2020 IGFA Fishing Hall of Fame Inductees
DANIA BEACH, FL – In recognition of their extraordinary contributions to recreational angling around the world, The International Game Fish Association (IGFA) today named five fishing greats to the 2020 class of the IGFA Fishing Hall of Fame.
This year’s inductees include pelagic game fish researcher Dr. Barbara Block; famed billfish angler and conservationist Jose Campos; marine conservationist Ken Hinman; game fish advocate Patrick Gay; and fly fishing extraordinaire Dave Whitlock.
Elected unanimously by the IGFA Board of Trustees, the 2020 class will join 131 legendary anglers, scientists, conservationists, writers and fishing industry leaders whose contributions to sport fishing are forever preserved and celebrated in the IGFA Fishing Hall of Fame.
“The 2020 class is a diverse group of extraordinary individuals that have certainly earned their entrance into the IGFA Fishing Hall of Fame,” said IGFA President Jason Schratwieser. “Their work truly embodies the IGFA’s commitment to game fish conservation and the promotion of ethical angling practices, and we look forward to honoring them in September.”
The 2020 IGFA Fishing Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony will be held on Saturday, September 12, 2020, at Johnny Morris’ Wonders of Wildlife National Museum and Aquarium in Springfield, Missouri. The 2020 class will take their honored places alongside fishing luminaries, including Isaak Walton, Michael Lerner, Francesca LaMonte, Zane Grey, Mary Orvis Marbury, Ernest Hemingway, Ted Williams, Bill Dance, Mark Sosin, Lee and Joan Wulff, Flip Pallot, Alfred C. Glassell Jr., Kip Farrington, and Curt Gowdy, just to name a few.
Hall of Fame Inductees:
Dr. Barbara Block
Dr. Barbara A. Block holds the Charles and Elizabeth Prothro Professorship at Stanford University. Her research focuses on how large pelagic fish utilize the open ocean spanning from genomics to biologging. She and her team have pioneered the successful development and deployment of electronic tags on tunas, billfishes, and sharks. The combination of lab and field research has led to a rapid increase in the understanding of movement patterns, population structure, physiology and behaviors of pelagic fish and sharks. Dr. Block was Chief Scientist for the Tagging of Pacific Predators program (TOPP), organized under the Census of Marine Life. This international program succeeded in placing 4,000 electronic tags on 23 predators in the North Pacific to understand how pelagic animals use the North Pacific ecosystem. She is also the co-founder of the IGFA Great Marlin Race. Block began her oceanographic career at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution with Dr. Francis Carey and earned a Ph.D. in 1986 at Duke University. She was an assistant professor at the University of Chicago and joined the Stanford faculty in 1994. Block has published 200 peer-reviewed papers and has received the National Science Foundation Young Investigator Award, a MacArthur Fellowship, a Pew Fellowship for Marine Conservation, the Rolex Award for Enterprise, and a Benchley Award for Ocean Science. Block founded the Tag-A-Giant (TAG) at The Ocean Foundation to elevate the science and conservation initiatives for bluefin tunas globally. Block has helped produce five films with Discovery, Disney and National Geographic, the most recent award-winning film on white sharks is Blue Serengeti.
Jose Campos
With more than 60 years of offshore experience, Captain Jose Campos is one of Puerto Rico’s most accomplished and respected anglers. A past Chairman and Hall of Fame Member of the Club Náutico de San Juan, Campos has been a promoter of both billfish tagging and fishing tourism in Puerto Rico. He presented a paper at the first IGFA World Angling Conference in 1984 and was appointed Navigation Commissioner under the Puerto Rico Department of Natural and Environmental Resources, where he helped enhance the enforcement of Puerto Rico’s fishing and boating regulations. As Puerto Rico’s representative to the Caribbean Fishery Management Council, Campos was instrumental in the development and implementation of a comprehensive management plan for billfish and other marine species, and in establishing a catch-and-release program for the Caribbean. A skilled angler, Campos has won several prestigious fishing tournaments and was the captain of the team winning the highest point total in the history of the International Bluefin Tuna matches in the Bahamas. As a captain, he has been instrumental in the catch of 1,500 billfish, including 35 marlin over 400 pounds and has personally caught over 300 blue marlin.
He has served on several appointed advisory positions to the U.S. government, including the U.S. Advisory Committee to the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas, the Atlantic Highly Migratory Species Advisory Panel, and the federal Ecosystems Principles Advisory Panel. Hinman has published hundreds of articles on marine conservation issues, including monthly conservation columns for Marlin (1986-1997) and Salt Water Sportsman (1997-2005) magazines. He organized the 2nd International Billfish Symposium in 1988, for which he earned The Billfish Foundation’s Conservation Award; was given the Carl R. Sullivan Fishery Conservation Award from the American Fisheries Society in 2002, and in 2013 accepted the IGFA Conservation Award for Wild Oceans’ work with the IGFA in the development and passage of The Billfish Conservation Act of 2012.
Ken holds a science degree in Environmental Conservation from the University of New Hampshire.
Patrick Gay, AM
Patrick Gay is one of Australia’s best-known anglers, has held many Australian records and has several IGFA World Records to his credit. He is the founder of Gay Constructions and the Gold Coast City Marina and Shipyard. Gay began fishing at an early age and, in 1979, purchased and put into charter the famous Sea Venture, captained by the legendary Captain Dennis “Brazakka” Wallace, recipient of the IGFA’s Tommy Gifford Award. Gay was an IGFA Representative in Queensland for 28 years and has held a number of government-appointed positions, including that of the Director of the Queensland Fish Board. Gay was also president of both the Queensland Game Fishing Association and the Game Fishing Association of Australia, served as an original Board Member of the Gold Coast Waterways Authority, and was the founding Governor of the Pacific Game Fish Research Foundation. In 2007, he was awarded the Order of Australia (AM) for his services to the construction industry and the sport of game fishing and was inducted into the Cairns Game Fishing Hall of Fame in 2016.
Dave Whitlock
Dave Whitlock is a native Oklahoman who is well-known in the world of fly fishing for his talents in painting, illustrating, writing, photography, fly fishing, fly tying and lecturing. Dave’s art and writing appear regularly in many fly fishing and sports publications such as Fly Fisherman Magazine, Fly Fishing, and Tying Journal, Trout Magazine and others. He’s is also the author of five books. He has been the recipient of many awards for his fly-fishing and fly-tying contributions, including induction into the National Fresh Water Fishing Hall of Fame, the Trout Hall of Fame, Catskill Fly Fishing Center and Museum Fly Fishing Hall of Fame and the Arkansas Game & Fish Hall of Fame. Whitlock’s other honors include the Max Ander’s Wild Trout Award for his work on the propagation of wild trout, the Fly Fishers International Conservation Man of the Year Award, Buz Buzeck Memorial Fly Tying Award and the Dr. James E. Henshall Award for his work in warm-water fishing and conservation. He is also the recipient of the Lifetime Contribution Award from the National American Fly Tackle Trade Association.
Ken Hinman
He has served on several appointed advisory positions to the U.S. government, including the U.S. Advisory Committee to the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas, the Atlantic Highly Migratory Species Advisory Panel, and the federal Ecosystems Principles Advisory Panel. Hinman has published hundreds of articles on marine conservation issues, including monthly conservation columns for Marlin (1986-1997) and Salt Water Sportsman (1997-2005) magazines. He organized the 2nd International Billfish Symposium in 1988, for which he earned The Billfish Foundation’s Conservation Award; was given the Carl R. Sullivan Fishery Conservation Award from the American Fisheries Society in 2002, and in 2013 accepted the IGFA Conservation Award for Wild Oceans’ work with the IGFA in the development and passage of The Billfish Conservation Act of 2012.
Ken holds a science degree in Environmental Conservation from the University of New Hampshire.
Please visit IGFA Fishing Hall of Fame to learn more.
About the IGFA
Founded in 1939, the IGFA is a nonprofit organization committed to the conservation of game fish and the promotion of responsible, ethical angling practices through science, education, rulemaking, record keeping and recognition of outstanding accomplishments in the field of angling. The IGFA also maintains world records in freshwater, saltwater, fly fishing and junior angler categories. The IGFA has members in more than 100 countries.