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Posts: 3147
| Who's fishing the Metro tourney on Sat???
I'm betting with the big heat increase we see some fish caught big time,,the capable partners outing was just held and out of ten boats 8 fish were caught,,percentage wise that means there should be about 167 fish caught in tourney LOL!!!
but I bet we see some good numbers,,,still get tickets.
Edited by happy hooker 6/8/2016 4:31 PM
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Posts: 162 Location: Metro, MN | Ill be out on Tonka. I think it will be the biggest output of fish caught ever. |
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Posts: 558
| Going to be a warm one. Sure hope this heat is heating the bite up. Ill be out sweating somewhere, haven't decided where yet. Good luck to all. |
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Posts: 59
| Can't wait! Good luck everybody! |
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Posts: 55 Location: Coon Rapids, MN | Anyone know what the final results were? |
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| heard this second hand but 28 fish over 40" and 52" out of Indy was the biggest. |
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Posts: 416 Location: MN | That's correct. Here's what I remember:
525 entrants
28 over 40"
10th place was 45.5" or 46"
1st was 46" & 44", Minnetonka
3 doubles in top 10
8 out of top 12 were Minnetonka
Edited by nar160 6/12/2016 10:48 AM
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Posts: 1901 Location: MN | nar160 - 6/12/2016 10:22 AM
That's correct. Here's what I remember:
525 entrants
28 over 40"
10th place was 45.5" or 46"
1st was 46" & 49", Minnetonka
3 doubles in top 10
8 out of top 12 were Minnetonka
46 and 44 winner |
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Posts: 416 Location: MN | ^ Thanks and pardon the misinformation :S
Edited by nar160 6/12/2016 10:48 AM
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Posts: 3147
| John Hoyer won with two fish from Tonka on a bait we can't get locally
Tonka was THE lake to be on big water looked to be better,,we had a short day so we went to Harriet and it was mirror calm,,only heard of a 41 caught there.
Josh Stevenson got a 51 on St Croix but said the boat traffic was beyond belief with pleasure craft.
Somebody reeled in a Sony boombox, radio,CD,, technically I think that would have qualified has a hybrid but they didn't get a good picture.
527 entrants was the second most ever. |
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| Sounds like a really tough bite. It looks like being on Tonka was the critical factor. Oh yeah, it would have helped to be a guide with a secret bait as well. |
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Posts: 1901 Location: MN | Cfollow - 6/13/2016 9:32 AM
Sounds like a really tough bite. It looks like being on Tonka was the critical factor. Oh yeah, it would have helped to be a guide with a secret bait as well.
Not secret, just hard to come by. Pretty backed up |
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Posts: 3147
| Actually over a year wait right now,,tried to get one after tourney |
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Posts: 200 Location: Twin Cities | Cfollow - 6/13/2016 9:32 AM
Sounds like a really tough bite. It looks like being on Tonka was the critical factor. Oh yeah, it would have helped to be a guide with a secret bait as well.
Yeah to me its pretty lame that a guide would even enter the tournament. |
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Posts: 132
| Why is that lame, just because he won? Guides fish that tournament every year. |
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Posts: 4269 Location: Ashland WI | happy hooker - 6/13/2016 11:59 AM
Actually over a year wait right now,,tried to get one after tourney
What lure is it? |
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Posts: 200 Location: Twin Cities | Lure is a barfighter
No it's just lame any guide would enter because they have an obvious advantage over everyone. Leave it to us amatures to try and win |
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Posts: 132
| Sure our local guides are some of the best in the business and should win on paper. But I just think that since the tourney is such a short window and covers so many different lakes, literally everyone in the field has a shot. You get two bites, you have a legit shot at winning it.
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Posts: 3147
| John Hoyer works a full time job,,,I know doctors and lawyers, teachers off for the summer and self employed people who spend more time on the water then guides do,,should they not enter.
We're talking about a tournament that costs little to enter and no humongous payout,,not a Toyota angler of the year event
The season was ONE week old when this tournament was done I think everybody is on a pretty level field.
Without googling it can you name last year's winner ???? Winning this does not allow you to retire or seal a tv show deal.
It's a small tourney with the emphasis on fun with a random pretty good grand prize that anybody can win even if their not in the top ten. |
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Posts: 1901 Location: MN | Well said Hooker. He probably thinks only amateurs should enter PMTT events as well |
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Posts: 132
| Completely agree |
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Posts: 200 Location: Twin Cities | happy hooker - 6/13/2016 2:49 PM
John Hoyer works a full time job,,,I know doctors and lawyers, teachers off for the summer and self employed people who spend more time on the water then guides do,,should they not enter.
We're talking about a tournament that costs little to enter and no humongous payout,,not a Toyota angler of the year event
The season was ONE week old when this tournament was done I think everybody is on a pretty level field.
Without googling it can you name last year's winner ???? Winning this does not allow you to retire or seal a tv show deal.
It's a small tourney with the emphasis on fun with a random pretty good grand prize that anybody can win even if their not in the top ten.
Lol you mad bro? Was just voicing my opinion, nothing else |
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Posts: 3147
| No emotion,,just statin not hatin,,,these are just the obvious |
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Posts: 618 Location: Bloomington, MN | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9_bCctPQzqo#t=72
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Posts: 859 Location: MN | I think its fine for guides to enter... most guides aren't rolling in cash... I would guess its a hard way to make a living I know I couldn't do it. I'm also guessing theirs a chance that these local guides book clients for the day, if so their out their fishing might as well enter. The other fact is that season is like 7 days old at the time of the tournament which really levels the playing field. Great win by what I have seen is a great guy. Plus it appears he could do no wrong based on that video, the Muskie Gods wanted him to win. |
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Posts: 325 Location: Otsego, MN | Better start a poll if guides should be allowed to fish tournaments
I fished it and while the weather was hot the fishing was not! We were on Tonka and put a little guy in the net and raised 4 others. One fish was a big beautiful blonde (>50 easily) and swiped at a bait but wouldn't follow again. Had a blast and look forward to next year! |
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Posts: 255
| Guide no guide who cares everyone has a shot winning this tournament I think it's great Hoyer won Josh Stevenson placed also
both of these guys do a ton for our sport don't hate appreciate |
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Posts: 859 Location: MN | BLIZZAK - 6/13/2016 8:26 PM
Guide no guide who cares everyone has a shot winning this tournament I think it's great Hoyer won Josh Stevenson placed also
both of these guys do a ton for our sport don't hate appreciate
Another great point. It's open to everyone cannot remember the last time a guide won this if ever. |
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Posts: 99
| According to Mr. Hoyer this is the tenth year he has fished the event. Not exactly domination in my eyes. Not to mention the sense of pride one might get by beating some of the best around.
First time fishing the tourney for myself and brother. Fished on Tonka. Had one upper 40s follow and missed a 40 incher that bit in the eight.
So who broke off the big white rubber bait on a Muskie on Minnetonka? Saw the fish swimming around and the bait hanging out of its mouth. Few hours later saw him again and he had successfully spit the bait. Can't say for certain it was the same fish, but the mouth was pretty beat up. |
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| NathanH - 6/13/2016 8:39 PM
BLIZZAK - 6/13/2016 8:26 PM
Guide no guide who cares everyone has a shot winning this tournament I think it's great Hoyer won Josh Stevenson placed also
both of these guys do a ton for our sport don't hate appreciate
Another great point. It's open to everyone cannot remember the last time a guide won this if ever.[/QUOTE
Dan Altman won a few years ago and hangs his shingle out as a guide. Ryan McMahon guided a woman to a very high finish last year or a couple of years ago. Luke Ronestrand was guided to a very high finish or a win a number of years ago. It was a much more fun event before it was tied to the MN tournament trail for a number of years and before all the guides started entering. It's still muskie fishing and everyone has a chance bug to say guides don't have an advantage, c'mon man! |
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Posts: 1220
| A lot of folks have questioned my love for fishing tournaments in view of how "precious" few I've actually won. I mostly fish against younger, stronger guys who can viciously rip the big rubber all day long, and against the "few" who we all agree are truly "Pros." That would be the person who takes folks out day after day and simply must figure this thing out to make the lousy living they get. Yes, I have a love of competition in general, but the true fact of why you get to be an actually "better,"really more skilled angler from doing this is the absoulutely generous, freely given, and friendly bounty of help these pros will give you over and over and over. Sometimes all you have to do is watch how they put their boat in the water or take it out. You learn this stuff from modeling the behaviour of those who know, and all you have to do is shutup and listen after you have asked. I swear I've seen them give out a good spot and the right bait to someone who just hasn't a clue where to start. And....then there's that day, every so often, when I catch a bigger fish than they do, and finish ahead of some really top guys who are far my betters. And, then do you know what happens? They come over and give me their honest congratulations and best wishes. Do I want the best sticks out there in every tournament? Darn right I do!! |
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Posts: 200 Location: Twin Cities | Kevin Kray is also a guide who caught the beast on Indy. Surprised that is the only one caught on Indy and none were caught on Eagle or Waconia. Was anyone fishing those lakes? There is something weird going on at Indy last time I was there, bunch of dead crappies everywhere and two muskies floating near the top that didn't move when we went by. |
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| Double post sorry.
Edited by Cfollow 6/14/2016 8:52 AM
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| If you prevent guides from fishing, are you going to also ban those who are financially able to hire the best guides for three or four day long trips right before the tournament? Would that not be the next step in this line of thinking? |
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| Cfollow - 6/13/2016 9:32 AM
Sounds like a really tough bite. It looks like being on Tonka was the critical factor. Oh yeah, it would have helped to be a guide with a secret bait as well.
Yeah...that's like Buster Posey playing in the little league world series with a corked bat!!
Did you see that video? Clearly that was the work of a secret, and obviously magical, lure! It had nothing to do with a really great fisherman and a healthy dose of luck!
P.S. One of the coolest pieces of Muskie footage I've ever seen!!!!
Edited by Ben Olsen 6/14/2016 10:40 PM
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Posts: 618 Location: Bloomington, MN | 99%of us would have completely screwed up on that rare opportunity. He is a complete professional at muskie angling.
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Posts: 200 Location: Twin Cities | I read an article that last years 56" on tonka was caught in 50ft of water, anyone know if that is actually true? seems fishy...
Also this has been updated now-http://metromuskietournament.com/metroresults.html
Edited by pistolpete314 6/15/2016 7:20 AM
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Location: MN | pistolpete314 - 6/15/2016 7:17 AM
I read an article that last years 56" on tonka was caught in 50ft of water, anyone know if that is actually true? seems fishy...
Why does that seem fishy? Ever hear of open water fishing? My only fish that's hit the bag this year came in 40+ feet of water.
Anyone ever hear of a tournament that doesn't allow guides? I'm not a big tourney guy but I haven't.
Congrats on the win and thanks for sharing that killer video! |
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Posts: 323 Location: Elk River, MN | pistolpete314 - 6/15/2016 7:17 AM
I read an article that last years 56" on tonka was caught in 50ft of water, anyone know if that is actually true? seems fishy...
Trolling in a pontoon, they got a 55 the weekend before. |
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Posts: 1901 Location: MN | And they mean over 50 fow, not that the fish was 50' down |
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Posts: 200 Location: Twin Cities | Propster - 6/15/2016 9:09 AM
And they mean over 50 fow, not that the fish was 50' down
Yeah good point, still is wild. Would not think to go that deep |
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Posts: 200 Location: Twin Cities | Espy - 6/15/2016 8:05 AM
pistolpete314 - 6/15/2016 7:17 AM
I read an article that last years 56" on tonka was caught in 50ft of water, anyone know if that is actually true? seems fishy...
Trolling in a pontoon, they got a 55 the weekend before.
And a 57 the next weekend? :) |
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Posts: 255
| What's fishy about it?? A 55" week later a 56 its called open water trolling now you learned something!! |
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Posts: 59
| I think Guides have always fished this tournament.
John seemed like a great guy, congrats to him! Perhaps if you can't beat them you should hire them that day..... |
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| Ben Olsen - 6/14/2016 10:36 PM
Cfollow - 6/13/2016 9:32 AM
Sounds like a really tough bite. It looks like being on Tonka was the critical factor. Oh yeah, it would have helped to be a guide with a secret bait as well.
Yeah...that's like Buster Posey playing in the little league world series with a corked bat!!
Did you see that video? Clearly that was the work of a secret, and obviously magical, lure! It had nothing to do with a really great fisherman and a healthy dose of luck!
P.S. One of the coolest pieces of Muskie footage I've ever seen!!!!
The guy charging $400 a day to take you muskie fishing based on his expertise earned through time on the water and networking with other musky guides is now claiming that expertise provides no advantage in a tourney setting. LOL!! |
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Posts: 132
| Cfollow - 6/16/2016 9:08 AM
The guy charging $400 a day to take you muskie fishing based on his expertise earned through time on the water and networking with other musky guides is now claiming that expertise provides no advantage in a tourney setting. LOL!!
Who cares!
Just go out and fish it. Maybe one year you'll win it and that'll be your moment to prove to everyone you're as good as you think you are. |
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Posts: 1901 Location: MN | CF why do you always have to be such a bag of Sweetness?
(sweetness is what this web site switched my word to. You all know what I was trying to say)
Edited by Propster 6/16/2016 1:00 PM
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Posts: 3147
| I'm betting there were at least 30 guys in this that guide or part-time guide in the metro now or in past.
So that means all top 12 spots should have been guides right???,, Offering yourself up has a guide does not mean you passed some state proficiency test for catching fish or have a fisheries degree, it just means you guide.
Some of these guys pursued guiding because they found they have a knack,talent,insight for the sport. They win on their talent not just time on the water, I could read the wall street journal everyday I still would lose money. I've won a fair amount of money handicapping football, on the other hand I could not pick a winner in a horse race if only one horse was in it, despite reading book after book watching video after video on speed tracking
talent trumps experience.
Edited by happy hooker 6/16/2016 3:26 PM
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| happy hooker - 6/16/2016 3:10 PM
I'm betting there were at least 30 guys in this that guide or part-time guide in the metro now or in past.
So that means all top 12 spots should have been guides right???,, Offering yourself up has a guide does not mean you passed some state proficiency test for catching fish or have a fisheries degree, it just means you guide.
Some of these guys pursued guiding because they found they have a knack,talent,insight for the sport. They win on their talent not just time on the water, I could read the wall street journal everyday I still would lose money. I've won a fair amount of money handicapping football, on the other hand I could not pick a winner in a horse race if only one horse was in it, despite reading book after book watching video after video on speed tracking
talent trumps experience.
30/525=5.7% of the total anglers.
3 guides in the top 12/12 spots= 25% of the top 12 composed of guides
I am simply saying the have an advantage. I have NOT in one single post said they shouldn't be allowed in the tournament. They are better at catching muskies than the average weekend warrior it really is that simple. |
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Posts: 255
| Fish more than |
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| Cfollow - 6/16/2016 9:08 AM
Ben Olsen - 6/14/2016 10:36 PM
Cfollow - 6/13/2016 9:32 AM
Sounds like a really tough bite. It looks like being on Tonka was the critical factor. Oh yeah, it would have helped to be a guide with a secret bait as well.
Yeah...that's like Buster Posey playing in the little league world series with a corked bat!!
Did you see that video? Clearly that was the work of a secret, and obviously magical, lure! It had nothing to do with a really great fisherman and a healthy dose of luck!
P.S. One of the coolest pieces of Muskie footage I've ever seen!!!!
The guy charging $400 a day to take you muskie fishing based on his expertise earned through time on the water and networking with other musky guides is now claiming that expertise provides no advantage in a tourney setting. LOL!!
People on here need to work on reading comprehension!! Generally, when communicating with others, you should try to read what they actually wrote. Not what you'd like to think they wrote! Reread my post and then explain to me how you got the "provides no advantage" part!!! Time on the water and expertise are absolutely THE advantage. However, you're assuming the "guide" part means more time on the water and more expertise than any number of other competitors. That is NOT an accurate assumption. Also consider the "chicken or egg" angle: Does one become a guide because they are a great fisherman or does one become a great fisherman because they are a guide. Lastly, success in muskie fishing will always be determined by luck! Even on your best day you can be bested by a kid with a snoopy pole or a walleye guy trolling cranks. Sometimes tourneys are won by the best fisherman but they're always won by someone who benefited from some good luck!!
P.S. You are right on about the networking thing!! Our network includes more non-guides than guides but it's invaluable!! Good reason to be nice and inclusive to everyone and not make all kinds of assumptions! Good Luck!
P.P.S. The lure is far less important than the guy attached to the other end! Lure fads are ridiculous!! John coulda won that tourney with about 16 different lures!!
Edited by Ben Olsen 6/16/2016 11:48 PM
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Posts: 859 Location: MN | Great post by Ben. But forget about reading comprehension it's not happening on this or any other site. Im fairly new to the sport of Musky fishing but my observations are as such.
1. Lure fads are insaine I'm still trying to understand why it happens with such intensity.
2. Guides share more information and make themselves more available to those not paying for their services then any sport I've ever seen.
3. As a group Muskie guys cannibalize their own way too much and people who have success are run out of town. Guides, bait makers, stores, tv shows, take way too much abuse.
Great win by John can't we be happy for him! That hit was amazing.
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Posts: 132
| Spot on Ben and Nathan |
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Posts: 444
| Crazy Video |
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Posts: 99
| Very well said Ben!!
And Nathan I agree totally with number 2. A well known guide answered a bunch of questions for me and I didn't know him at all before asking we only shared some mutual friends.
BTW I am still wondering who broke off the big white rubber bait. Someone has to know lol. |
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Posts: 59
| When tournament fishing against guides I fear their networking information the most. Unless it's one of their "home" waters. |
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