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Who's idea was it too put all those steel beams right after the curve?
they will compete, in his memory. Having taken a ride on an olympic bobsled course, luge strikes me as one of the most dangerous of sports. Huge respect for those who compete. Big sympathies to the family, team and country.The vid is Horrific. Absolutely horrific.
What does the Georgian team do? Stay? Leave? They must be in a total state of shock. This is so sad. Not a good way to start the games at all I'm afraid.
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There's an expert, Chris Whiteman, on right now who just said "crashing is just part of the sport." They said the dude who died hit 90mph.Scary and very sad indeed.
Needs to be some legal action...to prevent future work..without thorough testing BEFORE an example of some "coming in under budget" physics takes precedence.Who's idea was it too put all those steel beams right after the curve?
Needs to be some legal action...to prevent future work..
About 10-15 years ago, they started to tire of clearing snow off the tracks. So they began to put roofs overhead, with beams to match.Who's idea was it too put all those steel beams right after the curve?
Yes, really really sad. Having something like this happen to an Olympic athlete, or any athlete, is just so wrong. Me being Georgian only adds more to my sadness and, to be honest, frustration.
We are a tiny country with limited resources and I have been to the poor town where Nodar lived. Given the resources availble to him being 44 in the world is pretty impressive and I can only guess how much pride and honor he felt to be there representing his country.
What frustrates me is some folks trying to say that it was "pilot error", that it wouldn't happen to the top athletes cause they have more experience. First, Nodar ranked 11th during training so he wasn't completely green. Second, its the Olympics and you are going to have athletes show up from small underfunded countries who won't be as experienced as your usual world champion luger -- you are supposed to expect that and plan for it. When you spend millions and millions of dollars on the world's fastest track, is an extra 10 grand on extending the wall and shielding the steel beams really that much extra? It seems to me that an oversight in design is being blamed on the athelete by some.
But others, including many fellow athletes have said that the course is too dangerous. So I really really hope that they fix it by this evening when the competition runs start.
Cripes, another lawsuit happy response. Is that the only way to prevent things? C'mon, the only ones winning on theat one are the lawyers.
that initial hit might have been the cause of death.