"Monster Shark Chomps Into Great White" is the catchy title at a Sky News story accidentally covering well what is about to happen:

A stunning picture shows a 10ft predator thrashing about with two massive chunks missing on either side of its body, off the Queensland coast.
Experts said its rival may be 20ft (about six metres) long, judging by the size of the huge bites.
As the 'Monster Shark' is G, the poor little White Shark equals the rest of the industry: navigation, mapping, location.
All just a bite away.
The quoted fisherman rounds it up:
"It certainly opened up my eyes.
I mean the shark that was caught is a substantial shark in itself (...)"

