
Last
year, Bill Crutchfield Sr. made a run at the big bucks in Maryland's "Diamond Jim" $1 million fishing tournament.
This year, his son got a different kind of big buck - a deer with
antlers massive enough to put most chandeliers to shame and obliterate a
state record almost two decades old.
"He does the fishing, and I do the hunting," said Bill Crutchfield
Jr., as he waited yesterday afternoon for state certification.

With a crowd of camera-phone-toting hunters and Department of Natural
Resources officials watching, Crutchfield hauled the carcass from the
refrigerator at Hitchcock Taxidermy in Severn for the tale of the tape.
The buck had 13 points on each 25-inch antler. The entire rack spanned
slightly more than 21 inches tip to tip. After measuring all the antler
tines and space between the prongs, Crutchfield's total score was 268
4/8 inches, breaking the mark set in 1987 of 228 4/8 inches (antlers are
measured in 1/8th-inch increments).
"That's stunning. That's a beast," said Paul Peditto, the head of
DNR's Wildlife and Heritage Service.
For Crutchfield, Monday afternoon's hunt in southern Charles County was
a waiting game that began just minutes after he settled into his tree
stand and heard a sound behind him in a marsh.
"I turned around and seen him lay down about 100 yards away," recalled
Crutchfield, 39, a Charles County native and a firefighter at the Indian
Head Naval Surface Weapons Center. "I seen him shake his head and could
see just a bit of his rack. I seen him last year and I knew he was big.
"To calm his nerves, he called a hunting buddy, who reminded Crutchfield
that he had plenty of daylight left and to take deep breaths.
About an hour passed as the hunter calculated the distance and thought
about the shot. Suddenly, about 40 yards behind the big buck, an
eight-point buck walked out.
Minutes later, "my deer stood up and it was over like that," said
Crutchfield, who after looking at the buck called his friend again to
alert him that the state record was in jeopardy.
To gain a spot in the national record books, Crutchfield will have to
let the antlers air-dry for 60 days and then submit them for additional
measurements to an official of the Boone and Crockett Club, the official
record-keeping organization for North American big game.
Because some bucks develop racks that do not have an equal number of
times on each side, the club divides entries into "typical," or
symmetrical, and "non-typical."
While the unsymmetrical antlers on Crutchfield's buck will never be
mistaken for the world record of 333 7/8 inches, they easily made the
185-inch minimum to be included in the next edition of the Boone and
Crockett award book.
Word of Crutchfield's accomplishment attracted a previous record holder,
Walt Lachewitz of Gambrills, to Hitchcock's shop, to swap stories and
snap pictures."
Sad? No," said Lachewitz, who in 1998 bagged a white-tailed deer on the
Eastern Shore that scored 185 7/8 inches. "I'm happy when someone gets
a big one because it doesn't happen often. You could hunt for 10 lifetimes
and not see a buck like that."