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Whole Russian professional hockey team dies in a plane crash

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  • [HOLY S**T!] Whole Russian professional hockey team dies in a plane crash

    The crash of the Yak-42 aircraft, whose passengers included players and coaches of a team that includes foreign stars, plunged Russia's sports world into grief and marred a showcase political forum featuring President Dmitry Medvedev.

    The plane was carrying 37 passengers and eight crew to Minsk in Belarus when it crashed a few kilometers (miles) from the airport at Tunoshna outside Yaroslavl, 250 km (150 miles) north of Moscow, the Emergencies Ministry said.

    Citing preliminary information, the ministry said two people survived and were taken to hospital.

    The plane was carrying members of Lokomotiv -- a leading Continental Hockey League (KHL) hockey team based in Yaroslavl -- to a match in Minsk, KHL president Alexander Medvedev said in televised comments.

    "There has been a terrible tragedy," Medvedev said after the opening match of the league's season in the city of Ufa was interrupted by news of the crash, stunning spectators and sports officials. He announced a minute's silence and postponed the match.

    There was no immediate word on the identity of the victims. Lokomotiv's roster includes European and NHL stars, among them Czech national side players Karel Ranuchek, Jan Marek and Josef Vasicek, Slovakia's legend Pavol Demitra and Swedish goalkeeper Liv Stefan, according to the KHL.

    Its head coach is Canadian former Detroit Red Wings assistant Brad McCrimmon, according to the KHL.

    At the scene, a broken piece of the plane's light-blue fuselage lay half-submerged in a river on the edge of Tunoshna, a village near the airport, which has the same name.

    A police boat plied the waters and emergency workers waded in the shallows near a fire engine on shore. A few modest wooden houses stood just meters (yards) from the crash site.

    The Interfax news agency cited a security official as saying the plane caught fire after the crash.

    Citing an official at the state aviation agency Rosaviatsia, Interfax reported that the plane had trouble gaining altitude and hit an antenna beyond the runway.

    The crash occurred while Russia was hosting an international political forum in Yaroslavl that Medvedev, who has said he may run for a second term as president in March, was expected to address on Thursday.

    Medvedev's spokeswoman, Natalya Timakova, said he expressed his condolences and would alter his plans for the forum and visit the site of the crash, which came less than three months after a jet crash in northern Russia killed 45 people.

    Prime Minister Vladimir Putin ordered Transport Minister Igor Levitin to travel to the crash site on Wednesday and Medvedev sent his first deputy chief of staff, Vladislav Surkov.

    The crash was Russia's deadliest since June, when a Tupolev Tu-134 jet slammed into a roadside while trying to land in fog in the northern Russian city of Petrozavodsk, killing 45 people.

    In April 2010, Polish President Lech Kaczynski's Russian-built plane crashed near the western city of Smolensk in a thick fog, killing him and all 95 others on board.

  • #2
    The local emergencies ministry said the jet was taking members of the Lokomotiv Yaroslavl ice hockey team to the Belarus capital Minsk for the their first match of the 2011-2012 season.

    The team is coached by Canadian Brad McCrimmon and has several foreign players on the roster posted on its website.

    Former NHL star Pavol Demitra’s agent, Matt Keator, confirmed to the Associated Press that his client was one of the players killed in the crash.

    “This is just awful,” Keator said. “He was such a popular guy with everyone he has ever played with.”

    The Czech Republic’s Josef Vasicek, Jan Marek and Karel Rachunek, as well as Swedish Olympic champion Stefan Liv have also been confirmed to have died in the crash.

    Two accidents involving Tu-134 and An-24 jets this summer that killed a total 54 people prompted Medvedev to call for most of the aircraft to be retired by January 1 and the rest taken out in subsequent months.

    But that move was followed by a series of smaller air accidents as well as a Volga River boat disaster that killed 122 people who were taking a pleasure cruise.

    The accidents have tarnished Medvedev’s vision of a modern Russia that he promotes in messages ahead of presidential elections next year that can be also contested by Vladimir Putin — his more nationalist mentor and prime minister.

    Medvedev was due to speak at the forum on Thursday and sent his top political adviser Vladislav Surkov to the scene of the disaster.

    A Kremlin spokeswoman said Medvedev himself would arrive in Yaroslavl later Wednesday.

    Conference participants also held a minute of silence while the country’s hockey season kicked off with a somber message from the deputy head of Gazprom — the company that sponsors Russia’s Continental Hockey League (KHL).

    “I propose that we honour the memory of the dead with a minute of silence,” Gazprom number two Alexander Medvedev said at the season opening in the Ural Mountains city of Ufa.

    The match was later abandoned to applause from the crowd.

    Three-time Russian champion Lokomotiv Yaroslavl was founded in 1959 and last won the country’s title in 2002

    “I am at the airport right now,” the team’s general manager Yury Lukin told the R-Sport news agency.

    “I do not know what they are saying on the news, but things here are very serious,” he said.

    The start of Russia’s ice hockey league has been delayed in the wake of Wednesday’s crash.

    Lokomotiv Yaroslavl were scheduled to start their new KHL season on Thursday with a match at Minsk against local side Dynamo.

    The club, which was founded in 1959, won the Russian title in 1997, 2002 and 2003, clinching the league’s silver medal in 2008 and 2009.

    Yaroslavl also won bronze medals of the Russian league in 1998, 1999, 2005 and 2011

    Comment


    • #3
      Damn that's sad... RIP, plane crashes are one of the worst ways to go..

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      • #4
        RIP guys. Feel sorry for their families **.

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        • #5
          RIP sad news

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          • #6
            Rip..............

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            • #7
              Imagine if this was an NFL or EPL team, it would be crazy. RIP to those russians

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              • #8
                this is crazy. I wonder if this has ever happened before to any other sports team?

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                • #9
                  I've always been somewhat surprised this has never happened to an MLB team, with as many games played per season as they have (although of course multiple games are always played in each venue).

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Check_hooks View Post
                    this is crazy. I wonder if this has ever happened before to any other sports team?
                    In 1949 Italian soccer team that was top team in the country crashed in air plane same way. and in 1950 Russian hockey team died as well in air plane crash, so yes. This is not the first time. anyways..RIP again.

                    Comment

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