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Stripers
247
78
Pounds 8 Ounces
The Morning
after
Al McReynolds continued
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More than 300 pages dedicated to your favorite fish, the striped bass
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78
8
By Albert McReynolds

It
got to be just about almost daylight, the crack of dawn.
And the tackle shop is on a road where all the guys are
going to work — construction
workers, roofers, plumbers, carpenters, guys who work
at the casinos and build the casinos in Atlantic City.
And people start pulling up when they see this fish hanging
on the scale. All of a sudden the Fish & Game people
show up, the local TV people, the radio people. It turns
into a crowd. Guys are asking, “Who caught the
fish? Where's he at? I want to talk to him.” Guys
are lighting cigarettes and putting them in my mouth,
pouring Budweisers on my head, drinking beers. It's turning
into a festival.
Now, in order to
qualify for an IGFA record, I had to surrender the lure,
the rod, the line, the reel — everything. I had
to explain the catch, how I handled the fish, how it
was hooked and where. Everything in detail. Nobody tells
you when you land a world-record fish that there's going
to be an investigation. And this investigation is supposed
to be handled very quietly through the IGFA. Nothing's
supposed to be divulged until they reach a decision at
the conclusion of their investigation and tell you if
the fish qualifies for any world records. You need a
lawyer immediately because you shouldn't open your mouth
or tell anybody anything. The press calls it “freedom
of press,” but what you're actually doing is robbing
yourself and your family. Because when you divulge everything
it becomes public knowledge. The tackle companies feel
they don't have to pay you nothing. And they're going
to get a million dollars' worth of publicity. What they're
going to do is give you a hat and a T-shirt, and that
doesn't feed your family.
Well, we wound up
with everybody there, and the fish is put back on the
scale. And this weighmaster guy gets out the record book
and he says, “Okay. Cape Cod, Massachusetts, 73
pounds. Caught by a guy named Charlie Church.”
He moves the scale
and it goes 71, 72, 73, 74. He says, “You got one
record. You beat the 73-pounder what was caught by Charlie
Church.” Then he says, “Now this is for all
the marbles. Montauk, Glen Cove, Long Island, 76 pounds,
the all-tackle world record.” Then he goes, “Seventy-five,
76, 77, 78, 79.” It teeters and balances out. He
taps it back. 78, 8. He says, “Albert, to my knowledge
you just won everything, and you may have the record
for 20-pound test.”
He says to me, this
guy who's the weighmaster, as he's shaking my hand, “You
just won the state record. You beat the Massachusetts
record. You beat the New York record. Thank you for bringing
this fish to my shop.”
We wound up going
back inside his office and signing the proper papers
with witnesses and everything. And the phone rings, and
the secretary comes over to me. She says, “A man's
calling, says it's absolutely urgent to speak to you.”
She gives me the
phone and this guy comes on. He says, “Albert,
you don't know me. My name is Nelson Bryant. I'm an outdoor
sportswriter for the New York Times. I live up here in
Martha's Vineyard.” He says, “Listen, are
you sitting down? Sit down for a minute.” I sat
down. He says, “I'm in touch with the king of Sweden.
I'm trying to reach a man who owns Waterford Crystal
in Ireland. There's a fishing contest on.
A lot of people
don't know about it. We're trying to track it down and
find out how to qualify for it or how to file for it,
or get an application, or find out what the rules are.
You just might have won a whole load of money. You stay
there now. I'm gonna call you back as soon as I hear
something.”
After that I walk
outside, and here comes my wife through the crowd. She
says, “What's going on?”
I tell her, “I
caught that fish.” And I'm pointing to the fish.
She says, “Wait
a minute. You gotta be to work pretty soon. We need the
money 'cause it's going to be a long winter.”
I say, “I
just got off the phone with a guy who told me I might've
won a lot of money or something here.”
She says, “Yeah,
I'll believe it when I see the check. How long is all
this going to take?”
Soon the weighmaster
guy is talking to me again. He tells me he's gonna take
the fish and put it somewhere safe. My rod's gone, my
line, my lure, the tackle and everything I had is gone.
Now even the fish is gone. I'm standing there with absolutely
nothing, and I'm groggy and tired beyond belief. My feet
are still soaking wet and I'm trying to figure out what's
going to happen next.
Then this guy pulls
up with a truck advertising this tackle company. They're
one of the biggest companies that make fishing reels.
He says, “Congratulations, man. Listen, get the
reel and put it in the picture so it goes in the magazines
or in the newspapers. Now, I'm gonna authorize right
now to you a lifetime supply of fishing tackle. And you'll
probably get cash too. I'll get back to you.”

Then
he gives me a hat and a T-shirt and asks me to put them
on for the photos. I say, “Yeah, why not?”
Next thing I know,
the secretary comes back out. I'm in the parking lot,
posing for pictures with people. She says, “That
man's calling again from the New York Times. Says to
get you immediately.”
So I go back inside
and pick the phone up. The guy says, “Albert, this
is Nelson Bryant again. I got some information for you.
Listen to this. There's a ‘chance of a lifetime'
fishing contest. It's a bounty. It's being handled by
Lloyd's of London. The Blair Mail House Nebraska people
are handling the applications. We're having a private
courier pick one up and bring it to New York, for you
to claim one of the prizes. The contest, from what we
understand, awards a prize for breaking the next IGFA
world record for four species of fish. Rainbow trout,
largemouth bass, king salmon. And what do you think the
last one is?”
I say, “Striper?”
He says, “Striped
bass. You just won, to our knowledge, $250,000. Me and
you, Al, are going to become good friends. I'm going
to take the New York Times and point it at their head,
like a double-barrel shotgun. And if they don't give
you your money, I'm gonna blow it all over the newspapers.
They're going to send representatives down from the tackle
company that's sponsoring the contest. Now have a good
day. I'll get back to you if anything changes. Just watch
yourself. Be careful. You're dealing with some people
that I don't think you're used to dealing with.”
After that, the
tackle-shop owner tells me if I want any tackle, anything
at all, to take whatever I want. Just let him know what
I need. He also tells me he has been in touch with an
insurance company, since a prize is involved. He's gonna
take care of the fish and insure it for $100,000. He
releases this to the news media, tells them he is insuring
the fish and that he'll be holding it for safekeeping.
By now I'm late
for work at the Beach Patrol. Dozens of guys offer to
give me a ride. When I get to the lifeguard station it's
about 10:30, 11:00. And the chief walks up to me and
says, “What are you doing here? Go home. You're
suspended. We're docking you for the day. You never called.
You never showed up.”
As I'm standing
there, some of the other lifeguards who want to heckle
me are saying, “Wait, you can't go anywhere. Ted
Koppel's calling. NBC's calling.” They're breaking
my balls and humiliating me and treating me terrible.
My head's pounding. I'm upset, tired, frustrated. All
this stuff is happening and it's overwhelming. Your feet
leave the deck and you're floating on cloud nine, and
the next minute you're walking into mean, jealous people
who want to treat you terrible.
The chief also tells
me to have all these phone calls stopped because they've
been getting over 50 phone calls an hour from people
who want to talk to me. Then the assistant chief says, “What
is all this bull— over a fish? All it is is a stinking
fish. I don't know what everybody's getting excited about.”
I walk home on the
boardwalk. I finally get back to our little rental apartment.
I see the bed and I collapse. I must have passed out.
I wanted nothing to eat, nothing to drink. I just wanted
to get some rest. I don't know how long I slept, but
my wonderful, beautiful wife, she wakes me up with hot
chicken noodle soup and tells me to get up, it's time
to go to work. I must have slept 24 hours.
I get to the lifeguard
station, put on my uniform and go down to the beach.
Before I know it, I get a call at the station. They tell
me that the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute showed
up and was examining my fish. And that the people handling
the $250,000 contest were in town checking the fish,
and wanted to know if I used any of their tackle. Which
I didn't. I didn't use anything of theirs. But the application
for the contest said you didn't have to use their tackle.
I don't know how
many phone calls I got while I was working on the Beach
Patrol the last couple weeks there, but it was unbelievable.
I mean, I didn't have a minute's peace. There was always
somebody who wanted to talk to me, somebody who wanted
to meet with me. They wanted me at the Elks, the Moose,
the VFW, the American Legion, the fishing clubs. All
these so-called new friends wanted a piece of me.
This fellow who's
the weighmaster and is holding my fish, now he wants
to see me. He asks me who I would like have mount the
fish. I said I'd like to give a local guy a shot. One
guy comes to mind, and I tell him to get a hold of him.
So this taxidermist
took on the task of making the mount for me, and the
agreement we reached was that I was to get a skin mount.
And there was supposed to be a right-facing mount and
a left-facing mount. And I was assured this would be
done.
When the mounts
were finished, they were delivered to the weighmaster's
store. I went to see them and there was a right mount,
a left mount and a full mount — but they were fiberglass!
I asked him where the skin mount was, the original fish,
and he says the taxidermist told him it was destroyed.
The world-record fish is destroyed! Now I know he has
a $100,000 insurance policy on it, but that doesn't matter
in the sense that what I really want is the world-record
fish, the only one of its kind in the world, the largest
caught on rod and reel. I want that. That's mine. That's
my trophy, but I never got one.
Eventually the lure
company comes forward. They give me a hat, too, tell
me I'm on the advisory staff. The deal is they will get
a mount of the fish. They will also give me $2,500 and
tackle boxes filled with my choice of tackle from their
plant.
Then the guy who
weighed the fish, insured it and kept it at his store,
he's also asking for a mount to display in his tackle
shop. Now here I am, a fisherman all my life and a lifeguard
in the summer. I have no education. I can't read or write.
I never took a course in business. I'm really in a mess
here, and it's starting to get worse and turn ugly. But
I don't have any money to pay for an attorney.
Anyway, I get laid
off from the Beach Patrol. I'm going to collect unemployment
or try to find work in Atlantic City with the teamsters.
I work there part-time with guys who I grew up with,
who were friends of mine. I'm also a book holder for
warehousemen, chauffeurs and truck drivers.
Around this time
I start getting hate mail. I think I know who it's coming
from, and we track it. But I refuse to prosecute because
it's a family member. The hate mail says that I am a
cheat, a fraud, that the catch is a hoax, a scam, that
I devastated the striped bass population by killing the
queen bee.
The guy who was
with me when I caught the fish, he stops seeing me, talking
to me, coming over to visit or going fishing with me.
He starts becoming very scarce and evasive when I try
to reach him.
Everything starts
to go nuts. All kinds of stories are flying around. If
I rounded up all the people who said they seen me catch
the fish and was with me, they would fill a 70-foot party
boat. Guys are telling me they seen me jump on the fish's
back and ride it to shore. They were there. They caught
a 69 when I got the 78. Years later, a guy tells my son
the story. I walk up and say, “I'm Al McReynolds.”
The guy tells me, “Al
McReynolds is dead. He drank himself to death.”
My family and I
wind up moving out of Atlantic City, over to the town
of Brigantine. We move into a hotel called the Blue Marlin
for the winter. I'm trying to find work. It's getting
toward Thanksgiving and I'm still waiting to hear from
the IGFA what their decision is. I go up to the Atlantic
City Convention Hall to find work with the Teamsters.
I'm standing in the bullpen, as they call it, with all
the other guys, and this friend of mine walks over to
me. He says, “Hey, Al. What are you doing here,
man?”
I say, “What?
What are you talking about?”
He says, “I
can't put you to work. You're worth $250,000. I gotta
put these other guys to work.” I say, “What
do you mean? I didn't get no money yet. I haven't heard
anything.” But I go back home to the hotel. I get
there and I'm looking at my three kids and my wife. We
have a 21-inch TV, remote control. I wind up taking it
out and getting in touch with some lifeguards I know,
tell them I have a TV for sale. The chief winds up making
me an offer. I sell him the TV — I guess it was
about 100 bucks — so we can have some food.
By Christmas I still
haven't heard anything from the IGFA. Christmas Eve comes
and I'm in the hotel with the kids. We're eating peanut
butter and crackers. Ain't much going on.
The manager of the
hotel comes by and says there's a phone call for me in
the front office. I go out to his office, 'cause we didn't
even have a phone in the room. They shut them all off.
I pick up the phone and the guy comes on. He says, “Albert,
I'm Elwood K. Harry. I'm the president of the International
Game Fish Association. There's no more fitting time for
me to call you than Christmas Eve. We reached a decision.
We unanimously voted to give you the new all-tackle world
record, as well as the 20-pound-test record. There's
a limousine coming down from New York from the man who
owns the tackle company. He's bringing you to New York,
to Rockefeller Center. You're going to stay at the Hilton.
He's flying in on the Concorde from Paris. He's bringing
you your money and he's going to pay you the $250,000.
Congratulations to you. Job well done on catching that
fish. If you ever get down here to Florida, come and
see us and say hello. Now God bless you, Albert, and
merry Christmas.”
Well, we make arrangements
to have someone look after the kids because we don't
know how long we're going to be in New York and what's
going to happen. I wind up having somebody buy me a jacket
and a tie. We get in the limousine and the weighmaster
guy is in there, along with his wife. We all head off
for New York.
We arrive at Rockefeller
Center and check into the Hilton. In the room are bottles
of champagne and a basket with every type of fruit in
it. My wife and I look outside and there's the building
where the ball comes down on New Year's, that wedge-shaped
building. And we're looking at each other, and we're
saying to each other, “Can this be real? Is this
a movie? What is this?”
The next day we
take a limo to the Explorer's Club in Manhattan for the
ceremony. That's where they made the movie The Verdict
with Paul Newman. Members include Admiral Byrd, the astronauts.
They have moon rocks there. They have stuffed polar bears,
elephants, Cape buffalo, lions. It's a real men's club.
When I get there they take me to a room and give me cognac
and a cigar. After a while, a couple of gentlemen walk
in and say, “Al, are you ready?”
I said, “Yeah,
let's go.”
We walk up to these
big sliding doors, must be 12 feet high, and I see all
these people sitting at tables with tablecloths and napkins
and crystal and waiters. There's a woman representing
the governor from the state of New Jersey. I see my wife.
She's sitting with the Guinness Book of World Records
people from Niagara Falls. There's sportswriters all
the way from Oregon, Maine, Florida. They bring me out
and I stand next to the podium.
The owner of the
tackle company walks up and says, “Albert, I really
wish you were using one of my products. Couldn't you
tell them you were wearing a hat or a belt buckle with
my logo on it or something?”
I say, “No,
I can't.”
“That's all
right,” he says. “Now, if you'll turn around
and look at this, you're gonna like it. I turn around
and this check comes down from the ceiling. It's about
12 feet long, five feet high, has my name on it, and
it has the $250,000 up there with all the zeros on it.
And as I'm looking at it, it's dawning on me that this
is real. This is absolutely real.
When we get back
from New York, I deposit the money and rent a car. We
take the family to Disney World. But before we leave
I go to see my friend who was with me that night on the
jetty. I hadn't seen him in a while. I don't know why
he wasn't invited to New York, to the award ceremony,
but it wasn't my place to invite anybody. And I still
don't know what arrangement he had made with the guy
who owned the tackle shop. I don't know what they worked
out. When I get to his place, I say, “Hey, what's
up, man?”
He says, “Well,
if it isn't the millionaire! What's up champ?”
I say, “Hey,
I brought something for you. I wanted to do something
for you and your family.” And I give him a check
for $10,000. That's the last time we ever spoke.
So we go down to
Florida to get out of the snow and ice. When we get there
it's 70 degrees. It's fabulous. Palm trees, beaches.
The kids are having a ball. We see Mickey Mouse, the
Disney parades. We stay right next to Disney at one of
the hotels there. I just want to mend my wounds. I'm
feeling pretty beat up. And we are scared, nervous. Nothing
like this has every happened to us. My wife's parents
are both dead. She doesn't have anybody to hold her in
Jersey. I really don't have anybody to hold me around
either. My grandmother is dead. My grandfather is gone.
It's just us and the kids.
When we get back
to Jersey, I get a note saying that the Sportsman's Federation
of New Jersey was making me Sportsman of the Year. I
also get invited to the New Jersey Game & Fisheries'
annual event. They want to give me a plaque for catching
the New Jersey state record striped bass. I wind up going
up there, driving up with my sister and my brother-in-law
and my wife.
When we get there,
I'm sitting at this table and this guy's talking to me.
He identifies himself as a publisher from New York. He
says, “You know, man, you robbed your kids and
you robbed yourself and your wife.”
I say, “What
are you talking about? Who are you?”
He says, “You
gave everything away for free, and they didn't have to
pay you. You didn't get a dime. You're a fool. You're
stupid.”
Just as I'm getting
ready to stand up, my brother-in-law grabs me by my arms.
When I get up to
the podium, this guy has a plaque for me. He says, “Albert,
we want to present this plaque to you for the New Jersey
state record.” But they have the date wrong and
they have my name spelled wrong. He says, “Well,
this is close enough, man. Here, take it.”
By spring I feel
that New Jersey is closing in on me. I don't want to
be there no more. It's time to leave. I tell my wife
that I'd like to move up to New England, where I used
to fish commercially. We wind up looking for property
up there. I find a beautiful saltbox home, three bedrooms,
three baths, a two-car garage, five acres of land. I
buy it for my family.
We also decide to
travel some more, to take the prize money and enjoy it.
We travel extensively. We do what we want to do with
our family. Sometimes we see people on hard luck and
having tough times and we give money anonymously. We
can't let people know that we help people and give money
to charities. We don't want our names mentioned, because
everyone will have their hand out. They think we're rolling
in money.
People don't realize
that if it wasn't for the $250,000 prize, I would have
gotten next to nothing for catching that fish. But everybody
throws that in my face — with $250,000, what am
I crying about? It's the principle. I mean, come on,
man. Ted Turner didn't stop at one million, Donald Trump
didn't stop at a certain amount of money. You're supposed
to make money and share the wealth.
One of the things
I can't understand is when you have these news reporters
come up to you and tell you they want to do an exclusive
story, or they're freelance writing and want a story.
As soon as you ask them what they're going to pay, they
tell you that they have to talk to their editor about
it. And then they come back and tell you that the editor
says they can't pay you anything. Here these people are,
traveling, getting their expenses paid, hotel, meals,
a salary. Their newspapers are selling millions of copies
and they start crying poor. They don't want to give you
a dime. I hated that. I had people try to coerce stories
out of me. Guys come down from New York telling me they're
writing a book and they want an interview. Then, when
I go to look for the book, the book never even came out.
You know, and I
ain't joking when I say it, if I ever hooked another
world-record fish I would think of cutting the line and
letting it go. My oldest son says to me, “Dad,
you should never pick up a rod ever again. It ain't worth
it.” I hope this story is going to open the eyes
of anyone who thinks that catching a world record will
make everything fabulous and wonderful. Let's talk about
reality here.
I had people following
me, watching me. I had all sorts of crazy things happening — phone
calls, cars pulling up on our property with the lights
off. People would pull up while I was fishing. I'd go
to walk over to the car and they'd take off. When I went
back fishing, they would pull up again. I'd try to walk
up to them again and they would take off. I don't know
what these people wanted. I have no idea. I wish I could
have gotten a good attorney to advise me.
One time I went
up to Maine on a trip and I walk into this bar there.
It's like a little hunting bar. And I'm sitting there,
and I had a jacket on with these patches for the tackle
companies. Being a fool, I'm wearing these patches and
these guys ain't paying me for them, but I'm advertising
for them. They don't give a damn about me. This guy sees
the patches on my jacket and he says, “What's all
that stuff about?”
I says, “I'm
the world-record holder for striped bass.”
He says, “That's
a damn lie. If you say that again I'll come around the
bar and break your jaw. I'll fracture your skull. The
world record was caught in Maine. You don't know what
the hell you're talking about.” And the bartender's
standing there. Well, I got my stuff and I got the hell
out of there.
It shook me up.
I mean, here I am, the world-record holder for striped
bass, and somebody wants to do me bodily harm because
of it. I started thinking about what I did wrong. I didn't
understand it. I'm just a regular guy. I learned. I would
never wear any patches on any jackets, hats or shirts,
or anything advertising these companies. Never again.
Not for free I wouldn't do it.
I've had guys ask
me, “You're the world-record holder for striped
bass? Why are you so quiet, man? Why didn't you tell
us who you are?” Because of things like this:
One time I'm in
Brigantine, New Jersey, and there's a fishing tournament
going on. I thought I'd go over and see what they are
catching. There's a whole bunch of guys there, and they're
having a little fish fry and beer bust. I walk up and
this one guy's glaring at me. I never met this guy before
in my life. He comes over to me and says, “You're
the world-record holder for stripers?”
I say, “Yes.”
He says, “How
many stripes does a northern striper have and how many
does a southern striper have?”
I say, “I
really don't know. I didn't know there was a difference.”
He says, “Yeah
there is, you stupid ass. I told people that you don't
know what you're talking about. You don't even know how
many stripes there are on a striper!”
After I moved out
of Atlantic City, I tried to go back just to visit. I
pull up to the boardwalk and get out of the car with
my two sons and we start to walk up the ramp. I get up
to the top of the ramp and there's my cousin. He comes
down the boardwalk, starts shoving me, poking his finger
in my chest, telling me I deserted him. He said I was
going to build him a tackle shop, said I was going to
give him $10,000 like I gave the other guy. He's telling
me my grandmother and grandfather would roll over in
their graves if they knew what I turned into. I ought
to be ashamed to show my face in Atlantic City. And he's
doing this in front of my sons. We start backing down
the boardwalk. He shoves me real hard and I go back against
this rock. I laid the whole back of my foot open about
five inches. We get back in the car. We drive out of
there. I should have had him arrested for assault. This
is what your family can do to you over money.
My sister calls
me up and tell me she needs money. She's cheating on
her husband with her minister and says that she found
religion. The woman's out of her mind. When I won't give
her the money, she tells me I should shove the money,
and she wishes that I would die.
I've got an older
brother who lives in Hawaii. He's a retired E9 Chief
from the Navy. He married a Japanese girl from Okinawa
and has a couple of kids. He finds out I have money and
he contacts me. Tells me he's losing his home. And here
he is with a chief's pension. God knows how much a chief
gets after 30 years in the military. I break down and
send him $10,000. He tells me he owns land in Bakersfield,
California, and that he'll give us that as collateral,
or he can give me a sword owned by his wife. It's a Samurai
sword, worth thousands of dollars. But I don't take anything
from the guy. I just want to help him out.
Later, I come to
find out he's a used-car salesman, working part-time,
and he's an alcoholic. When I ask about my money, he
tells his kids and his wife that I'm nuts. He changes
his phone number, his address, never pays me a dime.
Think about lending money to your family!
It gets worse. I
get a call from a former lifeguard who lives in Cleveland.
He's in the money-management business. He deals with
people like Mario Andretti, Arnold Palmer, Dick Butkus,
Barbara Streisand, Johnny Mathis. This guy wants to take
me on as a client. Well, he had me invest some money
in stocks and bonds, stuff I know nothing about. I wound
up getting wiped out. I lost money.
Now it doesn't give
me any pride to tell people what eventually happened.
This is the seriousness of catching the world record,
winning the richest prize, and all these other things.
We actually wound up losing our home. We lost all our
money. We have no life insurance. We have no medical
insurance. We wound up living in a car and living in
motels with our children. And I was too embarrassed to
ask anybody for help or tell anybody what our situation
was. But I think it should be told. This is real life.
This is the truth I'm telling you. Was it all worth it?
Yes. They say life is a roller coaster. You have highs
and lows. If you don't get on the roller coaster you
never enjoyed life. Jackie Gleason said that fortunes
are to be won, fortunes are to be lost and then won again.
He says life is terrific. And he's right. Life is fantastic.
If you get to Florida
and visit the IGFA headquarters, the new Fishing Hall
of Fame, the replica of my world-record fish is hanging
there when you come in the door. It's right above the
world-record largemouth bass. There's also a painting
of me standing on the rock jetty, and it shows the world-record
fish coming up and taking the lure. The artist is a famous
painter. He donated the painting to the IGFA. It's a
$20,000 painting. It's called “The Moment of Truth.”
If you missed part 1 read it here
Reprinted with permission from Al McReynolds
Editors note: Als
story first appeared in Saltwater Sportsmens Magazine September
and October 2004 editions. SSW held the North American
rights of Als story until the publishing dates then
the rights reverted back to to AL. We can now reprint the
extraordinary catch story. Parts 1 and 2.
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