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Suertudo team headed for Cabo?
Cabo Tuna Jackpot Countdown begins

Suertudo team that caught the world record tuna (pending) is expected to compete in Bisbee’s, Tuna Jackpot

GUY YOCUM ON his 60-foot Viking  Suertudo after the 50-minute battle with the 427-pound yellowfin.


CABO SAN LUCAS — As if a tournament, three nightly parties, $600,000 in cash and prizes and the filming of a reality TV show was not enough, it appears the Suertudo team that set a pending all-tackle world record tuna of 427 pounds Sept. 18 is coming to the Nov. 7-10 Los Cabos Tuna Jackpot Jackpot.

“We’re looking at our plans and we’re talking about it now,” said boat owner Guy Yocum on Friday in an interview with WON. “It looks like we will do the Bisbee’s and also the Tuna tournament.”

Director Pat McDonell said teams are sending in their entries and it appears the field, based on projections, will be larger than last year.

“You never know, really,” said McDonell, “but it was 108 teams last year, again the biggest tourney tourney field in Cabo last year, but we’re really encouraged because many teams that had not been in the event the past few years for various reasons are coming back, and those who were in it, are returning. Each event is distinct, and we have some new twists, but having the guys from the Suertudo would be fantastic.”

Get details on the event at www.loscabostunajackpot.com. Pangas and various-sized sportfishers are available. The charterboat list is on the website.  Cost to enter for a team of up to four anglers is  $800.

The following is a full story on the catch, from the pages of Western Outdoor News

BY PAT McDONELL
Editor, Western Outdoor News
Director, Cabo Tuna Jackpot

Yellowfin’s weight of 427
verified by scale company


All-tackle record is likely

International Weighing Systems (IWS) in San Diego checked the  Minerva's Tackle scale brought from Cabo, and  it was learned last Friday,  the scale was dead-on. Thus, the  heavier weight  has been submitted to the IGFA for Guy Yocum’s pending all-tackle yellowfin record. The pending record was caught on Sept. 18 and weighed the next day at Cabo San Lucas.

The Holy Grail of all-tackle records in big-game fishing is debatable. Is it black marlin? Blue marlin? Bluefin tuna. For many, it is yellowfin tuna. After a WON interview Friday with owner/angler Guy Yocum and the boat's captain Greg DiStefano, in which every aspects of the catch was discussed, it appears the  the new record will be 427 pounds.

The current record of 404 pounds was set two years ago on a long range trip into Baja aboard the Vagabond by Mike Livingston. The 427 pounder was caught Tuesday, Sept. 18 approximately 180 miles from Cabo San Lucas by the Dana Point resident  on his 61-foot Viking sportfisher El Suertudo.

Yocum's pending record  was hooked on a chunk bait during a long yellowfin drift 180 miles south of Cabo, As reported before, the fish was weighed in on two scales in Cabo the  day after it was caught. The first scale that was from the boat, was not functioning correctly, blanking out a few times, but eventually registered a weight of 421.5 pounds.

Worried that their older scale might not hold up to certification, a second scale, a newer International Weighing Systems (IWS) digital scale owned by Minerva Saenz  of Minerva’s Tackle and an IGFA rep for the area, was brought down. All digital scales used for record attempts or IGFA-sanctioned tournaments  should be, but are not required, to be certified once a year by the San Diego scale manufacturing company. Minerva’s 14-month-old IWS scale she won at a tournament auction, said Yocum, was a mere two months out of certification.

Before a growing crowd at the scale at Cabo San Lucas Marina Wednesday morning, the massive yellowfin registered 427 pounds. The digital scale was brought back to San Diego to IWS and on Friday the results came back to Yocum and his longtime captain Greg DiStefano. The weight of 427 pounds was verified by IWS as being acceptable and is the official weight listed in the official application to the IGFA, based in Dania Beach. Florida.

In an extensive interview with Yocum and DiStefano on Friday afternoon after they heard the scale and the weight checked out, they said the application was sent with the required materials: a  60-foot section of main line (100-pound Jerry Brown Spectra), 200-pound Yo-Zuri pink fluoro leader, a 12/0 Mustad hook (connection was a snell knot) and all mainline to leader connections, affidavits from crew and angler concerning the fight, and photos. 

Yocum, 55, a Dana Point resident and owner of a Corona-based concrete business, keeps the boat in Cabo year around. He said he was told the minimum time for records to be reviewed and results to be announced is 90 days. He’s confident the fish will be approved as the new all-tackle mark after the IGFA reviews the application.

He credits his captain of the past six years, DiStefano, 42, of San Clemente, for the record even though Yocum’s name would be listed in the annual record book.

“He did it,” said Yocum. “This was a special trip (to target big tuna) and he went out 90 days before and started preparing, setting up each rod and reel.” The key element in the catch was that the boat was set up — and the mindset of the crew, captain and owner — was to catch the biggest fish possible and not to make any mistakes that might disqualify it.

There’s a lot of ways to get disqualified. Too long of a leader length, touching the main line by a non-angler, allowing the rod (a bent rod Melton’s custom roller guide stand-up tuna stick with a Shimano Tiagra 50 Wide) to touch the rail. You might say that IGFA rules, well, ruled all methods of fishing and tackle. 

Said DiStefano, “That went for any fish hooked, even a 75 pounder, because in a good bite and after a few days you can get lackadaisical, handing fish off. But we didn’t. Because you never know what you have until you see it. Even that fish. We thought that fish would be about 280 when we saw it in the chunk line.”

The fish got itself tail-wrapped about 30 minutes into the 55-minute fight as Yocum worked the fish as he stayed clicked into a Black Magic harness. It took three gaffs, the first one breaking after the second one went in, to secure the fish after it made two heart-stopping runs on consecutive gaff attempts.

When it came through the transom door, Yocum, whose view of the fish had been blocked by a trio of gaffers, got his first real look at the monstrous tuna.

“We had caught a 350-pound tuna two months ago so when I saw it come through the door, but I knew this one was much bigger than the other fish,” said Yocum.

Then DiStefano got out the tape measure. The tuna was 88 inches long and 63¼ inches in girth. By the time it got back to the dock the next day the fish had Weight-Watchered to a mere  62 ½ inches in girth. But the tape on the boat indicated it was 433 to 440 pounds.

“That’s when we knew we had a fish way over 400 pounds and maybe a record.” They packed it in ice in a fish bag custom made for big fish by Canyon Products in Florida, and by 1 p.m. the El Suertudo  was headed back to port.”

Now the crew and owner are back in the states, trying to get some work done. The media requests and calls from friends and tackle companies has been exciting —  and ongoing.

Yocum said the burden of dealing with the questions has been put on his captain, who has had his cell phone stuck to his ear nonstop since they got back. He asked for all of it. He got it.

“Greg said he wanted to break the record,” joked Yocum. “I told him, ‘Be careful what you wish for. Now he’s done it, and now he’s paying for it.”

The celebration started in Cabo, but it was a nervous sort.

“We didn’t know how the scale thing would turn out,” said Yocum. “Those guys DiStefani and the crew)  went out to dinner and ate some of the fish (at Solomon’s Landing restaurant in Cabo). I wasn’t feeling well. After all that, I just went home, got a sandwich and went to bed.” 

The nervousness, or some of it, has lifted with the announcement Friday, Sept. 28, that the tuna’s weight of 427 pounds checked out Friday. Now there is the wait, this time for the IGFA to make it official.



Some Sidefacts:


El Suertudo, the name of the 60-foot Viking, is   Spanish for "the lucky one." Guy Yocum bought it in Florida  4 1/2 years ago and DiStefano spend three months "getting it California ready."

Yocum is 55, married to Myra and they have two college age children, a son and daughter, in school in Boulder. His concrete company in Corona is Guy Yocum Construction ("It didn't take me a lot of time to come up with that name") and has been in the concrete business for 33 years and is also in land development.

Plans for the tournament season are for the crew to return to Cabo to fish the Bisbee’s Black & Blue Marlin Tournament, and then the Los Cabos Tuna Jackpot Tournament, Nov. 7-10. I’m hoping we can show the tourney folks at the captains meeting some Go-Pro footage that was taken on the trip.

Jerry Brown Spectra line, 100-pound, was on all reels as backing. Why? Most super braid line companies either don’t know what their heavier lines will break at DiStefano said, or they break over the IGFA 130-pound limit for main lines. Most 130-pound braids break at around 160 pounds, he said. Better to play it safe, the captain said. 

The trip was planned for four to five days. The caught fish in several stops as they moved south and found black porpoise, with a nice meter reading of tuna that stopped the boat. Several fish were hooked in various ways (kite, flylined baits) and the boat's bait supply was getting low, and mainly dead baits were being used on the kite. The chunk line produced. The big fish came up in the chunk line, was spotted, was enticed with more chummed chunks, and then was targeted with a hooked chunk. 

They had landed fish to 200 pounds on the trip before the record breaker showed up. “Two hundred and twelve pounds is my previous record, but my son did get a 350 pounder on the boat last month,” said Yocum.

The Mustad Connection: That hook and the weight  might just make the catch eligible for the Mustad $1 million competition which offers registered anglers a chance to win a million dollars if they can catch a certified all tackle world record of certain species (including yellowfin tuna) before Sept. 30. Perfect timing. The million bucks would be paid out in $20,000 installments over 50 years. Yocum would have to live to 103 to get it all. The money would be paid on an insurance policy if the catch is not just an all-tackle record but it meets the requirements of the contest. It's no slam dunk, Yocum told WON last week. There’s a lot of fine print.

This is obviously a new Cabo record. Three years ago a 383-pound yellowfin won the Los Cabos Tuna Jackpot for the Fisherman team and remains the largest tournament yellowfin ever caught, anywhere. That fish's replica hangs on the wall of the Pisces Sportfishing office in Cabo, courtesy of Gray's and WON.   

Gray’s Taxidermy has the measurements and is planning on getting Yocum a replica of the fish for display in Cabo. It could go next to the 383 pounder in the Pisces Sportfishing office.


GUY (Holding the Melton's bent butt custom rod and Shimano 50W reel) AND HIS CREW of the El Suertudo with their monster 427-pound yellowfin that is a pending all-tackle IGFA yellowfin record.

Reader Comments
Sh** just got reel ! I'm on my way ! It's hot all around the Cape I see. Love the Gordo Banks; best fishing I've ever done has been done there. Congratulations to GUY SLOCUM.
Skip Borne
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