Nearly 1,000 pounds of blue marlin was all it took to reset a 68-year-old record -- and to hand one crew a payday of more than $6.5 million. Marlin Fever's 919.9-pound fish stands as the biggest in the history of North Carolina's Big Rock Blue Marlin Tournament.
Caught on the second day of the event out of Morehead City, the marlin pushed past the previous tournament best of 914 pounds, set by Top Dog in 2019. Angler Connor Daniel landed it aboard a 63-foot Jarrett Bay skippered by captain Cameron Guthrie, and no boat in the 278-strong fleet came close to matching it over the rest of the week. Marlin Fever's cut of a purse worth more than $9 million came to $6,513,187.50, ahead of Fender Bender (644.1 pounds) and Haphazard (635.6 pounds).
The flip side of those numbers is that the vast majority of boats leave with nothing. Rob Orr, who runs the Ocracoke charter Free Ranger, has learned that the hard way.
"Out of 278 boats, we finished fourth and eighth. That doesn't get you any money," Orr said.
Landing a qualifying blue at all is the achievement, he says. "I know people that fish the tournament for 25 years and never got in the way of a fish, and out of the 10 years, that's the first time I've been able to take in a qualifying blue marlin," Orr said. As for why the fleet keeps coming: "All the best marlin fishing is right here off of Ocracoke," he said, describing a hooked fish that "might jump 25 or 30 times in the first 30 seconds."
On Ocracoke, the reception outweighed the empty prize sheet. "When we pulled into the landing, there was a whole crowd from Ocracoke waiting for us," said Farris O'Neal. "Rob's a very good marlin fisherman and he will win it one day. It was awesome."
Running since 1957, the Big Rock pairs enormous prize money with small-town ritual. This year it also produced a fish that came within a whisker of the four-figure mark -- and a fresh reminder of how narrow the gap is between a record payday and going home broke.
