<Li> There were rather extraordinary measurements for tigers, such as lengths of over 12 ft (370 cm) for 2 Bengal tigers shot in Kumaon and near Oude at the end of the 19th century, a total length of 360 cm (11.8 feet) for the Caspian tiger of Prishibinske, and a total length of slightly under 420 cm (13.8 feet) for a large Siberian tiger (Mazák and Volf, 1967, from Barclay, 1915), but there were issues, like that skin had been removed . Skin that is removed from flesh can be stretched to give exaggerated measurements . For example, two lions killed by F.C. Selous in Mashonaland respectively measured 9 ft 11 in (302 centimetres) and 9 ft 1 in (277 centimetres), at extreme length in a straight line, before skinning, and 11 ft 9 in (358 centimetres) and 11 ft (340 centimetres), after skinning . </Li> <Li> Male African lions measured 1.70--2.50 metres (5.6--8.2 feet) (Nowak and Paradiso, 1983). The longest African lion in the wilderness apparently was a Katanga lion that was shot near Mucusso in southern Angola, during October 1973, and unusually measured nearly 360 cm (11.8 ft), in total . Though Brakefield agreed with Guinness on the weight of the Transvaal lion, they did not agree about the Angolan lion being this long . </Li> <Li> For two Gir lions, Colonel Fenton and Count Scheibler gave head - and - body measurements of 6 ft 6 in (198 cm) each, with tail - lengths of 2 ft 11 in (89 cm) and 2 ft 7 in (79 cm), and total lengths of 9 ft 5 in (287 cm) and 9 ft 3 in (282 cm), respectively, making them similar to Central African lion . A record for the length of the Indian lion, including the tail, was 2.92 m (9.6 ft) (Sinha, 1987). </Li> <Ul> <Li> Between the pegs, Siberian tigresses measured 2.40--2.75 metres (7.9--9.0 feet), Bengal tigresses measured 2.40--2.65 metres (7.9--8.7 feet), Caspian tigresses measured 2.40--2.60 metres (7.9--8.5 feet), Indochinese tigresses measured 2.30--2.55 metres (7.5--8.4 feet), South Chinese tigresses measured 2.20--2.40 metres (7.2--7.9 feet), Sumatran tigresses measured 2.15--2.30 metres (7.1--7.5 feet), and Bali tigresses measured 1.90--2.10 metres (6.2--6.9 feet) (Mazák, 1981). </Li> <Li> African lionesses measured 1.40--1.75 metres (4.6--5.7 feet) (Nowak and Paradiso, 1983). </Li> </Ul>

Who win in a fight lion or tiger