14 from figure skating community
killed in plane crash, six of them from Boston club
Send a link to a friend
[January 31, 2025]
By DAVE SKRETTA and JIMMY GOLEN
NORWOOD, Mass. (AP) — Two teenage figure skaters, their mothers, and
two former world champions who were coaching at a historic Boston
club were among the 14 members of the skating community killed when
an American Airlines flight collided with an Army helicopter
Wednesday night and crashed into the frigid waters of the Potomac
River.
Skating Club of Boston CEO Doug Zeghibe said Thursday that skaters
Jinna Han and Spencer Lane and their mothers were among those
killed, along with 1994 pairs world champions Evgenia Shishkova and
Vadim Naumov of Russia.
In all, 14 of the victims were coming back from a national
development camp for promising young skaters following the U.S.
Championships in Wichita, Kansas, Zeghibe said. Clubs in
Philadelphia and the Washington area also expressed condolences for
members of their community.
“We came here because we needed to be together,” 1956 Olympic
champion Tenley Albright said while standing in a rink outside
Boston that is named for her. “We’re family, and it’s a community
and the skaters — the people who were on that plane — they’re our
family, too.
“I certainly don’t have any answers. I really can’t believe that it
happened, because I picture them right here,” Albright said,
breaking into tears. “It’s just terrible, and it’s sad. And we just
feel we need to be together. And that’s why you see so many hugs
today.”

The Kremlin also confirmed that Shishkova and Naumov were aboard.
Among their students was their 23-year-old son, Maxim, a former U.S.
junior champion who has finished fourth at senior nationals the past
three years and narrowly missed the podium again on Sunday while his
parents watched at INTRUST Bank Arena in Wichita.
Maxim Naumov flew home Monday. “He had no reason to stay at the
national development camp,” Zeghibe said.
“Both of his parents were with him while he was competing. It’s
well-known Mom was always too nervous to watch him skate," the club
official said, pausing to contain his emotions. “But his dad was
with him, and Dad was in the ‘kiss-and-cry’ sharing his great
performance.”
Sixty passengers and four crew members on the American Airlines
plane and three soldiers aboard a training flight on the Black Hawk
helicopter are presumed dead after the collision in Washington on
Wednesday night. There was no immediate cause identified, but
officials said flight conditions were clear as the jet coming from
Wichita was making a routine landing when the helicopter flew into
its path.
Washington Fire Chief John Donnelly said officials do not believe
anyone survived.
“We are heartbroken to learn that figure skaters, along with their
families, friends and coaches, are understood to be among those on
board,” U.S. Figure Skating said in a statement. “Our thoughts are
with everyone affected by this tragedy.
“Figure skating is more than a sport — it’s a close-knit family —
and we stand together.”
One of the most prestigious training grounds in figure skating, the
Skating Club of Boston produced Olympic and world champions Dick
Button — who died Thursday at age 95 — and Albright, Olympic
medalists Nancy Kerrigan and Paul Wylie and scores of U.S. champions
— including Alisa Efimova and Misha Mitrofanov, who won the pairs in
Wichita last week. The club, which is getting ready to host this
spring's world championships, sent 18 skaters to nationals in all.
The U.S. Figure Skating and Massachusetts flags were lowered to
half-staff outside the century-old club's newly built rink on
Thursday. Flower deliveries arrived at the reception desk, while
visitors were greeted with long and tearful hugs.
“We’ve been through tragedies before — as Americans, as people — and
we are strong. And I guess it’s how we respond to it," said
Kerrigan, a two-time Olympic medalist and Skating Club of Boston
alum. “And so my response is to be with people I care about, I love
and need. I needed support, so that’s why I’m here.”
On the club’s two practice rinks, young skaters practiced their
routines in silence.
“Skaters are resilient, and they want to skate,” Zeghibe said. “I
think also they come to the club and will come to the club as an
opportunity to come together and to grieve together.”
A table that had been filled with messages wishing all of the
skaters luck in Wichita was replaced midday by one with framed
pictures of Lane, Han and the coaches. In front of the photos were
lit candles; behind them, six white roses stood in six simple vases.
[to top of second column] |

Former Olympic skater Nancy Kerrigan, right, is embraced while
arriving at The Skating Club of Boston with fellow Olympic skater
Tenley Albright, left, Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025, in Norwood, Mass.
(AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

“I’m heartbroken by the tragic loss of my fellow
skaters in this devastating accident,” said reigning world champion
Ilia Malinin, who won his third consecutive national title in
Wichita. “The figure skating community is a family, and this loss is
beyond words.”
Lane, 16, was a sectionals champion who had become popular among the
skating community on social media, where he has thousands of TikTok
followers. On Wednesday, he posted a video showing him doing a
triple toe loop to wrap up the development camp.
“I am so happy to have qualified for national development camp,”
Lane said in an Instagram post Wednesday. “It has been my goal
almost ever since I became aware that it was a thing. I learned so
much new information that I can apply to my everyday life, and met
so many amazing people.”
He later posted a photo of him aboard the plane just before it
departed from Wichita.
Lane’s father said Spencer had an infectious personality.
“In his home club in Boston, he was just loved by everyone from the
adults running the club to the smallest skaters to the people that
are competing for a shot at the Olympics,” Douglas Lane told WPRI in
Providence, Rhode Island. “They just adored him.”
Naumov and Shishkova moved to the U.S. and became coaches, first at
the International Skating Center of Connecticut and since 2017 at
the Boston club that has trained world-class skaters since 1912.
They competed together in pairs events at two Olympics, in 1992 and
1994.
"We were at the Olympics together. But in '94, I was kind of busy
myself and sort of separated from a lot of what was going on,” said
Kerrigan, whose attack by cronies of rival Tonya Harding dominated
the news at the Lillehammer Games.
“Everything you've heard about them being a little tough — but with
a smile on their face,” she said. “To walk in here and not see that
would be very strange for everybody that comes here, especially
those that are here day in and day out. And it’s it’s going to be
hard.”
Han was only 13, but already showing Olympic potential, Zeghibe
said.
“We watched Jinna just grow up here, from just a tiny little tyke
into this amazingly mature 13 year old,” Zeghibe said. “A great
performer, a great competitor. And off the ice, a great kid — as we
would say ‘raised right.’”

For the Boston club, the accident was an eerie reminder of a 1961
plane crash that killed the entire U.S. delegation en route to the
world championships in Prague. The world championships were canceled
that year out of respect for the American team.
Albright said she would have gone to Europe to cheer the team on if
she hadn't been in medical school at the time. She lost her coach
and 22 friends on that flight.
“The day the music stopped, very much like this,” said former USOC
vice president Paul George, who was the American pairs champion the
following year. “It took time, but we came back — I think stronger,
better.”
The club will proceed with plans to host the world championships at
the TD Garden in Boston from March 25-30. Zeghibe said the plans are
to have a “super, amazing event.”
“We’re pretty busy and we can’t take a break," he said. "We need to
keep moving.”
The European championships are taking place this week in Tallinn,
Estonia. They continued Thursday as scheduled and there was a moment
of silence during the competition for the victims.
“Today, the world of figure skating is heartbroken," International
Skating Union President Jae Youl Kim said. "We share our deepest,
most sincere condolences with the families and friends of all those
who lost their lives in this terrible crash. To lose so many members
of our community in this way brings sadness beyond words.”
___
Skretta reported from Kansas City, Missouri.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |