
Chris King of Los Molinos was fishing with John McGhee, owner of Legal Limit Sportfishing out of Berkeley, when he landed a pending new world record 342 lb. sevengill shark in San Francisco Bay on July 2, 2017.
That fish would eclipse the 308 lb. current world record and the previous state record of 276 pounds set by Cliff Brewer in Humboldt Bay on October 17, 1996.
King hooked the shark while fishing a salmon head in San Francisco Bay at 110 feet deep. He was using a 908 Black Diamond Phenix rod with a Boss Dauntless 400 reel with 65 lb. test XTREMEBRAID.
“It was a group of buddies that were on the trip,” said McGhee. “On that same trip, we also landed four limits of leopard sharks, along with keeping four other sixgills. We also lost two big sharks.”
They were fishing the South San Francisco Bay at 50 feet deep when the pending record fish hit. They hooked leopard sharks averaging 40 to 50 inches while using salmon and squid. “The big fish took 25 minutes to get in,” McGhee said.
After landing the shark, they had a hard time finding a certified scale that big. “We had to take it to the Recycle Zone to weigh it,” said McGhee. “We also took it to the CDFW and are now filling out the paperwork to get it designated as a state and IGFA record.”
The fish featured a 55 inch girth and length of 113 inches. “On a previous trip, we lost four fish and landed one sevengill over 300 pounds, but that big fish wasn’t quite as fat as this one,” he stated.