[ESPN]Bus carrying team from Bluffton University crashes
Bus carrying team from Bluffton University crashes
ESPN.com news services
http://sports.espn.go.com/ncaa/news/story?id=2785357
ATLANTA -- A charter bus carrying a college baseball team from Ohio plunged
off an interstate ramp early Friday and slammed into the highway below,
killing six people, injuring 29 and scattering sports equipment across the
road, authorities said.
[Bluffton University baseball crash
AP Photo/Gene Blythe
Witnesses said the bus seemed to lose control as it turned off the exit and
crashed through the fence onto the highway below.]
Four students, the bus driver and the bus driver's wife were killed, said
police Maj. Calvin Moss.
At least three people were listed in critical condition.
The university identified the victims as sophomores David Betts and Tyler
Williams; freshmen Scott Harmon and Cody Holp; bus driver Jerome Niemeyer and
his wife, Jean, all from Ohio.
The bus, carrying the team from Bluffton University, a Mennonite-affiliated
school south of Toledo, toppled off the Northside Drive bridge on Interstate
75 in clear, pre-dawn weather, police spokesman Joe Cobb said.
Police later said at a news conference the bus exited the interstate at
"highway speed" and apparently made no attempt to stop. No skid marks were
left on the pavement, meaning the brakes either were never applied or failed,
police said, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
The bus crashed onto a pickup truck.
"When I saw the thing coming, I think I closed my eyes and stepped on the
gas," said Danny Lloyd, who was driving the truck and escaped uninjured. "It
looked to me like a big slab of concrete falling down."
The impact broke his windshield, pushed his truck into the concrete and
wrecked the front bumper, said, Lloyd, 57, of Frostburg, Md.
A.J. Ramthun, an 18-year-old second-baseman, was asleep in a window seat when
the bus hit the overpass wall, jolting him awake.
["I just looked out and saw the road coming up at me. I remember the catcher
tapping me on the head, telling me to get out because there was gas all over."
--Bluffton second baseman A.J. Ramthun.]
"I just looked out and saw the road coming up at me. I remember the catcher
tapping me on the head, telling me to get out because there was gas all
over," he told reporters.
His brother, a fellow team member, was trapped underneath the bus and damaged
his hip. "He might not recover from that," Ramthun said. He said his own
collarbone was broken and he had to get stitches in his face.
I heard some guys crying, "I'm stuck, I'm stuck," while the rest of the team
helped the most injured players off the bus, said Ramthun, from Springfield,
Ohio.
"It was what you'd expect out of any college team -- more concern for others
than you have about yourself," he said.
Firefighters pulled people through the roof of the bus, which was on its side.
At Bluffton University's campus, clergy organized a campus gathering to give
students a venue to express their feelings about the crash, said Pastor Steve
Yoder with the First Mennonite Church. Students and residents of the
community wiped tears from their eyes as they came in, and the gym was quiet
with people talking muffled voices.
[College president James Harder called Friday "a profound and tragic day in
the life of Bluffton University."]
Nineteen male students were being treated at Grady Memorial Hospital, said
Dr. Leon Haley. Three were in critical condition, and all but two students
were awake and talking, he said. Doctors were checking them for broken bones,
he said.
"All things considered they are pretty calm," Haley said. "They are very
aware of what's going on.
He said the driver was not taken to Grady. Three injured people were taken to
Piedmont Hospital and seven to Atlanta Medical Center, Haley said.
Piedmont hospital spokeswoman Diana Lewis said the team's coach, James
Grandey, 29, was in serious condition and expected to improve.
Officials at the three hospitals said 28 of the 29 people being treated were
of college age. The age of one injured person, at Piedmont, could not
immediately be determined, they said.
"This is a profound and tragic day in the life of Bluffton University,"
school President James Harder told reporters Friday morning in Ohio.
Classes were canceled, and the school called off other sports trips that had
planned during next week's spring break, Harder said.
"This is deeply impacting all of our students, faculty and staff. We know
these people on a first-name basis," he said. "For now we're pulling together
and supporting each other as best we can."
"It hits home harder than it would if it had happened at a bigger school.
Everybody knows each other."
-- Bluffton assistant football coach Steve Rogers
On campus, students and residents of the community filled the school's
basketball gym to grieve together and learn more about what had happened.
Some wiped away tears as they came in. The university, with about 1,150
students 50 miles south of Toledo, is affiliated with the Mennonite Church
USA.
The baseball team had been scheduled to play its first game of the season in
Sarasota, Fla., Saturday against Eastern Mennonite College of Harrisonburg,
Va., and it had eight more games scheduled in Fort Myers, Fla.
Cobb said the bus was traveling southbound on I-75. He said the bus driver
may not have planned to exit the interstate, and may have mistaken a car pool
exit ramp for the regular car pool lane that continues down the interstate.
Witnesses told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that the bus, which exited at
the Northside Drive HOV exit, appeared to lose control, crossed Northside at
an angle and crashed through the bridge barrier.
When the bus went off the bridge, it landed in the southbound lanes of the
interstate, blocking all four lanes. Five fire trucks and at least three
dozen firefighters were at the scene.
There was blood on the overpass near where the bus went over.
When the bus was righted, it was clear that all the windows on the driver's
side had been shattered, and there was considerable damage on the front of
bus and on the roof above driver's seat.
Atlanta Journal-Constitution reporter Mike Morris was returning from another
assignment -- a motor vehicle accident -- when he came across the accident
minutes after it happened. He wrote a first-person account for the
newspaper's Web site about what he saw and experienced.
"As I ran up to the bus, young men, who appeared to be in their late teens
and early 20s, began to climb out of the rooftop hatch, which was only a
couple of feet from the pavement since the bus had landed on its side,"
Morris wrote on the Web site.
As Morris and other motorists tried to help, "Some of the injured collapsed
in the roadway, while others were able to walk to the wall. Almost all were
covered with blood," he wrote in his account.
"I asked one young man where they were from, and he said they were a baseball
team from Ohio, heading to Florida," Morris wrote. "Then, he said, 'I'm
freezing. Can you find me a blanket?'"
The charter company, Executive Coach Luxury Travel Inc., of Ottawa in
northwest Ohio, did not immediately return telephone or e-mail messages from
The Associated Press.
On campus, assistant football coach Steve Rogers said he was working out in
the weight room with members of the football team around 6 a.m. when they saw
news of the bus crash on television. He said when they saw the markings on
the side of the bus, "That's when reality hit everybody."
They recognized the bus company as one all the school's sports teams may have
used, he said.
"Everybody was in shock. Nobody what to say or what to feel," he said.
His players started calling friends they knew on the baseball team, trying to
reach some by cell phone. The campus, with 1,150 students, is small enough
that everyone will know someone who was on the bus, Rogers said.
"It hits home harder than it would if it had happened at a bigger school.
Everybody knows each other," he said.
The worst part is waiting to find out who was injured and who was killed,
Rogers said.
Megan Barker, a sophomore from Bucyrus, Ohio, said she knew just about
everyone on the team and described them as "a fun-loving group of guys."
"They live as a family," Barker said.
She said she she heard from one of her close friends on the team, calling to
say he was OK.
Terri Bauman has two sons on the school's baseball team. One was on the bus
and one, a freshman, was bumped at the last minute by a sophomore player. Her
21-year-old son, Chris Bauman, a junior outfielder, called from Grady
Memorial to say he had been pinned under the bus and had a gash on his leg
but was otherwise OK.
"Some of their friends are hurt and some are gone, so it is tearing him
apart," Terri Bauman told The Cincinnati Enquirer.
At a chapel service the night before, students a had offered a prayer for
their sports teams and other students to travel safely over spring break,
said Katie Barrington, a junior from Brooklyn Heights, Ohio.
"Sometimes you take that stuff for granted," she said.
--
If you're not have fun in baseball,
you miss the point of everything.
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc)
◆ From: 220.141.100.28
推
03/03 20:34, , 1F
03/03 20:34, 1F
推
03/03 23:11, , 2F
03/03 23:11, 2F