Alexander sizov biography
Lokomotiv Survivor: 'We Knew We Would Crash'
The sole survivor of the plane crash that devastated Yaroslavl’s Lokomotiv ice hockey team last month said in his first public Thursday that passengers knew something was wrong before the Yak-42 took off.
Crew member Alexander Sizov, 52, told Channel One television that passengers started to worry when the plane did not lift off immediately.
“I quickly realized that we were on unpaved ground. The plane started falling shortly after takeoff, and it was clear that we were going to crash,” he said.
Sizov spoke from his hospital bed at the Sklifosovsky Medical Center, where he was brought two days after the Sept. 7 crash and treated for severe shock, burns and multiple fractures.
His head and hands bandaged, and hospital bed sheets up to his chest, Sizov showed few physical signs of the trauma he endured when the Yak-42 rose and then plowed into the ground — parts of it ending up in the Tunoshonka River, a small tributary of the Volga — and burst into flames.
But his measured tones, wandering eyes and weighty pauses suggest an inner struggle to reconcile himself with, among other things, his incredible good fortune: Of the 45 people on board the plane, Sizov was the only survivor.
“On impact, everything started flying. Something hit me hard, that’s why my left side is all busted up,” he said. “Once in the water, I honestly didn’t see or notice anything around — not the fires, not the plane, nothing.”
Police said an injured Sizov tried to save a colleague from the burning wreckage, an effort that left one of his arms severely burned.
Lokomotiv winger Alexander Galimov initially survived the crash but succumbed to his injuries five days later. The crash also claimed the lives of 19 Yaroslavl-born players and several foreign-born teammates, as well as Canadian coach Brad McCrimmon. The chartered plane was carrying the team to Minsk for its first game of the regular sea Second Life? Is she happy? Does it make you happy that you were presented with an incommensurable gift and a second chance or pain from memories that tirelessly black out all the major notes? And the colors of this one will last for a million lives ... God for good reason gives some of us one more opportunity to stay here, on earth sinful. Maybe we need to change something in our lives, to understand, to understand ... Not to everyone, but, probably, to those who are worthy ... We are now talking about a miracle - a surviving person after a plane crash, and his name is Aleksandr Borisovich Sizov. The city of Zhukovsky, a former garden city, and now a science city, has found a very nice citizen ... Rather, this person has always been here, but survived a second birth. Here today lives Alexander Sizov, who survived in a plane crash on September 7, 2011, an aircraft operation engineer. This day is forever covered with a funeral veil, especially those who are keenly aware of who has something to do with hockey. The Yak-42, carrying a glorious young team of Yaroslavl hockey players, took overclocking, but it was not destined to land on sinful ground in its regular mode. These jolly guys, the hope of domestic hockey - Yaroslavl team "Locomotive" - went to the game with the club "Dynamo" (Minsk). The Tunoshonka River became their last refuge on Earth ... Alexander Sizov after the disaster does something, somehow breathes, walks, eats, drinks, found the strength to live on, adapted. Born in a shirt, he does not give interviews, does not communicate with journalists, it is very difficult for him to remember everything, he tries to forget. Especially avoided the attention of the press in the first years after the accident. His family avoids publicity ... September 7, 2011. Nobody assumed tha ASSOCIATION Wins1 KO / TKO 1 100% SUBMISSIONS 0 0% DECISIONS 0 0% Losses0 KO / TKO 0 0% SUBMISSIONS 0 0% DECISIONS 0 0% September 2011 was marked by a tragedy of a wide scale - a whole hockey team crashed in a plane crash. Immediately after taking off from an altitude of about 5-10 meters, the plane crashed down, leaving, it seemed, not the slightest chance of survival to anyone who was on board that ill-fated flight. But a truly miracle happened, among the 45 people there was a lucky man - flight engineer Alexander Sizov. He was incredibly able to survive after the crash of the liner. The famous hockey team Lokomotiv went to Minsk on September 7 to play a match, which in the end did not take place. Take-off took place under normal weather conditions, and it seemed that nothing preceded the woes. The flight was to take place the day before, but it was postponed in connection with the International Political Forum. The plane tried to tear itself away from the ground already beyond the border of the runway. As the CCTV cameras showed, it was noticeable that for some reason the liner lacked traction, and it was beyond the line. The crew took a desperate step, namely the attempt to fly no longer from the strip, but from the ground. Tearing off the ground, the plane only managed to rise into the air at a small height, but at high speed crashed into the mast of the lighthouse, and then, flying a little more, collapsed down. In the beginning, a chance to survive was given to two - a hockey player Alexander Galimov and one man from the crew. It was a flight engineer Alexander Sizov. But, unfortunately, Galimov died in the hospital after some time, but Sizov was luckier. He suffered a rather long rehabilitation course and spent more than 1, 5 months at the Sklifosovsky Emergency Research Institute. He was diagnosed with multiple fractures of the ribs, an open craniocerebral injury, accompanied by brain damage, hip fracture and body burns. He was hos Flight engineer Alexander Sizov after the disaster. What is with him and what does he do?
Zhukovsky - the city in which the newly born person lives
Alexander Sizov
AGE N/A/N/A HEIGHT 0'0"/ 0 cm WEIGHT 265 lbs/ 120.2 kg
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CLASS
HeavyweightAlexander Sizov - the only survivor in a plane crash near Yaroslavl
Interrupted flight
The only survivor is Alexander Sizov