Bradford Beavers
Splash Bass
Grae Buck
The FLW Tour stop at Cherokee Lake
featured some serious drama on the
weigh-in stage, but it was the on-the-
water drama (or comedy, depending on
your perspective) that made for some
great viewing.
On day two of the event, Bradford
Beavers had a fish hung up. Knowing
every ounce counts in this game, the rook-
ie went in after his fish.
Not to be outdone, second-place finish-
er Grae Buck played cat-and-mouse with
the same bedding fish all day long on day
three. After losing it once, he hooked the
fish again, only to see it come unbuttoned
right next to the boat. Buck reached out to
try to grab the fish before it could escape,
but he found himself under water instead.
Buck came back later and eventually man-
aged to get that same fish in his livewell.
Both anglers got their fish – and a
great story to tell – in the end.
AMe
Colossal Catch
On April 22, Zachary Sutterfield (left)
caught the fish of several lifetimes. The
Durant, Okla., bow fisherman hauled in
an alligator gar that weighed approxi-
mately 170 pounds and measured 6 feet,
9 inches in length.
While it’s not the biggest alligator gar
to come from Oklahoma waters (254
pounds, snagged by Paul Easley from
Lake Texoma in 2015), a 170-pounder is
nothing to sneeze at. The prehistoric
beasts can live upward of 50 years, and
it’s safe to say the one Sutterfield caught
was no baby.
...an alligator gar that
weighed approximately
170 pounds and measured
6 feet, 9 inches in length.
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FLWFISHING.COM I SuMMER 2019