Trail Posted February 16, 2008 Posted February 16, 2008 In my only two years of fishing, I must say, smallmouth been it for me... Quote
Bass XL Posted February 17, 2008 Posted February 17, 2008 I would def. put rainbow trout in there too. Quote
bugman Posted February 17, 2008 Posted February 17, 2008 I fish Lake Eire and her tribs and I would have to agree that Smallies are a great fighting fish. I have caught many Rock Bass along Eire's breakwalls that really put up a fight. If they grew as big as Eire's Small Mouths I have to think about getting a bigger boat lol. If i'm fishing the rivers I'd have to say Steelhead and Salmon can put on a real air show. As for my vote I picked "Carp" just because of their intial run. I don't care what equipment I'm using or how hard I have the drag set, when a carp hits the bait there is no stopping them from running 30' down stream. Quote
SenkoBasser Posted February 17, 2008 Posted February 17, 2008 I'd have to say the best fight for me was the 8 lb. 3 oz. Salmon on my favorite beaded nymph I call the "Bumble Bee". That fish fed 6 of us with leftovers. Quote
Jake. Posted February 17, 2008 Posted February 17, 2008 Never caught a smallie, so I will say Shellcracker. A 1 lb+ shellcracker on a UL rod with 4 pound line is quite a fight. Quote
Fish Chris Posted February 17, 2008 Posted February 17, 2008 Well, ounce for ounce, I'd have to say it's the Sunfish.... but to be more specific, I'd say it was the Bluegill. Bowfins are radical strong, and a blast to catch :-) Smallies just don't give up ! But as far as just absolute "horse power" the strongest freshwater fish I've ever tangled with were Sturgeon ! {even when talking pound for pound}. I've caught little ones... like say 20 lb'ers, which made you think you had a good sized keeper ! But then with my 300 lb'er, I was using 80 lb braid, on light salt-water tackle, with my drag cranked down really tight, and it still took 55 minutes ! Thank God I was in a boat that the fish could just drag around. Honestly, I think a bigger boat would have made it a lot tougher, "unless" the Captain was good at chasing down fish. Anyway, to make a long story short, the next morning after I caught my PB Sturgeon, it honestly felt like I had been in a car accident ! Every muscle in my body was just aching. I even had aches in places I didn't know had any muscles ! And to make matters worse, none of my fishing buddies even felt sorry for me :-) LOL Peace, Fish Quote
Super User RoLo Posted February 17, 2008 Super User Posted February 17, 2008 But as far as just absolute "horse power" the strongest freshwater fish I've ever tangled with were Sturgeon ! {even when talking pound for pound}. Hmmm, coming from a multi-species aficionado who knows his onions, you've just whet my appetite for a big sturgeon! Chris if you haven't already, you ought to give "yellowfin tuna" a shot using standup tackle (stroker rod, gimbal belt & shoulder harness) I've seen quite a few votes for musky, pike and striped bass, which I find a little surprising. Needless to say, a true heavyweight fish, regardless of species is going to overcome the drag-setting and peel line off the spool. It's really very hard to factor-in the weight of the fish when evaluating its relative fighting ability (to factor OUT emotion). Nobody loves pike and musky fishing more than myself, but based on their body weight I've caught too many pike and musky that disappointed me, ditto largemouth bass. I've also boated many striped bass (not all of them) that were a big disappointment, in fact a bluefish of the same weight could tow the striper around the ocean. Roger Quote
Rattlinrogue Posted February 17, 2008 Posted February 17, 2008 I voted Largemouth bass,but on second thought a striper is a hard fighting fish. Quote
ejtaylor822 Posted February 17, 2008 Posted February 17, 2008 Smallies by far for a wrestling match for anything that I have caught. Â But, oz-for-oz, bluegills have just as much fight as a smallie just on a much smaller scale. Quote
Fish Chris Posted February 18, 2008 Posted February 18, 2008 Yes, you really have to hook a good Sturgy or two someday ! It's almost scary ! I mean, those things will make you feel so "powerless" or should I say, "Out of control of the situation" ! Especially a big one ! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ BTW, the OP said "freshwater" but yes, I hear "any fish in the Tuna family" is like pure horse power ! I guess the closest I've ever caught were some Mackeral on the micro-light once, and those 2 or 3 lb fish fought like any 10 llb freshwater sportfish I've ever caught ! Oh and Bat Rays !!! Holy $%#% Â ! Those things make you feel like you snagged the bumper of a passing school bus ! Just rediculously strong ! Peace, Fish Quote
Super User RoLo Posted February 18, 2008 Super User Posted February 18, 2008 I've ever caught some Mackeral on the micro-light once, and those 2 or 3 lb fish fought like any 10 llb freshwater sportfish I've ever caught ! Okay, now imagine going toe-to-toe with one of those weighing about 100 lbs! (yellowfin tuna that is). Oh and Bat Rays !!! Holy $%#% ! Those things make you feel like you snagged the bumper of a passing school bus ! Just rediculously strong ! Funny but I can picture that. With all that body area they must feel like a foul-hooked halibut ;D Roger Quote
LCpointerKILLA Posted February 18, 2008 Posted February 18, 2008 If it was brackish I would have to say snook. They hit hard and fight hard. They head strait for piling so fast you can hear the line cutting through the water. Quote
fishizzle Posted February 20, 2008 Posted February 20, 2008 smallies win for most time out of the water before they get to the boat Quote
mjhutch1116 Posted February 20, 2008 Posted February 20, 2008 I would have to pick the smallmouth, pound for pound for my money they are the best. Matt Quote
mt Posted February 21, 2008 Posted February 21, 2008 The psycho Spotted Bass of the Coosa River chain. M.T. Quote
Del from philly Posted February 21, 2008 Posted February 21, 2008 i gotta say, iv caught smallies up to 4 and half pounds...nothing too crazy but the hardest fight i ever had was with a 2.5 lb smallmouth from the schuykill river. i was expecting a 6 lb fish, the thing took me back out twice! that one fish fought harder than all of my 3 & 4+ fish Quote
esr1 Posted February 21, 2008 Posted February 21, 2008 I would have to  say smallmouth. Its the only fish to actually to injure my wrist on a strike on bullscholes a few years back. Quote
hamer08 Posted February 21, 2008 Posted February 21, 2008 Its hard to judge lb for lb, but I'm the most tired after messing with carp. It may be they are just so much bigger (typically 25 lbs), but when you hook them, they shoot down stream and you fight you every inch of the way back to the boat. Once they see the boat, you get to repeat the process. Smallies are problaby the hardest to land, since they shake the hook out frequently. Quote
jdw174 Posted February 21, 2008 Posted February 21, 2008 According to Homer Circle in the Apr issue of BassMaster Magazine, a rainbow trout and a smallmouth are about equal when it comes to how hard they fight..... Quote
jrhennecke Posted February 22, 2008 Posted February 22, 2008 Smallmouth for sure. Â Although the largemouth at Clearlake are pretty fiesty. Quote
Popeye Posted February 22, 2008 Posted February 22, 2008 I kinda wondered if anyone was going to mention sturgeons. I saw one once wallowing at the base of a dam and I thought it was the Loch Ness Monster! Huge, huge fish!! I have caught some large carp that put up a pretty darn good fight as well as some catfish. However, even though I've yet to hook up with one, a MUSKY does appear to be quite a fighter. I've seen them caught on "Lindner's Angling Edge" and, oh boy, the ones they were catching put up one heck of a tussle!! Big fish with nasty attitudes:o) I have caught numerous Northerns that could outfight a LMB anyday. Smallies HAVE to rank real close to the top of the list too! When I had my first sailboat here in 'Diego, I used to motor out into the Bay and me and my daughters would fish for sand sharks, skates, and bat rays! When you hook into a large bat ray, it's like snagging a log and they DO put up one heck of a fight! Quote
fishizzle Posted February 25, 2008 Posted February 25, 2008 Sturgeon are illegal to fish for in CT They do get huge though 8-10' maybe? Quote
osbornj2 Posted February 25, 2008 Posted February 25, 2008 While I agree that Smallies do put up one heck of a battle, and I do love fightin' 'em, I would have to say that, of the list, that stripers are certainly the hardest fighters. Â But, I have never caught a bowfin, and from what I'm reading from some of you, I need to try soon! Quote
Tokyo Tony Posted February 25, 2008 Posted February 25, 2008 I checked smallie because it's the hardest-fighting freshwater fish I've caught that was also on the list. Â I'd love to catch a sturgeon someday, but I have to say, of all the freshwater species I've caught, Peacock bass fight the hardest, even harder than smallmouth. Quote
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