U.S. Olympic figure skating icon Nancy Kerrigan spoke through tears as she remembered members of the skating community who are believed to be dead after the devastating crash of a military helicopter and American Airlines f light 5342.
Not sure how to process it,” figure skating Olympic medalist Nancy Kerrigan said through tears Thursday morning at the Norwood facility. “Which is why I’m here.”
Nancy Kerrigan visited the Skating Club of Boston after six of its athletes died in a Wednesday, January 29, plane crash
Six people associated with Zeghibe’s club in Norwood, Massachusetts, were killed in the plane crash: skater Spencer Lane and his mother, Molly, skater Jinna Han and her mother, Jin, and coaches Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov, a married couple who were world champion pairs figure skaters from Russia in the 1990s.
Olympian Nancy Kerrigan cried while speaking to reporters at Skating Club of Boston, her former club that had six members aboard the American Airlines flight that crashed in Washington, D.C. Jan. 29.
Local figure skating legend Nancy Kerrigan cried on Thursday when speaking about two promising young skaters who died along with their mothers and coaches in a plane crash in Washington, D.C.
As news trickled out about the victims of the Washington D.C. plane crash, the figure skating community mourned several of its own.
Olympic star Nancy Kerrigan fought through tears as she spoke about those who were lost in a tragic plane crash, which occurred on Wednesday night.
American figure skaters, coaches and family members who had been at a camp at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Wichita, Kansas, were among those aboard the passenger jet, according to U.S. Figure Skating.
Spencer Lane, a 16-year-old figure skater from Rhode Island, and his mother, Christine Lane, 49, were among those killed in Wednesday night’s plane crash while en route from Wichita to Washington, D.C.
Olympian Nancy Kerrigan cried while speaking to reporters at Skating Club of Boston, her former club that had six members aboard the American Airlines flight that crashed in Washington, D.C. Jan. 29.