[Deathwatch] Nodar Kumaritashvili, athlete, 21
Notification of departing celebrities
deathwatch at slick.org
Fri Feb 12 19:40:03 PST 2010
February 13, 2010
Luge Athlete's Death Casts Pall Over Games
By JOHN BRANCH
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/b/john_branch/index.html?inline=nyt-per>
and JONATHAN ABRAMS
VANCOUVER, British Columbia --- The Vancouver Olympics were set to open
with the most daunting and dangerous collection of events the Winter
Games had ever seen, but before the competitions even began, a luge
athlete died in a high-speed crash that overshadowed Friday night's
opening ceremony and intensified concerns over the safety of the Games
themselves.
The athlete, Nodar Kumaritashvili of the Republic of Georgia, lost
control of his luge sled near the end of his training run while
traveling nearly 90 miles an hour --- about as fast as any luger had
ever gone before the Whistler Sliding Center track was completed in 2007.
The sled, with Kumaritashvili riding atop on his back, feet first,
bounced off a side wall and threw Kumaritashvili over the short,
ice-covered concrete wall on the left. He slammed into vertical supports
that hold a canopy and lights over the course. Medics arrived
immediately, and Kumaritashvili was pronounced dead at a hospital.
Kumaritashvili, from Borjomi, Georgia, was 21.
Hours after the accident, Georgia's Olympic delegation wore black
armbands as they marched in the opening ceremony.
The accident will raise questions not only about the safety of the track
but also about the International Olympic Committee
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/i/international_olympic_committee/index.html?inline=nyt-org>'s
shift in recent years toward increasingly dangerous sports. It has added
events like skier cross and snowboarding that feature high drama driven
by danger. Although luge is not new to the Games, technology and track
design have rapidly pushed speeds higher.
Canadian sports officials will face criticism for providing foreign
athletes with relatively little access to most Olympic venues in an
effort to give Canadians a competitive advantage for the Games. Canada's
Own the Podium program pumped about $110 million into a medal push for
the home team. It set a goal of 35 medals, and the sliding sports of
luge, bobsled and skeleton were viewed as likely mines for gold, silver
and bronze.
While Vancouver Organizing Committee officials followed the guidelines
established by sports federations for allowing access, they did not
follow tradition. Many foreign athletes and federations were peeved over
the relatively little training time on venues, from the ski courses to
the speedskating oval and the sliding center.
Kumaritashvili, ranked 44th in World Cup standings this season, did not
participate in a World Cup event at Whistler last year. He made nine
runs down the track at an international training week in November.
His crash at Whistler occurred on his fifth training run of the week. He
crashed higher on the course during his second run on Wednesday.
The two-time defending gold medalist Armin Zoeggeler
<http://2010games.nytimes.com/athletes/armin-zoeggeler-ita.html?inline=nyt-per>
of Italy was among many athletes who have crashed in training this week.
"Speculations about his experience to me seems a little bit unfair and
misleading," Nikolos Rurua, Georgia's minister of culture and sport,
said in response to questions about Kumaritashvili's qualifications for
competing.
Kumaritashvili is thought to be the first Olympic athlete killed during
training or competition since the 1964 Innsbruck Games, when two
athletes (one in luge, one in skiing) were killed during training before
those Games opened. In 1992 in Albertville, France, Nicholas Bochatay of
Switzerland, training for the demonstration sport of speed skiing,
crashed into a snow-grooming machine on a public trail and died.
An investigation into the accident was under way, Rogge and the
Vancouver Organizing Committee chief executive John Furlong said, but
there was no immediate decision about whether to postpone the two-day
men's luge competition, scheduled to begin Saturday. The International
Luge Federation and I.O.C. officials will meet with team leaders to hear
any concerns about the safety of the track.
Josef Fendt, the president of the International Luge Federation, was one
of many concerned about the track's safety after an international
training week there in November 2008. After seeing record speeds and a
number of spills by skilled riders, he wondered if it was too fast. "It
makes me worried," he said.
Speed and safety dominated talk among bobsledders and skeleton athletes,
too, who share the track with luge. Steve Holcomb
<http://2010games.nytimes.com/athletes/steven-holcomb-usa.html?inline=nyt-per>,
the driver of the top United States bobsled team, coined Curve 13
"50-50," for the chances of negotiating a sled through it successfully.
Last February, at a luge World Cup test event for these Olympics, Felix
Loch of Germany reached 153.937 kilometers per hour (95.652 miles per
hour), about six m.p.h. faster than speeds at any other track. Fendt and
the world's top riders began to embrace the track as familiarity slowly
settled fears.
On Friday, Fendt said in a statement, "This is the gravest thing that
can happen in sport, and our thoughts and those of the 'luge family' are
naturally with those touched by this event."
When asked if future Winter Olympics should have a luge track that is
not as challenging as the one here, Rogge said: "It's not a time to look
for reasons. That will come in due time."
Last August, Ron Rossi, the executive director of USA Luge, said he
worried about inexperienced lugers on the Whistler track, particularly
near the bottom of the course.
"The speed doesn't bother me," Rossi said. "That said, you get a whole
spectrum of skill levels at an Olympic Games. I do have a concern that
people who are a little less experienced have the potential to get
seriously hurt."
Kumaritashvili was approaching the end of Curve 16, a sweeping turn to
the right nicknamed Thunderbird, and was just moments from the finish line.
He apparently knew he was in trouble. As he came down off the
high-banked turn, he raised his left hand and dropped his feet to the
ice. Off balance, he struck the right wall at the end of the curve,
appearing to strike his head, and the collision upended his sled.
Kumaritashvili was thrown hard to the left of the course, just above the
short, icy wall of the track, and slammed into vertical supports that
hold a canopy and lights over the course.
The sled remained on the track and stopped the timer at the finish line
while Kumaritashvili was tossed.
The track was immediately closed, broadcast equipment was cleared and
the police --- both municipal and Royal Canadian Mounted Police ---
lined the track to keep people away. The broadcast lights remained on to
aid in the investigation. The other luge athletes were told of the death
and then sent back to the athletes' village.
Furlong, the chief executive of the Vancouver Olympics, said he passed
along his sympathy to Kumaritashvili's family, and to members of the
Georgian federation, which included eight athletes. Furlong said the
federation members had described Kumaritashvili as "an incredibly
spirited young person."
"He came here to feel what it's like to be able to call himself an
Olympian," Furlong said. "We are heartbroken beyond words to be sitting
here. It's not something I have prepared for or ever thought I needed to
be prepared for. My team is devastated by this."
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