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Angler reels in record-breaking fish in Connecticut. ‘Is it a baby Hippo?’

An angler set a record in Connecticut by catching a fish weighing more than 58 pounds.
An angler set a record in Connecticut by catching a fish weighing more than 58 pounds. Getty Images/iStockphoto

An award-winning angler set a state record in Connecticut by reeling in a massive fish, one of his favorite species to catch.

Norbert Samok hooked a Common Carp at Lake Zoar on June 21, nearly three weeks after another angler broke Connecticut’s record for the species, according to Connecticut Fish and Wildlife.

The huge fish weighed over 58 pounds and measured more than 44 inches in length — 13 pounds heavier than the carp caught by the previous record holder, Rafal Wlazo, on June 1, the state agency said in a June 25 news release.

Wlazo was also at Lake Zoar, which is a reservoir along Housatonic River, when Samok landed his catch, Connecticut Fish and Wildlife wrote on Facebook.

He took videos and snapped photos of Samok, including one shared by the agency that shows Samok holding up his fish.

Norbert Samok with the carp he caught at Lake Zoar in Connecticut on June 21.
Norbert Samok with the carp he caught at Lake Zoar in Connecticut on June 21. Rafal Wlazo Connecticut Fish and Wildlife

“Holy CARP (or is it a baby Hippo?)!,” wildlife officials captioned the post.

Samok, of New York State, is a member of the USA Carp Squad, according to the U.S. Angling Confederation

Having grown up in Hungary, his “European (background) spurns him on to target carp as a main fishing pleasure,” reads his bio on USAngling’s website.

He regularly competes in U.S. carp fishing competitions and has won multiple trophies, according to USAngling.

The record Samok set with the carp from Lake Zoar could prove tough to beat, Connecticut Fish and Wildlife wrote in its post.

When Wlazo set the previous state record for common carp on June 1, his catch weighed more than 45 pounds, the agency said.

Wlazo is the founder of carp fishing gear store Carp Angler in New York.

He congratulated Samok for beating his record, according to Connecticut Fish and Wildlife, saying “from one champ to another!”

Lake Zoar is about a 15-mile drive northwest from New Haven.

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Julia Marnin
McClatchy DC
Julia Marnin covers courts for McClatchy News, writing about criminal and civil affairs, including cases involving policing, corrections, civil liberties, fraud, and abuses of power. As a reporter on McClatchy’s National Real-Time Team, she’s also covered the COVID-19 pandemic and a variety of other topics since joining in 2021, following a fellowship with Newsweek. Born in Biloxi, Mississippi, she was raised in South Jersey and is now based in New York State.
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