Skip navigation

USC rattled by turbulent flight to South Bend

Plane carrying team to game; some passengers thrown from seats

Free video
  Notre Dame Live
Oct. 17: Tiffany Simons and John Walters look ahead to Saturday's game against USC.

NBC Sports

Video: Football from NBC Sports
Mack Brown losing sleep over 'Bama
Texas head coach Mack Brown says watching Alabama on film is causing him to lose sleep.

Special feature
Louisiana Monroe v Texas
  NBCSports.com's All-American team
The top offensive and defensive players in the nation, highlighted by five Alabama and Texas players.
Special feature
Image:
Predictions 101
Get picks to all the bowl games

NBCSports.com

Slideshow
UCLA v Tennessee
  College cheer
Check out some of the college football cheerleaders from across the country.
Slide show
Year in Pictures 2009 - Sports
Experience an audio slide show of the best sports and news images from around the world and close to home.
updated 12:37 p.m. ET Oct. 19, 2007

SOUTH BEND, Ind. - USC's football team, coaches and staff endured several terrifying minutes as their chartered flight to South Bend plummeted amid a severe thunderstorm, forcing the pilot to abort his first landing attempt.

About 125 people, including 82 players, coach Pete Carroll and most of the coaching staff faced a harrowing end to their trip across the country for Saturday's game.

"There was a moment there when I was thinking, 'This is it,' " Dennis Slutak, USC's director of football operations, told The Los Angeles Times.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

USC sports information director Tim Tessalone told The Associated Press on Friday that some passengers were thrown from their seats by turbulence as lightning cracked around the storm-tossed aircraft about 9 p.m. Thursday.

"It was a little bit of a roller coaster drop there for a minute," he said. "We had some people fly out of some seats. Everybody is fine, but it was a frightening little dip there."

The pilot aborted the approach and circled around the storm before landing without incident about 20 minutes later to the relief of the shaken team and the spouses of some staff members also on the flight, Tessalone said.

Safety Taylor Mays said he was screaming.

At their hotel, senior defensive end Lawrence Jackson said he was going to see the team trainer because a Popsicle stick had pierced the inside of his mouth during the drop.

"That was terrifying," fullback Stanley Havili said. "I thought I was going to die."

Quarterback John David Booty said, "It wasn't the worst flight I've ever been on, but it was definitely the biggest drop."

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sponsored links