s history.

Participan­ts travelled to Whitianga from across the world, including South Africa, Guatemala, the United States, the Cook Islands, Tonga and Australia.

This year, there were an additional 150 spots, plus a waitlist for those who missed out.

Organiser Tom Maxwell said the competitio­n was a success in boosting tourism in the local community.

“This year marked our fifth year running the competitio­n, which was bigger and better than we could have imagined.

“The community really supports the event, and it was incredible to see everyone watching from the shoreline for the shotgun start.”

Maxwell said it was incredible to see the competitio­n receive internatio­nal recognitio­n.

“It’s been great to put Whitianga on the map as a world-class fishing destinatio­n.”

In another event first, a Kubota Billfish Classic Pink Ribbon Ladies Lunch was hosted on Friday, March 15, to raise funds for the Breast Cancer Foundation NZ.

Maxwell said: “We are predominan­tly a tag and release competitio­n. The data captured by participan­ts is shared with scientists in the region to assist with their studies around migration habits.”

He said the competitio­n had a release rate of over 90 per cent which provided insight into the movements of billfish.

“The competitio­n rules were carefully crafted under the Internatio­nal Game Fish Associatio­n guidelines to ensure fish are released.”

More points are awarded for fish caught and tagged with markers, encouragin­g teams to follow the catch-and-release system.

The winners for each category were announced at an awards ceremony on Saturday evening at the Whitianga waterfront.

“We were overwhelme­d by the support and numbers that we had to turn our awards ceremony into a festival along the water, with local community groups setting up food stalls to support fundraisin­g efforts.

“The Kubota Billfish Classic event is more than just a fishing competitio­n. We are always looking at new ways to support the local community and raise important funds for New Zealand charities.

“We couldn’t have done it without the support of our sponsors who have been incredibly generous in donating a range of prizes and multiple allexpense­s-paid fishing trips,” Maxwell said. For more informatio­n visit the Mercury Bay Game Fishing Club’s Facebook page.

 ?? ?? Local junior and Mercury Bay Game Fishing Club member Jack Rogers, 16 (second left), with a 207.1kg blue marlin, as part of Team True Lies, at the Kubota Billfish Classic in Whitianga.
Local junior and Mercury Bay Game Fishing Club member Jack Rogers, 16 (second left), with a 207.1kg blue marlin, as part of Team True Lies, at the Kubota Billfish Classic in Whitianga.

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