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Andrews' AJ Breaks 38-Year-Old 黑料天堂 Record

amberjack

Brian Andrews shows off his record-setting amberjack on the stern of Summer Breeze II.

By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂

The 127-pound, 12-ounce amberjack that reigned atop the 黑料天堂 state records for 38 years was landed before Brian Andrews was born.

Marcus Kennedy of Mobile, who caught the big amberjack on June 19, 1981, will see the last of his state records fall on Friday, August 23, when Andrews鈥 132-pound, 12.8-ounce fish takes its place after the record certification process is complete.

Andrews was aboard Capt. Bobby Walker鈥檚 Summer Breeze II soon after the amberjack season in the Gulf of Mexico kicked back in on August 1 a few weeks ago.

Walker, who has been fishing the Gulf as a captain or deck hand for 50 years, went to a special amberjack (AJ) spot and his anglers started to hook nice fish.

鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 have had a better angler,鈥 Walker said of Andrews, who hails from Citronelle. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 have drawn it up any better. He was a big, strong, strapping guy. You talk about a guy working on a fish, he could do it.鈥

The 37-year-old Andrews was no neophyte angler. He had previously owned his own private Gulf boat and had some experience fishing offshore. He said the trip on Summer Breeze II started out in rough seas but turned into a nice day for fishing. After catching a few beeliners on two-hook rigs, the anglers got down to serious business at the amberjack holes.

When Andrews hooked up, he wasn鈥檛 sure what was on the other end of the line. He had caught a 70-pound amberjack earlier in his fishing career, but this one was different.

鈥淚 was trying to be positive, but several people were telling me it was a shark,鈥 Andrews said. 鈥淗e was pulling like a shark, but you never know. He made at least three big runs. It took at least 30 minutes to get him in. When he makes a run, all you can do is hold the rod and watch him go. When he starts peeling drag, you just hold on. When he stops peeling drag, you have to start taking some of the line back.鈥

The main thing the boat captain was worried about was the number of sharks that were hanging out in the same vicinity as the AJs.

鈥淲e had caught so many big bull sharks,鈥 Walker said 鈥淚 was hoping to goodness it wasn鈥檛 a shark. We had already caught two or three good jacks off that hole and broke off a couple. I was just hoping we weren鈥檛 wasting time reeling up a big shark.

鈥淚 hollered down to Paul (Resmondo), my deck hand, to let me know when he could see the fish and tell what it was. He said, 鈥楤obby, he looks like he鈥檚 40 feet down, but I can tell you it鈥檚 an AJ, and he looks huge.鈥欌

When Andrews finally reeled the big fish to the surface, the deck hands gaffed the fish and struggled to get it into the boat.

鈥淲hen that fish hit the deck, his mouth flopped open, and I said he looked like he could swallow a basketball,鈥 Walker said. 鈥淗is head was huge. I told them I鈥檇 lay money that the fish was at least 100. I didn鈥檛 think any more about it.鈥

Andrews said it was time for a break after the fish was finally on the deck and the deck hands were in charge.

鈥淲e admired him for a few minutes.鈥 Andrews said. 鈥淲e took a few pictures and got him on ice. I went inside for some AC (air conditioning) after that. After about 45 minutes, I was ready to catch another one. It took me a little while to recoup.鈥

The boat came back in and docked at Zeke鈥檚 Marina. Walker was busy squaring away the boat for the next trip when he heard something that got his attention.

鈥淭hen I heard people hollering and raising Cain and wondered what was going on,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey had hauled the fish up on the scales. When I saw it, I said, 鈥榃hoa.鈥 Tom Ard looked at me and said, Bobby, you鈥檝e got a state record.鈥

Capt. Bobby Walker, right, and Andrews celebrate after the AJ registered on the scales at Zeke's Marina.

The big fish measured 65 inches from the tip of its snout to the fork of its tail and sported a 40-inch girth.

Obviously, when you spend as much time as Walker on the Gulf, plenty of big fish are going to hit the marina dock.

鈥淚鈥檝e caught plenty of big amberjacks during my day,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think that was the third one over 100 pounds. Believe it or not, we caught a 109 and a 111 on the same day about 10 years ago.鈥

When Kennedy, 17 at the time, caught the long-standing AJ record, he said big amberjack were more common during the late 鈥70s and early 鈥80s, and he was definitely gung-ho when it came to targeting big fish.

鈥淲e had caught several fish over 100 pounds back then,鈥 said Kennedy, who held the 黑料天堂 blue marlin record for 26 years before it was broken in 2013. 鈥淚 had previously held the record at 102 pounds. Some of my high school friends and my dad (the late Rod Kennedy) were out fishing. We actually caught that big fish (the record) on the Edwards Liberty Ship. I think I caught it on a small, live king mackerel, but I can鈥檛 remember 100%. I definitely was using a 6/0 reel with 100-pound test line and a Ross Hutchisson custom rod. That was my big amberjack rig.

鈥淏ack then, that鈥檚 what we fished for. We won the 黑料天堂 Deep Sea Fishing Rodeo on a regular basis with big amberjack. When we got that fish in the boat, I knew it was significantly bigger that the 102-pounder that I鈥檇 caught before. We got him to the boat in 15 to 20 minutes. We fought them hard, and I had a good, strong back back then.鈥

Now that his last record is off the 黑料天堂 record books, he鈥檚 not worried about getting back on the list. He鈥檚 going to leave that up to his 28-year-old son, Tyler, who already owns three state records for other saltwater species.

鈥淚f I catch a record fish, it鈥檚 going to be something smaller,鈥 Kennedy said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not going to be an amberjack or blue marlin. I鈥檒l leave that up to Tyler and Ryan (Kennedy, his 20-year-old nephew).鈥

Walker said amberjack are usually around some kind of structure 鈥 wrecks, petroleum rigs or big rocks on natural bottom 鈥 and can be anywhere from 50 feet to 300 feet down. He said it鈥檚 easy to distinguish between the different snappers and the amberjack. He marks AJs on his bottom machine and tells his anglers how far to drop.

Although a lot of anglers will use big jigs for amberjack, Capt. Walker likes to use live bait for the big fish.

鈥淗ardtails (blue runners) are probably the best bait,鈥 he said. 鈥淛igs used to work great, but AJs are just not as plentiful and are harder to catch. We just like to drop a big, live bait down and see what鈥檚 down there.

鈥淭he secret to catching a big AJ is having the right tackle. You鈥檝e got to go pretty heavy. You can鈥檛 catch one like that on light tackle. First, you鈥檝e got to get him away from the wreck or the rocks. You鈥檝e got to have some pretty strong tackle to do that. If you can get him away from the structure, you鈥檝e got a good chance of catching him.鈥

Walker said amberjack fishing has been a little slow so far, but he knows fishing success is cyclical.

鈥淥ne year it鈥檚 great, and the next year you鈥檙e wondering where the AJs went,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his has started out like one of those years that鈥檚 down a little.鈥

Walker said the demand to catch amberjack doesn鈥檛 compare with red snapper. He fished 55 of the 62-day snapper season for charter boats.

鈥淧eople like to catch amberjacks, but it鈥檚 nothing like the bookings we get for snapper,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e tell them we can also catch beeliners (vermilion snapper) and maybe a scamp or a grouper.

鈥淚鈥檝e got some more 12-hour trips coming up. I鈥檓 probably going to the amberjack hole. I want to see if lightning strikes twice in the same spot.鈥

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The fishing party that chartered Summer Breeze II join Andrews and the record amberjack in front of the Zeke's Marina scales.