By LAURA AQUINO By LAURA AQUINO ADVERTISING HIBT media correspondent KAILUA-KONA — Anglers gathered on Kailua Pier early Monday morning as the 53rd running of the Hawaiian International Billfish Tournament got underway. At the traditional announcement of “Start Fishing, Start
By LAURA AQUINO
HIBT media correspondent
KAILUA-KONA — Anglers gathered on Kailua Pier early Monday morning as the 53rd running of the Hawaiian International Billfish Tournament got underway. At the traditional announcement of “Start Fishing, Start Fishing, Start Fishing,” 40 teams with 150 anglers headed off the West Hawaii coast for the first of five promising days of fishing.
The highly competitive field is led by defending HIBT champion Port Vila Game Fishing Club of Vanuatu, back to defend its title against anglers from around the world, including 11 different countries. The United States leads the field with 12 teams. Australia and New Zealand boast six teams each, Japan five, China four, Papua New Guinea two, Singapore and South Africa both with one, and one each from HIBT first-timers from Russia and Portugal.
The 40 teams will be competing in the world-famous waters off the Kona Coast this week in their hunt to capture big game fishing’s most prestigious HIBT Governor’s Trophy.
Day 1 excitement
By 10:30 Monday morning, Kona Game Fishing Club–Taiyo angler and team captain Masaharu Matsushita weighed in a 576-pound Pacific blue marlin and put the first points on the HIBT scoreboard. Matsushita is no rookie, having fished in eight previous HIBTs.
“This is the largest fish I have caught,” he said. “I had the fish on 50-pound test and caught the marlin on a lure I made and brought with me from Japan.”
By the noon roundup, another 12 billfish had been tagged, three satellite tags had been deployed plus one more Pacific blue marlin had been boated and was expected to weigh in at the end of day. Before the mid-afternoon roundup, half the 2012 HIBT teams had fish — and valuable team points.
Tournament director Robbie Englehard said it best: “Kona’s had some great fish earlier this summer, and now at HIBT, we are seeing the quantity.”
Englehard, a longtime HIBT volunteer, has held the post of tournament director for six years. Englehard started his fishing career in 1974 as a deckhand for the legendary George Parker, Kona’s Hall of Fame charter boat captain who in 1954 captured the first 1,000-pound Pacific blue marlin ever landed in the Pacific
HIBT women anglers made their mark on Day 1 of the 53rd HIBT. Big Game Clube De Portugal angler Robina Baynan posted valuable HIBT points on the scoreboard as she tagged and released two Pacific blue marlin, estimated at 200 and 250 pounds, on 50-pound test line. Olympian Dream Fishing Club angler Mari Arakawa celebrated her birthday on this first day of tournament fishing and was very excited to tag and release two fish, one a Pacific blue marlin, estimated at 150 pounds, and a Short nose spearfish estimated at 40 pounds.
“As the teams were boarding their boats this morning, you could hear the excitement building in languages spoken from around the world,” HIBT Founder Peter Fithian said. “With 40 teams fishing this year, we expect to see a lot of action. Anglers know Kona’s impressive sport fishing reputation and are ready to fish. We are looking forward to a great week of HIBT action.”
HIBT rules note that billfish points are awarded for any Pacific blue marlin, Black marlin, Striped marlin, Short nose spearfish and Broadbill swordfish that weigh in at 300 pounds or more. Qualifying tagged and released billfish are awarded valuable points computed on line weights of 80- or 50-pound test. Bonus points are given for weighed fish over 500 pounds, for the heaviest qualifying marlin each day and the heaviest qualifying marlin of the tournament. Ahi (tuna) are awarded points per pound for fish that weigh in at 100 pounds and more.
Fithian noted that the HIBT is underwritten “by the generosity of the County of Hawaii and sponsored in part by KWXX Radio and numerous other corporate and community donors.”
The 2012 HIBT continues through Friday.
For more information on the HIBT, including team listings, IGFA world-record rules and a daily video recap of tournament standings, log onto www.hibtfishing.com.