Plane crash near DC resurfaces memories of 1961 tragedy that killed US skating team
Wednesday night's plane crash outside Washington, D.C., that killed a yet-unknown number of U.S. figure skaters, coaches and family members was devastating news for the skating community. It also rekindled painful memories of another tragedy nearly 64 years ago.
On Feb. 15, 1961, the entire U.S. figure skating team died in a plane crash in Belgium on its way to the that year's world championships in Prague, Czechoslovakia.
Among the 72 passengers killed in the crash were 18 skaters, plus 16 coaches, officials, judges and family members. It remains to this day one of the nation's greatest sports tragedies.
"Those were all my friends and coaches," 1960 Olympic bronze medalist Ron Ludington told the (Wilmington, Delaware) News Journal in a 2010 interview. "I grew up with them, and I traveled all over the world with them."
Ludington was supposed to be one of the coaches on the flight, but he had to back out at the last minute.
None of the 60 passengers and four crew members aboard Wednesday's American Airlines Flight 5342 survived the crash as the plane collided with a military helicopter as it was about to land at Washington Reagan National Airport.
The flight originated in Wichita, Kansas, the site of the recently completed U.S. Figure Skating Championships.
U.S. Figure Skating, the sport's national governing body, said in a statement that the athletes, coaches and family members were returning home from the National Development Camp held in conjunction with the U.S. championships.
"We are devastated by this unspeakable tragedy and hold the victims' families closely in our hearts," U.S. Figure Skating said in a statement.
The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: US figure skating suffered air tragedy in 1961 that killed US team
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
3 minutes ago
- USA Today
Claressa Shields vs Lani Daniels live updates: How to watch, fight time, price
Claressa Shields is set to defend her undisputed heavyweight title Saturday, July 26, against 'The Smiling Assassin.' That would be Lani Daniels, a New Zealander with an irrepressible smile she wears everywhere but inside the boxing ring. Daniels, 37, held the IBF world heavyweight title in 2023 and currently holds the IBF light heavyweight title. Quick and athletic, she's won seven fights in a row. Yet she's still a significant underdog against Shields, and for good reason. Daniels did not start boxing until she was 24. Shields, 30, started her boxing career at 15 and since then has won two Olympic gold medals, world titles five divisions and undisputed world titles in three divisions. In Shields' 80 fights as an amateur and pro, she has lost once (to Savannah Marshall in 2012). It's unlikely Daniels will hand Shields loss No. 2. USA TODAY Sports has you covered with updates, analysis and highlights from the Claressa Shields vs Lani Daniels card here: Claressa Shields vs Lani Daniels: Time, PPV, streaming for fight Claressa Shields will face Lani Daniels on Saturday, July 26 at the Little Caesars Arena in Detroit. Watch Shields v Daniels with DAZN PPV


Fox Sports
33 minutes ago
- Fox Sports
Cycling great Vos wins 1st stage of women's Tour de France with brilliant late attack
Associated Press PLUMELEC, France (AP) — Cycling great Marianne Vos won the opening stage of the women's Tour de France with a brilliant late attack on Saturday. The 38-year-old Dutchwoman overtook her Visma–Lease a Bike teammate Pauline Ferrand-Prévot approaching the line, and then held off Mauritian rider Kim Le Court in the closing meters of a grueling uphill finish. Ferrand-Prévot looked set to win the stage, but the Frenchwoman attacked too early from 600 meters and could not withstand the late surge from Vos, who punched the air with her left fist as she crossed the line. Moments later, Vos hugged an exhausted-looking Ferrand-Prévot, the Paris-Roubaix winner. 'I didn't now if Pauline was still hanging in the finish, but in the end I sprinted a bit with Kim,' Vos said, praising her teammate's effort. 'I'm really grateful to the team and to Pauline.' The hilly 78.8-kilometer (48.9-mile) route from Vannes to Plumelec in Brittany featured two small climbs and was completed in 1 hour, 53 minutes, 3 seconds by Vos — a multiple world champion, a former Olympic road race champion and a silver medalist at last year's Paris Games. Former Olympic time-trial silver medalist Marlen Reusser was one of 10 riders to crash some 30 kilometers from the end. She continued for a while but was clearly struggling and had to abandon the stage. Sunday's second stage from the port city of Brest to Quimper stays in Brittany and is slightly more hilly and longer at 110.4 kilometers. The nine-stage race, which ends Aug. 3, began a day before the end of the men's Tour, set to be won for a fourth time by Slovenian star Tadej Pogačar by a comfortable margin. The women's race could be far closer. Last year provided the smallest winning margin in the history of the women's and men's races, with Polish rider Kasia Niewiadoma beating 2023 champion Demi Vollering by four seconds, and Pauliena Rooijakkers only 10 seconds off the pace in third place. ___ AP sports: in this topic


USA Today
33 minutes ago
- USA Today
Stanley Cup visits with dolphins during Florida Panthers summer tour
Every member of the Stanley Cup-winning NHL team, per tradition, gets a day with the famed trophy. Florida Panthers general manager Bill Zito spent part of his day with the dolphins. Not the neighboring NFL team Miami Dolphins – but the aquatic mammals. He took the Stanley Cup to Theater of the Sea, a family-owned tourist attraction in Islamorada in the Florida Keys. Video from WPLG Local10 TV station in Miami showed Zito taking fish from the Stanley Cup's bowl and feeding a dolphin. Zito also posted photos of a sea lion eating out of the bowl, joining the tradition of dogs, horses and players' children eating from the top of the Stanley Cup. Zito played a key role in helping the Panthers winning a second consecutive Stanley Cup championship. He acquired Seth Jones and Brad Marchand before the NHL trade deadline. And he managed to get playoff MVP Sam Bennett, Marchand and Aaron Ekblad signed to new deals to give the Panthers a shot at a third consecutive title in 2025-26. Where has the Stanley Cup been? The Stanley Cup was taken to the Elbo Room in Fort Lauderdale and then took center stage at the Panthers' parade. It spent a couple days at the NHL draft then went in for engraving. The names of the 2024-25 winning Panthers are now on the Cup. Forward Matthew Tkachuk took the Stanley Cup to his St. Louis hometown and while visiting with first responders in Brentwood, Missouri, he posed with the trophy inside a jail cell. Jones spent his day with the Cup in the Dallas area. The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.