Maxim Naumov heads to Olympics, hoping to honor his parents and the others killed in airline crash Today Us News


By DAVE SKRETTA

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Maxim Naumov sat silently on a chair deep inside the Enterprise Center, away from the packed crowd in the arena, the prying eyes of the TV cameras, the friends, family and strangers who had been showering him well-wishes for the better part of a year.

Naumov stared at a photograph of him standing alongside his parents, former pairs world champions Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov. It was taken when Naumov was about 3, a little tyke trying to find his footing on the ice for the first time. It had been stuck inside a photo album tucked away above the refrigerator in his Connecticut home.

Naumov’s parents, who had been coaches at the renowned Skating Club of Boston, were among 67 people killed — more than two dozen of them members of the figure skating community — when American Airlines Flight 5342 crashed into a military helicopter on approach to Ronald Reagan National Airport and fell into the icy Potomac River on January 29, 2025.

FILE - A crane offloads a piece of wreckage from a salvage vessel onto a flatbed truck, near the wreckage site in the Potomac River of a mid-air collision between an American Airlines jet and a Black Hawk helicopter, at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Feb. 5, 2025, in Arlington, Va. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis, File)
FILE – A crane offloads a piece of wreckage from a salvage vessel onto a flatbed truck, near the wreckage site in the Potomac River of a mid-air collision between an American Airlines jet and a Black Hawk helicopter, at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Feb. 5, 2025, in Arlington, Va. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis, File) 

Eleven skaters, four coaches and several of their family members had been returning from a development camp in Wichita, Kansas, after the national championships. The younger Naumov had flown out earlier, shortly after finishing in fourth place.

“Once a week I try to have that space with them, in whatever capacity that might be,” Naumov said, after finishing third at this year’s U.S. championships, a placement that ultimately earned him a spot on the American team for the Milan Cortina Olympics.

“It could be a photo, talking to someone about them. It could be anything,” Naumov said. “It’s been therapeutic in a way.”

One year later, Naumov carries the hopes and dreams of those affected by the crash with him to the Olympics, while the skating world continues to reflect on a tragedy that rocked a sport so tightly knit that everyone, from 1956 Olympic champion Tenley Albright to kids just starting out, seems to remember where they were when they heard the news.

“It was devastating. I’ve never been that sad,” said Scott Hamilton, the 1984 Olympic champion. “So many promising young skaters were just gone.”

The day of the crash


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