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'Heart beating out of his chest': Teen's 45-minute fight with 2m shark off city's pier

Author
Jazlyn Whales,
Publish Date
Mon, 30 Mar 2026, 1:31pm

'Heart beating out of his chest': Teen's 45-minute fight with 2m shark off city's pier

Author
Jazlyn Whales,
Publish Date
Mon, 30 Mar 2026, 1:31pm

A Christchurch teenager has earned serious bragging rights after reeling in a 2m shark during a dramatic late-night fishing effort.

Luca Curnow, 14, set out with a friend on Sunday night to New Brighton pier, a popular spot for those trying to score their next catch.

But the young pair hooked something far bigger than they ever anticipated – a 2m-long sevengill shark, reeled in just after 1am.

Proud mother Annah Stevenson said the pair called for backup when they realised what had caught onto the line.

“My partner had got a phone call when the boys had hooked something, so he shot down to support them,” she said.

The height of the pier meant that lifting the shark directly was not an option, as the line would snap under the weight of the animal.

 Luca Curnow with his two-metre-long shark catch. Photo / Supplied
Luca Curnow with his two-metre-long shark catch. Photo / Supplied

Luca threw himself into a 45-minute battle with the shark at the end of the line, carefully working the animal along the pier and down towards the shoreline.

“He had to fight the line the whole way down, reeling it in and being gentle and letting it swim out and reeling it back in,” Stevenson said.

“His heart was beating out of his chest.”

The bait used for the catch. Photo / Supplied
The bait used for the catch. Photo / Supplied

Eventually, Luca managed to tame the shark up to shore.

“They managed to get it onto the beach and have a couple of photos. It was quite a production,” Stevenson said.

Unhooking the shark proved to be another lengthy task.

“His friend sat down and held the jaw open of the shark while my partner and Luca were arms deep in its mouth to unhook it,” she said.

The shark was then successfully released back into the water.

Stevenson said Luca had been planning a big catch for several days, although the outcome was beyond anything he had predicted.

“I don’t think he was quite anticipating a shark,” she said.

Workers repairing the New Brighton Pier will be inside watertight tubes on the seabed. Photo / Christchurch Star
Workers repairing the New Brighton Pier will be inside watertight tubes on the seabed. Photo / Christchurch Star

Although surfcasting is still relatively new for the teenager, Stevenson said that her son has developed a strong passion for fishing since he was young.

“He just researches all the time, he’s always looking at new methods and watching his idols,” Stevenson said.

Luca also shares his fishing experiences online through his TikTok account, Fishing Bros NZ, where he documents his catches.

“His absolute passion at the moment is fishing, and he’ll take any opportunity to go to different bodies of water,” Stevenson said.

“He just disconnects, and he says it gives him an endorphin rush.

“It’s definitely a nice feeling as a mother knowing that something so wholesome is occupying his time.”

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