|
Tourney raises
$6,500 for
youth crime
intervention;
37 boats compete
over cash
prizes |
By
JESSICA MACHETTA
Cape
Coral Daily Breeze
06/10/08
Saturday’s annual
Silver King Classic
Tarpon Catch and Release
Tournament saw 37
boats turn out for
the competition, which
awarded cash prizes
to the teams bringing
in the largest tarpon
and raised money for
the Cape Coral Youth
Crime Intervention
Program.
Organizer Mike Gavala
said it was only 21
minutes after the
shotgun start at Fish
Tale Marina on Fort
Myers Beach that one
of the top teams caught
and released its first
big tarpon.
In the end, all but
one of the winning
teams were from the
Fort Myers/Cape Coral
area. The winning
team, Able Body Labor
out of Tampa, was
presented with a $4,050
check by state Sen.
Burt Saunders, who
was on hand to join
in the festivities
and talk about his
upcoming run for Congress.
Second place and
$1,200 went to the
Fish Tale Marina team,
comprised of the marina’s
dock crew. Third place
team Outta Line took
home $800.
The Top Angler trophy
went to Kyle Hennenberger,
a third generation
angler from Tampa;
top female angler
was Nina Riedi of
Pompano Beach; and
top junior angler
when to Christian
Fisher, 11, of Fort
Myers.
Prizes were awarded
not on a biggest-fish
basis, but rather
to the team that caught
and released the most
tarpon that day.
Event coordinator
Wally Thomas said
four teams tied for
most releases, which
was two each, so the
top prize went the
team that caught and
released them earliest
in the day.
Thomas pointed out
though that the real
winners of the day
were the kids in the
youth program.
“We raised about
$6,500,” he said.
“The program gets
about $1,000 a year
from the county, so
the fact that we raised
$6,500 for them, that
will go a long, long
way for them and we’re
really excited about
that. It’s just a
good, good thing.”
Saunders, R-Naples,
also focused on the
youth program and
the importance of
the tournament’s donation.
“I worked with (former
Cape Coral Police)
Chief (Arnold) Gibbs
when he put the program
together, so it’s
nice to see how it’s
grown since it started
in 1995,” he said.
Saunders’ young sons,
Jonathon and Matthew,
were also on hand
to enjoy the day,
which included food,
a cash bar and a live
and silent auction.
Organizers shipped
in hundreds of live
crawdads from Louisiana
to cook for the crowds;
some that escaped
the boiling water
proved worthy “pets”
for the kids.
An unofficial record
was set for the day
when Marsad Quraishi
ate more than 11 plates
of spicy crawdads.
“It’s a tradition,”
he said, adding that
he believes he beat
his personal record
this time.
The band Bunche played
classic rock favorites
as Cape Coral Wrestling
“Heat” team members
bused tables and emptied
trash cans.
Several businesses
and individuals donated
auction items, food,
beverages and their
time to make the event
a success.
Fish Tale Marina
now looks forward
to the third leg of
its Triple Crown Series,
the ninth annual Grouper
Grab, slated for the
weekend of June 28.
The event features
a live weigh in, bands,
an awards banquet
and even a bounce
house for the kids.
“The Grouper Grab
offers the highest
level of competition
and true family fun,”
organizers said.
Aside from grouper,
the tournament will
offer prizes for largest
snapper and blackfin
tuna.
The Grouper Grab
benefits the Bouniconti
Fund to Cure Paralysis,
headquartered in Miami.
The Lee County chapter
serves spinal cord
injury victims in
this area.
For more information
or to register for
the tournament, call
Fish Tale Marina,
7225 Estero Blvd.,
at 463-4448 or visit:
www.fishtale.com.
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