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Post by JETStender on Sept 8, 2011 12:07:41 GMT -6
I thought I read one report that said that is was a 42 passenger plane with 43 confirmed dead(45 on board)... I mean it would be heavy for regular passengers let alone a hockey team with full gear. Really tragic. The model of the plane was a Yak-42, it's a 120 seat plane with only 45 passengers. I doubt it was overloaded.
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Post by bigwillyca on Sept 8, 2011 12:45:59 GMT -6
I thought I read one report that said that is was a 42 passenger plane with 43 confirmed dead(45 on board)... I mean it would be heavy for regular passengers let alone a hockey team with full gear. Really tragic. The model of the plane was a Yak-42, it's a 120 seat plane with only 45 passengers. I doubt it was overloaded. Thanks for the clarification.
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Post by Lions67 on Sept 9, 2011 19:44:21 GMT -6
here is the link to the memorial in Minsk where the team was to open their season. very moving, very sad and great class shown by the Minsk club and their supporters.
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Post by Lions67 on Sept 9, 2011 20:06:14 GMT -6
watching the Minsk players skating down the middle of the ice between the pictures of the players from Locomotive putting pucks into the net was extremely moving.
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Post by TheDeuce on Sept 12, 2011 9:34:25 GMT -6
MOSCOW - The only member of a top Russian hockey team to survive a plane crash that killed 44 people died Monday of his injuries in a Moscow hospital. The Vishnevsky hospital said 26-year-old Alexander Galimov died of the severe burns that covered about 90 per cent of his body, despite the best efforts of doctors in its burn unit, considered one of the best in Russia. The crash Wednesday of a chartered Yak-42 jet outside the western city of Yaroslavl took the lives of 37 players, coaches and staff of the local Lokomotiv Yaroslavl ice hockey club. The only other person to survive, flight crew member Alexander Sizov, was moved out of intensive care and into a general ward at Moscow's Sklifosovsky hospital, the RIA Novosti news agency reported Monday. Unlike many other members of Lokomotiv who were European Union citizens and once played in the NHL, Galimov was a native of Yaroslavl and a product of its youth program. His death is certain to be deeply mourned in the city, where the team's consistently strong performance was a source of great pride. At rallies following the crash, fans chanted "Galimov, live for the whole team!" and other slogans dedicated to him. "All of Yaroslavl, all of the country, all of the world followed the doctors' words, believing, hoping, praying that he would defeat death and remain with us," Yaroslavl Gov. Sergei Vakhrukov said. The governor described Galimov, a forward, as a fan favourite who remained true to his home club for many years. "He carried the team spirit of Lokomotiv and through his indomitable character often reversed the course of the most difficult games," Vakhrukov said. A memorial ceremony Saturday in the Lokomotiv ice arena drew an estimated 100,000 people, including Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. The crash, one of the worst ever aviation disasters in sports, shocked all of Russia and the international hockey community. The team was heading to Minsk, Belarus, to play its opening game of the Kontinental Hockey League season when the three-engine plane crashed into the Volga River bank shortly after takeoff and burst into flames. Investigators say they have come to no conclusions yet about the cause of the crash. ca.sports.yahoo.com/top/news?slug=capress-eu_russia_crash-8204676m.
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Post by Ric O. on Sept 12, 2011 17:59:59 GMT -6
What a horrific way to go... poor guy.
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Post by IantheD on Sept 14, 2011 14:50:23 GMT -6
Found out my dad used to play shinny hockey with Igor Korolev when he played with the Jets. Turns out, when Igor first came here he didn't know anyone so he asked if he could hang out with my dad so he could learn about the city. He was shocked when he found out he died in the crash.
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