Dixon native wins national ice fishing title

Big fish story

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Matt Stephan/Special to SVM
Ryan Wilson, a 2000 Dixon graduate, casts his line during the Mille Lacs National Championships in ice fishing on Dec. 15. Wilson and his partner Brandon Newby won the event.
Matt Stephan/Special to SVM Ryan Wilson, a 2000 Dixon graduate, casts his line during the Mille Lacs National Championships in ice fishing on Dec. 15. Wilson and his partner Brandon Newby won the event.
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Wilson and Newby hooked 13.52 pounds worth of fish the soggy first day to lead by 1.8 pounds.

“We actually hoped the bite got tougher,” Newby said.

Prayer answered

Mother Nature honored the request and, as a cold front rolled in, so did the competition. Teams formed a 15-foot-radius halo around the leaders for the bone-chilliing second day.

“We saw a lot of people on Sunday who became our buddies,” Wilson said. “Fifteen feet is something they usually just eyeball. But on Sunday, it was right down to the inch.”

Competitors sheepishly asked if they could fish near the front-runners.

“I said, ‘You’d be stupid not to,’ ” Wilson said. “If you weren’t trying to crowd us on Sunday, I’m not sure what you were thinking.” 

Despite the cold front pretty much killing the perch bite, Wilson and Newby still caught the required eight by mid-morning Sunday. They again had their eight crappies by 9 a.m. and steadily upgraded with bigger ones.

Their 32 fish totaled 24.83 pounds – a record-setting haul – to win by 6½.

“It wasn’t just a win,” Newby said. “It was a domination-type of deal.”

They became the first team from Wisconsin to win a national title, and the first duo, period, to win weight on both days.

“Winning Day 1 was winning a playoff game,” Newby said. “Winning Day 2 was the Super Bowl.”

They both got Super Bowl-worthy gold rings – valued at $3,200 apiece – as well as a $7,500 payout that Wilson says will simply allow them to keep competing. They've got two events in the circuit lined up for February.

Fish tale of redemption

So what's next after winning the whole shabang? Building a dynasty.

“The only thing we can do better is go out and win it again next year,” Wilson said. “It gives us confidence. If the fish aren’t biting for whatever reason, you can think, ‘If anyone’s going to get these fish to bite, it’s me.’ "

“There’s more to be won,” Newby said. “To be honest, we should be able to go anywhere and win.”

The win spelled redemption for Wilson, who toiled in unfamiliar territory at the Ice Fishing World Championships last February in Kazakhstan.

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