Once again, figure skaters representing the past, present and future of the sport perished in a catastrophic plane crash – devastating a global community far too familiar with tragedy.
No one survived the midair collision between an American Airlines passenger jet and a Black Hawk military helicopter Wednesday night, authorities said.
“U.S. Figure Skating can confirm that several members of our skating community were sadly aboard American Airlines Flight 5342, which collided with a helicopter yesterday evening in Washington, D.C.,” read a statement from the organization, America’s governing body for figure skating.
“These athletes, coaches, and family members were returning home from the National Development Camp held in conjunction with the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Wichita, Kansas. We are devastated by this unspeakable tragedy and hold the victims’ families closely in our hearts.”
US Figure Skating has not confirmed the total number of skaters killed.
But a married pair of skating champions, two young skaters and their mothers were among those lost in the plane crash, the Skating Club of Boston said Thursday.
The multigenerational loss evoked painful memories of the 1961 plane crash that killed 73 people – including all 18 members of the US figure skating team headed to the world figure skating championships in Prague, Czechoslovakia. That disaster killed not just elite athletes but also their coaches, leaving seismic voids in US figure skating for generations to come.
World champions and parents of an elite skater perish in the crash
Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov broke the mold of serious, stoic Russian pairs teams and won legions of fans worldwide. Their cheerful, tongue-in-cheek performance won the 1994 world championships.
Like many top Russian skaters in the 1990s, Shishkova and Naumov moved to the US and became coaches. The couple is survived by a son, 23-year-old Maxim Naumov, a US men’s figure skater who just earned fourth place at the national championships on Sunday.
Shishkova, Naumov and their son represented the Skating Club of Boston, which also lost several other members in the crash.
The tragedy will have a profound impact on the world figure skating championships in March, which will take place in Boston.
A longtime friend of the couple, renowned figure skating coach Rafael Arutyunyan, is mourning the death of his friends even as he continues to train his skaters.
“They were very nice people, very good professionals and very good people,” Arutyunyan told CNN. “I cannot believe they don’t exist in this world anymore.”
His trainees practiced in silence on Thursday as a tribute to the victims.
“I came to my rink and I said, no music today,” he said.
Arutyunyan — who’s coached legendary skaters like Michelle Kwan, Sasha Cohen and Nathan Chen – said after the 1961 crash, it became commonplace for teams not to travel together, and he hopes that athletes and coaches will travel less. “We are responsible for our kids,” he said.
“I know all these coaches,” he said. “All of our community was respectful to them and liked them, so I feel they’ll stay with us forever.”
Skaters Jinna Han and Spencer Lane, along with their mothers Jin Han and Christine Lane, were also killed in the crash, the Skating Club of Boston said.