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Wednesday, November 19th, 2025

Breaking News for

Sportsmen Since 1968

Youth angler is 13th FishMaryland Master Angler

Landon Derbyshire, the 13th FishMaryland Master Angler, holds a red drum caught and released near Crisfield, Md., on Sept. 2, 2023. (Photo courtesy Maryland DNR)

Annapolis, Md. — Landon Derbyshire, of Eden, Maryland, has earned a Master Angler Milestone Award under the Maryland Department of Natural Resources’ FishMaryland program.

Derbyshire is the 13th Master Angler since the program began in 2019 and the second youth angler to win the award, having met his qualifications at age 15. The award recognizes recreational anglers who catch 10 trophy-sized fish of different species in Maryland.

Derbyshire targets a variety of saltwater and freshwater fish, including invasive species, along the lower Eastern Shore, Chesapeake Bay and Atlantic Ocean.

“I got into fishing because my dad took me pond fishing when I was around 5, and I really enjoyed it,” Derbyshire said.

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The FishMaryland program includes dozens of species from both salt and freshwater. Derbyshire submitted entries for all 10 catches and received individual certificates for each catch.

He caught and released his 10th FishMaryland eligible fish, a sand tiger shark, on a boat just beyond the breakers off of a Maryland ocean beach. His Master Angler certificate was awarded on Aug. 27, about two weeks before his 16th birthday.

Derbyshire’s qualifying catches were: carp – 31.5 inches, sheepshead – 24.5 inches, blue shark – 85 inches, red drum – 51 inches, striped bass- 45 inches, cobia – 53 inches, blueline tilefish – 28 inches, snakehead – 31 inches, spotted seatrout – 24 inches and sand tiger shark – 73 inches.

Derbyshire caught the qualifying fish in many different locations including hooking a snakehead in the inland tidal waters of Allen Pond, a cobia in the lower Chesapeake Bay and a blue shark off the Ocean City shore at the “Hot Dog,” a popular deep-water fishing spot.

“I would say my favorite fish to catch would be red drum,” Derbyshire said. “I like fishing for them because they put up a great fight, and they are a really cool-looking fish.”

He had set his sights on becoming the youngest Master Angler award winner. After 11-year-old angler Lucy Moore earned that title in May 2024, Derbyshire then determined he would work to achieve the award before his 16th birthday.

“I showed people I could do it before I was old enough to get a fishing license,” Derbyshire said. “I had a lot of fun catching these fish and would not have caught them without help from the great folks at Sea Hawk Sport Center in Pocomoke City. My advice is to never give up, and keep fishing.”

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