Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Russian plane crash kills Lokomotiv ice hockey players

Russian plane crash kills Lokomotiv ice hockey players

Page last updated at 19:01 GMT, Wednesday, 7 September 2011 20:01 UK






The crash scene shortly after accident took place in Yaroslavl
T

he deaths of 36 players and officials in a plane crash in Russia have been described as an "irreparable loss" by the Russian Ice Hockey Federation.
Those confirmed dead include former Swedish Olympic champion Stefan Liv and former New Jersey Devils player Alexander Vasyunov.
The plane was carrying the Lokomotiv Yaroslavl team to Minsk, where they were to play Dinamo Minsk

on Thursday.
Lokomotiv came third in the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL) last year.
The KHL is an international competition which pits teams from Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Latvia and Slovakia against each other.
According to the latest reports, there were 45 people on board - 37 passengers and eight crew. Forty-three people are reported to have died.
The team's coach was Canadian Brad McCrimmon, who also died in the incident. He took over the role in May and had previously been an assistant coach with the Detroit Red Wings.

SOME OF THE VICTIMS


  • Brad McCrimmon - Age 52, from Canada. A former Detroit Red Wings assistant who took over as Lokomotiv head coach in May. Played in 1,222 NHL games between 1979-97, compiling 81 goals and 322 assists
  • Pavol Demitra - Age 36, from Slovakia. A three-time NHL All-Star who helped Slovakia win a world championship bronze medal in 2003. Scored 304 goals in 847 NHL games. Three-time Olympian
  • Ruslan Salei - Age 36, from Belarus. A defenceman who played in 917 NHL games, totaling 45 goals and 149 assists for the Anaheim Mighty Ducks, Florida Panthers, Colorado Avalanche, and Detroit Red Wings
  • Stefan Liv - Age 30, from Sweden. A veteran goalkeeper who won Olympic gold with Sweden as a backup in 2006
  • Karlis Skrastins - Age 37, from Latvia. A defenceman who played in 832 NHL games, mainly for the Nashville Predators and Colorado Avalanche
  • Josef Vasicek - Age 30, from Czech Republic. A Czech forward who spent most of his NHL career with the Carolina Hurricanes
  • Karel Rachunek - Age 32, from Czech Republic. Played 371 NHL games with the Ottawa Senators, New York Rangers and New Jersey Devils, and won a world championship title with the Czech Republic in 2010
Among the dead are Ruslan Salei, captain of the Belarus national team, Slovakia's captain Pavol Demitra, three Czech international players - 2010 world champions Josef Vasicek, who won the Stanley Cup with Carolina Hurricanes in 2006, Jan Marek and Lokomotiv's captain Karel Rachunek.
German Robert Dietrich and Latvian Karlis Skrastins were also killed.
Tomas Kral, the president of the Czech Ice Hockey Association, was shocked to hear the news of the players' deaths.
"Jan Marek, Karel Rachunek and Josef Vasicek contributed greatly to the best successes of our ice hockey in recent years, first of all to the golden medals at the world championships in 2005 and 2010," Kral said.
"They were excellent players, but also great friends and personalities. That's how we will remember them."
There were also some members of the Russian national team on board - Gennadiy Churilov and Alexander Kalyanin.
Two players from Russia's youth team, Daniil Sobchenko and Yuri Urychev, who became under-21 world champions in 2011, also died in the crash.
International Ice Hockey Federation president Rene Fasel said: "This is the darkest day in the history of our sport. This is not only a Russian tragedy, the Lokomotiv roster included players and coaches from 10 nations.
"This is a terrible tragedy for the global ice hockey community with so many nationalities involved.
"Our thoughts and prayers are with family and friends of the victims. Despite the substantial air travel of professional hockey teams, our sport has been spared from tragic traffic accidents. But only until now."
Pavol Demitra Demitra had expected this season to be his last as a professional Russian Ice Hockey Federation president Vladislav Tretiak commented: "We have suffered an irreparable loss. I still cannot believe what happened. Our hockey has lost great players and coaches. It's just a terrible tragedy for the sport.
"We will do our best to ensure that hockey in Yaroslavl does not die, and that it continues to live for the people that were on that plane."
National Hockey League commissioner Gary Bettman also offered his condolences saying: "Though it occurred thousands of miles away from our home arenas, this tragedy represents a catastrophic loss to the hockey world, including the NHL family, which lost so many fathers, sons, team-mates and friends who at one time excelled in our league."
Russia and the other former Soviet republics have suffered some of the world's worst plane tragedies.
In 1979, an airliner heading from the Soviet republic of Uzbekistan to Minsk carrying the Pakhtakor Tashkent soccer team collided in mid-air with another passenger plane, killing 178 people, including 17 members of the Pakhtakor squad.
A plane crash in 1950 near the Russian city of Sverdlov, now called Yekaterinburg, claimed the lives of 13 players and officials in the air force's ice hockey squad.

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Hurricane Irene: New York issues evacuation orders


Hurricane Irene: New York issues evacuation orders

People walk along the waterfront in view of Liberty Island, New York Waterfront areas around the tip of Manhattan are among the most vulnerable in New York
 

New York's mayor has issued the city's first-ever mandatory evacuation notices, as the US faces up to the arrival of Hurricane Irene.

Low-lying areas around Manhattan and into Staten Island are at particular risk, according to projections issued by city authorities.
The city's transport systems, including the subways and airports, are to shut from 12:00 on Saturday (16:00 GMT).
Irene, a category two storm, is due to hit a swathe of east coast states.
Boasting winds of 100mph (160km/h) as of 17:00 local time on Friday (21:00 GMT), Irene is due to make landfall in North Carolina on Saturday.
North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, New York and Connecticut have all been placed under states of emergency. The mayor of Washington DC also declared an emergency in the US capital.
 

Start Quote

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg
You only have to look at the maps to understand how big this is and how unique it is”
Michael Bloomberg New York City Mayor
'Unique' storm
While states further down the coast, such as North and South Carolina, have experience with hurricanes, few in New York have recent memories of severe tropical storms.
The city was last hit by a major hurricane in 1985, when Hurricane Gloria passed almost directly over the city and caused widespread damage.
Announcing the evacuation plans in New York, Mayor Michael Bloomberg insisted residents in all five boroughs needed to pay heed to the warnings and follow orders.
"We are today issuing a mandatory, I repeat the word, mandatory evacuation order for all New Yorkers who live in the low-lying zone A coastal areas in all five boroughs that are at greatest risk of damage relating to Irene.

"You only have to look at the weather maps to understand how big this storm is and how unique it is, and it's heading basically for us."

The evacuation orders cover an estimated 300,000 people, many of whom will be expected to leave immediately or be limited by a transport network shut down pre-emptively as Irene's wind and rain nears the region.
"Waiting until the last minute is not a smart thing to do," Mr Bloomberg said. "This is life-threatening."
Staying put Ordinary life in New York is expected to come to a halt over the weekend as the city faces up to a storm forecast to remain a category one hurricane, with winds of up to 95mph (153km/h) when it arrives in the area.
Among the zones facing evacuation notices are the Battery Park district at the tip on Manhattan, and Coney Island, where locals and tourists alike usually flock in summertime.
Broadway shows, baseball games, music concerts and outdoor film festivals were all cancelled for the weekend, the New York Times reported.
New Yorkers buying supplies in an outdoor shop, 26 August 2011 Many in New York have been buying up supplies of survival gear
Those remaining in place will need to wait out the storm, with subway systems closed and Amtrak rail services in the north-eastern US being shut down until the storm danger has passed.
Airports operating by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey - including JFK, La Guardia and Newark - will close to arriving flights at the same time.
The airport closures are to prevent passengers being stranded at terminals when ground transportation is suspended, the Port Authority said.
However, the airports will remain open to departing passengers until further notice.
Abe Feinstein, 82, is one of those with memories of the last major hurricane to hit New York.
"I think I have nothing to worry about," he said. "I've been through bad weather before. It's just not going to be a problem for us."
Mr Feinstein, who lives in an eighth-floor apartment on Coney Island, told the Associated Press that he would be one of those staying put.
The elderly man, reliant on a walking frame to get around, said he had little choice.
"How can I get out of Coney Island? What am I going to do? Run with this walker?"