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high-stakes tournament The White Marlin Open
#1
At a high-stakes tournament, a lucky fisherman reels in $2.6 million in cold hard cash
Ray Parisi 
  • The White Marlin Open in Ocean City, Maryland, is a week-long fishing competition held annually in August.
  • The prize money for last year's tournament ballooned to more than $11 million.
  • This year's competition takes place Aug. 5-9.
  • CNBC followed one angler at last year's tournament on his quest to win one of the big prizes.
If it's hard to believe that one fish could be worth a mind-boggling $2.6 million, then you're probably not familiar with the high-stakes world of tournament sports fishing.
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CNBC
Marlin jumping off the coast of Ocean City.
The White Marlin Open in Ocean City, Maryland, is a week-long competition held annually in August and in the fishing world, it's basically the Super Bowl. This year's competition takes place Aug. 5-9.
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CNBC
2018 White Marlin Open
The prize money for last year's tournament ballooned to more than $11 million, making it the most super rich fishing competition in the world.


Every year the multimillion-dollar jackpot is divided across more than a dozen prizes. In 2018, it included a head-spinning $904,000 payout for the biggest tuna, a $924,000 prize for the largest blue marlin — and the $2.6 million mega-payout for the largest white marlin reeled in.
On a recent episode of CNBC's "Secret Lives of the Super Rich," cameras followed Roy Schwalbach, CEO and founder of Jack Studios, a film, photography and event space, as he competed last season.
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CNBC
Angler Roy Schwalbach
"This competition is no joke," Schwalbach said on the first day of the fishing tournament. "We're going to get him today — we're going to get a monster."
The $45,000 fishing trip
For his chance to pull millions of dollars out of the ocean, Schwalbach and the other anglers who competed had to pay-to-play, and the tournament fees aren't cheap. Entry fees start at $1,100 per boat and could reach more than $25,000.
"You're fishing at a pro level, you feel like you're an NFL player," said the New York-based CEO, who loves the sport so much he built a home in Ocean City so he could fish more.
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CNBC
Schwalbach chartered Southern C's, a 61' Viking fishing boat with twin 2,400 HP engines.
He said between all the entry fees, hiring a captain, paying the crew, chartering a fishing yacht, plus all the fuel needed, the high-end fishing trip cost him about $45,000.
The high cost of entry means many anglers compete as a team, which means they can split all the costs — and if they win, the prize money, too.
"I have a lot more faith in myself as an angler than bringing bodies in to split the money," Schwalbach said.
The odds of reeling in $2.6 million
All the cold hard cash that's up for grabs is enough to lure hundreds of participants, who journey to Ocean City for a chance to cast out a line and strike it rich.
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CNBC
More than 300 boats competed in 2018, so the chances of reeling in that $2.6 million white marlin were slim. All fish have to meet the tournament's minimum weight requirement. Then, assuming an angler on one of those boats catches a qualifying fish, the odds of winning were about 1 in 300, or less than 0.3%.
Schwalbach wasn't discouraged because he believed his odds were much better, since he's been fishing for over 50 years.
"Based on skill, I feel that my odds are 90% I win, 10% I can lose," he said.
Poles, reels and lie detectors ... yes, lie detectors
As you might imagine, a tournament with so much money on the line has lots of strictly enforced rules.
"You're dealing with millions of dollars, and there are a lot of cheaters out there, so they [organizers] put polygraphs in there to keep everyone honest," said Schwalbach.
Competitors can only fish on three days of the five-day event. And while boats can leave the docks before sunrise to search for a spot to fish, no angler can put a line in the water before 8:30 a.m. sharp, and every competitor's line must be pulled from the water at 3:30 p.m. on the dot.
And while a boat can have more than one fisherman on board, once there's a bite and an angler takes the pole he or she must reel the fish in without assistance. In other words, no other angler can so much as touch the pole. Any violation of these rules and countless others can lead to an immediate disqualification without any refund of entry fees.
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Getty Images
And since the competition happens up to 90 miles offshore where fishing is almost entirely unmonitored, any person who wins more than $50,000 may be, at the discretion of the directors, subject to a lie detector test to address any potential question of impropriety that may arise.
And if the polygraph reveals someone broke the rules, the results can be used to disqualify a contestant and even strip prize money.
How serious are they about the lie detector, you ask?
Two years ago, polygraph results suggested a competitor violated the tournament rules and those results were used to strip him of a prize worth more than $2.8 million. (The $2.8 million was later distributed to winners of other categories.)
When asked about the 2017 disqualification, Schwalbach said it was the right decision. "The rules are the rules and he was definitely not entitled to the prize money."
Over three days, CNBC cameras spent more than 30 hours with Schwalbach at sea, while he burned thousands of dollars in fuel and motored across hundreds of miles of ocean.
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CNBC
Schwalbach and his crew reel in a White Marlin
He reeled in some feisty white marlins, and cameras rolled as he fought to reel in what he thought was the $2.6 million fish-that-got-away.
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CNBC

These three fish paid $4.4 million
Spoiler alert: While Roy did not end up catching the "monster" winning fish, here are the winners:
This is the $904,000 tuna that weighed in at 75.5 pounds and earned the fishing boat Buckshot the top tuna prize.
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CNBC
The winning tuna
Here's the $924,000 blue marlin that weighed in at 881 pounds and was reeled in on Auspicious.
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The winning Blue Marlin
And this white marlin is the most expensive billfish in the world:
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The winning $2.6 million White Marlin
This $2.6 million prize-winning billfish weighed in at 83 pounds, earning Weldor's Ark the tournament's top prize. The marlin is worth about $31,325.30 per pound.
Despite not catching the big money fish, Schwalbach said he still had a blast. "It was an amazing tournament and probably one of the most fun in a lot of years."
No fish goes to waste
If you're curious about what happens to all that pricey fish filet when the tournament's over, you may be happy to hear it was donated to Maryland Food Bank, an Ocean City nonprofit that helps serve needy Maryland residents, a spokesperson for the Open said.
"They donate all the food to the food bank, and I love that," said Schwalbach.
—CNBC's Christopher DiLella and Philip Minton contributed to this report.
Let God lead the way!
Give a man a fish he eats for one day, teach him to fish he eats forever!
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#2
Wanna give it a shot Mikey? We’ll take my boat
Reply
#3
(07-24-2019, 02:45 AM)So.Cali Wrote: Wanna give it a shot Mikey? We’ll take my boat

i would say yes however  dont even have 2% of the min entry fee haha
Let God lead the way!
Give a man a fish he eats for one day, teach him to fish he eats forever!
Reply
#4
Same here... nor do I have any vacation time available. 

Would be fun to beat out all them big yachts with a little 17’ er
Reply
#5
(07-25-2019, 02:22 AM)So.Cali Wrote: Same here... nor do I have any vacation time available. 

Would be fun to beat out all them big yachts with a little 17’ er

we may have our asses handed to us but yes it would be fun, haha
Let God lead the way!
Give a man a fish he eats for one day, teach him to fish he eats forever!
Reply
#6
Just gotta put out the right bait in front of the right kind.
Reply
#7
fish i am not worried about  WEATHER haha
Let God lead the way!
Give a man a fish he eats for one day, teach him to fish he eats forever!
Reply
#8
Ocean City math teacher wins world’s largest billfish tournament — twice

[*]Kristi King

16 hours ago

A high school math teacher is the preliminary winner of the White Marlin Open, and it’s not his first time.
The polygraph test — which is needed to officially declare a winner — will be conducted Saturday, but that seemed to be of little concern to the adoring crowd chanting Tommy Hinkle’s name Friday night.
No other White Marlin brought to the scales in the five-day tournament was heavier than Hinkle’s 79.5-pound strike. When his last potential competitor weighed in light, the crowd went wild.
[img]data:image/svg+xml;charset=utf-8,<svg height="608px" width="1024px" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" version="1.1"/>[/img][Image: IMG_6249-1024x608.jpg]Tommy Hinkle, who won the top prize with a 79.5-pound White Marlin, is the tournament’s first two-time winner. (WTOP/Kristi King)
“If lightning was ever supposed to strike twice,” Hinkle said, then pausing to collect his thoughts. “[It’s] overwhelming.”
Hinkle is the tournament’s first two-time winner; his 81-pound White Marlin won the top prize in 2008. This year’s winning catch could be worth $1,460,000.
“As far as probability goes, folks, put this up in the math books,” said Hinkle. “It was a long shot.”
Hinkle is a math teacher at Stephen Decatur High School in Berlin, Maryland, which is just outside Ocean City. Asked what the win might mean to his students, Hinkle said he hopes it might inspire them to follow at least one of his passions.
“If it inspires them to do some math, that’s it, I’m all in. If it inspires them to win $1.4 million, ‘Don’t be a fisherman, go out and get a real job,'” Hinkle advised.
A record-setting 404 boats participated in the 46th annual White Marlin Open this year. Various categories of different species of fish will result in the distribution of an estimated $6,143,000 in total prize money.
Celebrity participants created a little extra excitement and anticipation for spectators this year, but chef Emeril Lagasse’s boat never had a catch worthy of the weigh-in dock.
Also a no-show at the weigh in scales was basketball legend Michael Jordan and his boat, Catch 23.
Spectators watching Jordan’s 80-foot Viking return to shore after fishing Thursday were impressed, but, as Hinkle notes, you don’t need a big boat to do well.
“You don’t need to be a big boat to win a couple million dollars,” Hinkle said, adding that preparation, teamwork and opportunity all have to come together.
“I can’t believe that it came together twice,” Hinkle said. “It just goes to show you, man, this tournament is up for anybody to win. You just have to put the time in.”




It’s Day 5 of the White Marlin Open on Friday, Aug. 9, 2019, in Ocean City, Maryland. (WTOP/Kristi King)
A boat is seen on Friday, Aug. 9, 2019 in Ocean City, Maryland. (WTOP/Kristi King)

Crew from “Chasin Tail” pose with their 74-pound White Marlin caught on Day 1 of the White Marlin Open. (Courtesy Town of Ocean City)
The Hellsea caught at 22.5-pound dolphin on Day 1 of the White Marlin Open. (Courtesy Town of Ocean City)
Here’s a poster for this year’s White Marlin Open. (WTOP/Kristi King)
It’s the last day of the White Marlin Open on Friday, Aug. 9, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
First Presbyterian Church of Ocean City accepts donations from people who want to park in the church during the fishing tournament. (WTOP/Kristi King)



Tags: ocean city, marlin, fishing 
Let God lead the way!
Give a man a fish he eats for one day, teach him to fish he eats forever!
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