Scott Hamilton Tears Up Over American Airlines Plane Crash Death
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American Airlines Crash: U.S. Skater’s Chilling Final Plane Photo
Scott Hamilton is mourning the loss of several members of the figure skating community, who died in the deadliest air disaster in the United States in two decades.
Among the 64 people on American Airlines Flight 5342—which collided with an Army Black Hawk helicopter while approaching Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport and crashed into the Potomac River Jan. 29—included close to a dozen figure skaters, their families and coaches, who were flying home from the U.S. Figure Skating's National Development camp in Wichita, Kansas.
President Donald Trump has since confirmed there were no survivors among all 67 aboard both aircraft.
"I can't wrap my head around the last 36 hours," Hamilton, who won gold at the 1984 Winter Olympics, said tearfully on Today Jan. 31. "It's just been devastating and the loss is just beyond description. My heart is shattered."
The 66-year-old Olympic skater, who also runs a skating academy, had met a few of the members who perished in the crash at their national championships in Wichita last week.
"I got to see so many of these skaters and coaches and it's like a reunion every time we go," he said. "And for this to happen just days after those championships were over is just devastating, shocking—it just doesn't make any sense."
Hamilton also shared the figure skating community has come together amid the disaster: "It's a very tight-knit, very close-knit, very wonderful, caring, supportive community. We're no stranger to tragedy. This was just beyond devastation."
Rick Diamond/Getty Images for T.J. Martell Foundation
Among those killed in the collision—the first U.S. commercial plane crash since 2009 and its deadliest air disaster since 2001—were skaters Brielle Beyer, 12, Spencer Lane and Jinna Han, both 16, their mothers Justyna Magdalena Beyer, Christine Lane and Jin Han.
Before the plane took off, Spencer had shared a photo of one of the aircraft's wings, writing, wrote "ICT->DCA" on his Instagram Story, indicating the Wichita and D.C. airport codes.
Also among the victims were Russian skating coaches and married couple Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov, NBC News reported.
The pair, who are also Olympians, are parents of skater Maxim Naumov, 24, who had competed in Wichita and had taken an earlier flight home, the outlet reported.
"They were just wonderful, kind," Hamilton said. “Shishkova and Naumov were amazing national skaters that wanted to build their professional lives in America. Their son Max, I mean, he's an extraordinary talent. I actually sat with him for a nice visit in Wichita."
Read on for more information about the deadly collision...
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