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Sarley: A vote for muskie proposal

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It’s been a long time since I’ve mentioned the current world record muskie that has been accepted by the National Freshwater Fishing Hall of Fame in Hayward, Wis. The fish, caught by Louis Spray in 1949, purportedly measured 631⁄2 inches and weighed 69 pounds, 11 ounces.

This record fish has been disputed and argued about for many years. The International Game Fish Association doesn’t accept Spray’s fish. Instead, it counts Cal Johnson’s fish, caught in 1949 on Minnesota’s Lac Court Oreilles. This fish allegedly weighed 67 pounds, 8 ounces and measured 5 feet, 1⁄2 inch in length with a 33-inch girth.

Incredibly, the record changed hands nine times between 1939 and 1949. Unbelievably, Spray put in claims that he had caught three of these fish. That is akin to somebody winning the Powerball lottery three times.

There have been only a few fish caught and reported that were weighed in at more than 60 pounds since Spray claims to have caught the most recent “record fish.” No record fish have been caught in the past 63 years after nine in just a decade. That seems preposterous, doesn’t it?

A group called the World Record Muskie Alliance spent a lot of time and a lot of money to fund a scientific study of the photographs of Spray’s fish. The study was based on photogrammetry, which is well-accepted in the scientific community and is often accepted in court cases. The study proved Spray’s fish was nowhere near its claimed size.

The Hall of Fame wanted no part of this report and said that Spray’s record would stand. The fact that Spray allegedly caught his fish in Hayward and that the Hall is located there supposedly had no bearing on the decision. Experts pleaded with the hall to reconsider its decision, but to no avail.

I requested that the Hall institute a new record. I thought they could keep Spray’s record on the books but should create a new category for modern-day fish because of advances in technology in photography and weighing devices. They rejected the idea, saying, “We already have a record. We don’t need another.”

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