NBA-Brooklyn Nets coach Nash says subway attack hits close to home
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[April 13, 2022]
(Reuters) - Brooklyn Nets head coach
Steve Nash called Tuesday's shooting on a subway train in Brooklyn
"tragic and senseless" and said it hits close to home for the team,
whose practice facility and offices are located close by.
At least 17 people were injured when a gunman wearing a gas mask set
off a smoke bomb and opened fired on the train. Police said the man,
believed to have acted alone, fled the scene.
The morning rush-hour attack unfolded as a Manhattan-bound subway
train on the N line was pulling into a station in Brooklyn's Sunset
Park neighborhood setting off an intense manhunt by local and
federal law enforcement.
"Our community was affected this morning in a tragic and senseless
way," Nash said prior to the tip-off of the Nets play-in tournament
home game against the Cleveland Cavaliers.
"That's the subway stop for our practice facility and for our
office, so it does hit home. You just feel for all those affected."
The team held a moment of silence before the start of the game at
Barclays Center and said they and the WNBA's New York Liberty would
donate $50,000 to help those who were injured.
Ten people were hit directly by gunfire, five of whom were
hospitalized in critical but stable condition, authorities said.
Seven others were injured by shrapnel or otherwise hurt in the chaos
as panicked riders fled the smoke-filled subway car, some collapsing
to the pavement as they poured onto the platform of the 36th Street
station. The fire department said two of those hurt were treated at
the scene.
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Apr 8, 2022; Brooklyn, New York, USA; Brooklyn Nets head coach Steve
Nash coaches against the Cleveland Cavaliers during the third
quarter at Barclays Center. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-USA TODAY
Sports
According to CNN and other media organizations, a
total of 29 people suffering various injuries in the incident turned
up at area hospitals, though most appeared to have been emergency
room walk-ins who were treated and discharged.
"And you recognize that we have a lot of growing to do as a society
and a community and you feel for everybody," Nash said.
"It's more important now for our community to look at how to support
each other and continue to live with conviction and find ways to
overcome."
(Reporting by Rory Carroll in Los Angeles; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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