![]() ![]() Both main beams exceed 28 4/8 inches, the inside spread is 21 6/8 inches, and four tines range from 10 2/8 to 13 4/8 inches. That said, it has an impressive 12-point rack with one abnormal point. John Lee shot this deer in Madison Perish, but little more is known about the deer. The Louisiana record dates back nearly 80 years, all the way to 1943. Louisiana This monster has been tops in Louisiana for nearly a century. Mass is on the weaker side for a state record, but it has a 21 6/8-inch inside spread, respectable main beams over 26 and 27 inches, and six tines over 10 inches that range from 10 to 14 3/8 inches. Its 6×6 rack also has two short abnormal points. Thanks to its impressive size, it’s one of 19 typicals to hit or surpass the 200-inch mark, and sits at No. The biggest typical in Kansas was taken by Albert J. Kansas You’re looking at the 19th biggest typical whitetail of all time. It also features great mass measurements, beam length, and spread. The top typical deer in the Hawkeye State, it sports a 13-point rack with scary-good tine length. The Brenigar buck was taken in 1969, by David Brenigar in Wapello County, Iowa. Indiana Nevermind its state status, this buck is the second biggest typical whitetail- ever. With long beams, tall tines, and great mass, this is a deer for the ages, and is the current, longstanding P&Y world-record typical. This 7×6 is impressive and lacks nothing. Bagged in Peoria County, Illinois, in 1965, it’s held the state record for nearly 60 years. Johnson buck is a deer many people are familiar with. IllinoisĪ truly historical whitetail deer, and the No. Only one of eight mass measurements is over 4 4/8 inches, and one is less than 4, which is rare for a state record. Plus, it’s hard to beat four tines over 10 inches, and two more that nearly reach that. Most interesting are its 9 6/8- and 7 4/8-inch brow tines. Overall, it features a huge 7×6 configuration, plus a short abnormal point. This rack sports a unique, sweeping antler style with long tines and beams. The Idaho record whitetail deer was bagged by Ronald M. Georgia This record buck has been in the books for more than half a century. All but one mass measurement is 4 to 5 inches in circumference. This 10-pointer has impressive 26-plus-inch main beams, a 20 2/8-inch inside spread, and four tines over 13 inches. 1 by nearly 4 inches here, it sits at No. Milam buck was bagged in Sussex County, Delaware, in 1978. Three of eight mass measurements are 5 inches or greater. A clean 5×5, it sports a 23-inch inside spread, and one beam surpasses the coveted 30-inch threshold. ![]() It was taken 29 years ago in Litchfield County. While this deer ranks 1,301 overall, the Lovrin buck is still king of Connecticut. Incredibly, one tine measures more than 10 inches, another over 12 inches, two bigger than 13 inches, and one over 14 inches. ![]() Kinney bagged the buck on November 8, 2003, in El Paso County. Kinney buck is a massive western whitetail. Scoring a whopping 192 1/8 inches, the Eddie L. Colorado Colorado’s typical record was taken in 2003. ![]() Five of eight mass measurements are 5 inches or more. Five tines surpass 10 inches-two of which are greater than 12 inches. The tip-to-tip spread is 21 7/8 inches, and the inside spread is 27 5/8 inches, which is also astounding. Both main beams on this record whitetail deer are less than an inch from hitting the 30-inch mark. Loyd harvested the massive whitetail in Lee County, Arkansas. Taken in 2018, the Loyd buck dethroned the 195 1/8-inch Ayecock deer, which only held top honors for three years. Arkansas Arkansas’s B&C typical whitetail just broke the 200-inch mark. ![]()
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