Master Index of Archived Threads
Death at Shea (split from Bring Out)
seawolf17 Apr 16 2008 06:57 AM |
[url=http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=3349003&campaign=rss&source=MLBHeadlines]Antonio Nararainsami[/url], 36, at Shea on Tuesday.
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AG/DC Apr 16 2008 07:13 AM |
Well, that's fucking awful.
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seawolf17 Apr 16 2008 07:16 AM |
I was going to put it here, but I wasn't sure if it was baseball. I guess it is.
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soupcan Apr 16 2008 07:18 AM |
Dead guy's family's story is that he was just walking down the escalator, lost his footing and fell over the side.
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metirish Apr 16 2008 07:22 AM |
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Terrible that this happened.
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John Cougar Lunchbucket Apr 16 2008 07:43 AM |
That's scary. When I was a kid I remember a story of a depressed guy whose psychiatrist recommended he go to a baseball game as a means of cheering up. He leapt from the Upper Deck onto the sidewalk to his death. Does anyone remember this story?
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AG/DC Apr 16 2008 07:51 AM Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Apr 16 2008 07:58 AM |
A lot eaiser to trip and fall going down than going up, as you're moving in the drection of the lowering wall. If he was moving quickly, I guess I can see it.
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Gwreck Apr 16 2008 07:55 AM |
I too find it hard to believe that you could go over the side by just "losing your footing." I'm guessing some combination of alcohol/horseplay had to be involved. Of course, if not, it remains a horrible tragedy.
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themetfairy Apr 16 2008 07:59 AM |
I'm a total klutz, and an overprotective mom to boot. Even so, I can't see anyone falling over the railing unless he was running or otherwise goofing around. The cynic/lawyer in me doesn't want to see the guy's family suing the Mets over something that doesn't seem as if it could have possibly been their fault.
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metsguyinmichigan Apr 16 2008 08:06 AM |
I was at a minor league game in New Britian, CT back in 1987, and a guy was sitting atop a waist-high chain-link fence that ran along the top of the bleachers along the first base side (Bee Hive Field was a glorified high school field.)
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seawolf17 Apr 16 2008 08:25 AM |
Hey, I'll be at a game in New Britain tomorrow. I'll stay away from the fence.
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DocTee Apr 16 2008 08:26 AM |
Similar event happened in the last years of Candlestick, where the escalators were pitched at an absurd angle.
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AG/DC Apr 16 2008 08:42 AM |
So, in the Shea passings file, I remember a similar fall in 1986 (a college kid, I think) and a guy killed by a model airplane in the mid seventites at a Jets game.
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Farmer Ted Apr 16 2008 08:47 AM |
I remember Bucket's story. It was the day before, or maybe two days before, an early 80's banner day twinbill with the Cubs. I went to that banner day having read about it in the paper.
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soupcan Apr 16 2008 09:12 AM |
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Good memory Edgy. New York Post: TRAGEDY AT SHEA By ERIN CALABRESE and PERRY CHIARAMONTE April 16, 2008 -- A Mets fan leaving the game last night lost his balance while descending an escalator at Shea Stadium and plummeted two stories to his death - as his two young daughters watched in horror, authorities said. Antonio Narainasami, 36, of Brooklyn, was with several other relatives on a family outing, when the tragedy took place around 10 p.m. in Section A near left field. At home was the fan's wife, who is pregnant with their third child. The victim, a Guyanese native, who lived in Cypress Hills and worked in air conditioning repair and installation, was taken to New York Hospital Queens, where he was pronounced dead. His cousin, Kevin Prashad, who was there, said Narainasami had been walking down the escalator, which was turned off. "He lost his footing somehow and then he went over the railing," said Prashad, 28. "He had his kids with him - they were walking right behind him. "We saw his whole body go over the side. There's no explanation for what happened there. It's like a nightmare." But one police source said authorities are looking into the possibility the victim may have been sliding on the rubber railing. "We were just on a night out to Shea Stadium - we're all diehard Mets fans, the whole family," Prashad said. Added Vinnie Narainasami, another cousin: "He was one of the best guys I've ever known," noting Narainasami was "really excited" about the game because "it's his favorite team." That cousin said Narainasami was a team captain in the Legend Cricket Club. "We have been advised of a tragic accident that resulted in the death of a fan attending tonight's game," said a statement from the Mets. "The Mets, the City Parks Department and the New York Police Department are investigating the incident. Our deepest and heartfelt condolences go out to the fan's family." The game celebrated Jackie Robinson Day, the 61st anniversary of the Brooklyn Dodger great breaking the major league color barrier. In New York, two other fans have died at baseball games - both of them were sitting on the railings of escalators. In May 1985, Mark Leddy, 21, of Yonkers, fell 100 feet off an escalator at Shea. And in April 1999, a 37-year-old man fell more than 90 feet to his death at Yankee Stadium. Such accidents, however, are a rarity at ballparks - one 2003 study published in the baseball journal "Nine" reported about 35 deaths from 1900 to 2000. Additional reporting by Cathy Burke, Larry Celona and Mark Hale
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HahnSolo Apr 16 2008 09:19 AM |
As a fellow dad of two youngins, I don't believe he would have been horsing around and setting a bad precedent for the kids. But that's me.
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soupcan Apr 16 2008 09:20 AM |
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Ironically, its a safety issue. Avoids pile-ups at the bottom when so many people are exiting at the same time.
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Gwreck Apr 16 2008 10:04 AM |
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Really? The escalators at Giants Stadium go down after the game just fine. No problems there.
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soupcan Apr 16 2008 10:10 AM |
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I think the difference is that at Giants Stadium its just one escalator with a large space at the bottom to walk away as opposed to series' of connected escalators at the Garden and Shea. Does that make sense?
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AG/DC Apr 16 2008 10:12 AM |
New Jersey may have different safety guidelines than New York.
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Fman99 Apr 16 2008 10:27 AM |
Mrs. Fman99 and I went on a cruise to Bermuda for our honeymoon. At one of the ports of call an elderly gentlemen from our ship fell down an escalator. We could hear him yelling from where we were, up two levels. I do not know ultimately what happened to him.
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Gwreck Apr 16 2008 10:39 AM |
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Yes. Good point (same applies to Edgy's point too).
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G-Fafif Apr 16 2008 10:42 AM |
I seem to recall the 1985 incident was one stemming from screwing around.
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Grote15 Apr 16 2008 11:58 AM |
Didn't M. Donald Grant die at Shea..its was his tomb for quite awhile.
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Benjamin Grimm Apr 16 2008 12:01 PM |
Except for the rare few who are buried alive, not many people die in their own tombs.
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AG/DC May 22 2008 08:08 AM |
There's a ghost following the Mets around this season. Atlanta, GA (Sports Network) - A 25-year old baseball fan died following a fall from the upper deck at Turner Field on Wednesday, according to WSB Radio in Atlanta.
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HahnSolo May 22 2008 09:21 AM |
Yes officer, it really is important to distinguish whether the deceased was "playing on" or "messing around on" the escalator.
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AG/DC Jul 27 2008 12:59 PM |
Deja vu: Man falls from escalator at Shea
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AG/DC Jul 28 2008 02:11 PM |
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Benjamin Grimm Jul 28 2008 02:19 PM |
A visiting Cardinals fan was recently killed by a drunk driver just after leaving a Phillies-Cardinals game at Citizens Bank Park. Two women visiting from the St. Louis area were struck by the car; one was killed and the other was seriously wounded. Last I heard there were doubts that she'd ever walk again.
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themetfairy Jul 28 2008 02:36 PM |
I have a lot more sympathy for the visiting Cardinals fans in Philly than I do for someone stupid enough to be goofing on the Shea escalators that way.
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Nymr83 Jul 28 2008 02:45 PM |
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there goes your buddy's lawsuit. what an ass, great example to set for any kids who happen to be around that a broken escalator makes a great slide!
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