Ice skatters, Maxim Nowmov, have been surrounded by a friend of his family after losing his parents tragic in the aerial collision at Washington DC last week.
23 -year -old Na Mov has spent time with a loved one after a tragedy of 67 lives after a U.S. airplane crashed with a US military Black Hawk Helicopter.
Na Mov's parents, the 1994 world champion Evgenia “Zhenya” Shishikoba and Vadim Naumov were on a fateful aircraft.
“I know the couple with him now,” said Na Mov's former teammate and close friend Ekaterina Gordiva. I told the people。
“They were not even in Washington, but that morning [of the plane crash]We all connected immediately and connected to all the Simsberry people.
Gordiva adds a woman who is currently taking care of a young skater, saying, “It's like a named parent.”
“She is now with her, her, and her husband,” she added.
Shishikoba and Naumov, a coach who had peeled off at the time of death, competed twice in the Olympics and won the World Championship in 1994.
Duo, who was married, was in Kansas, in cooperation with US figure skate championships, and became fourth in Maxim.
This pair was a coach belonging to a skate club in Boston.
According to Daily mailThe teammate said that his son left Wichita last Monday, and that the last word that Shishikoba and Naumov expressed to his son are “proud of them.”
The Federal Aviation Bureau said that when a military helicopter collided with the passenger jet and in the air and collided with the Potmax River before 9 pm, he was on training.
On the way from Wichita to Washington DC, there were 60 passengers and 4 crew members in the American Eagle Flight 5342. American Airlines said。
The military helicopter was carrying three people, DC mayor Muriel Bowser said.
There were no survivors.
American Airlines flights contained 14 youth figure skaters. Six of them were members of the Boston skate club. He traveled to Kansas for a US figure skating development camp.
“Our sports and this club suffered terrible losses in this tragedy,” said the Boston Skate Club in a statement.
“Skating is a close community where parents and children train 6-7 days a week and work together. Everyone looks like a family. Among the skaters, coaches, and parents on airplanes, We believe that we have come from Boston's skating club.
Other casualties in the club were identified as Spencer Lane, his mother, Molly Lane, Jinna Han, her mother, Jin Han, Evary and Aridia Livingston, and his parents Peter and Donna Livingstone. Masu.


