logo
Team USA's Maia, Alex Shibutani Detail Support After Plane Tragedy

Team USA's Maia, Alex Shibutani Detail Support After Plane Tragedy

Yahoo23-05-2025

Originally appeared on E! Online
Maia Shibutani and are feeling the love.
Five months after 28 figure skaters, coaches and family members died on an American Airlines flight to Washington, D.C., that collided with a U.S. Army helicopter, the Olympic ice dancing partners detailed how the skating community has shown support for each other in the wake of the tragedy.
For Alex, being a shoulder to lean on for his fellow athletes affected by the crash—which killed all 67 people aboard both aircrafts—has come naturally, considering there's already a strong foundation of community within the sport.
"There's a fabric that connects generations, that connects athletes, both in the United States and around the world," the 34-year-old exclusively told E! News at Team USA's Nonna Experience on May 22, "and so in good times and tough times, that is something that we all lean on."
And that backbone was built by a mutual admiration that exists among all of the athletes.
More from E! Online
Titanic Submersible: New Clip Reveals OceanGate Implosion Moments Before Its Final Message Received
OnlyFans' Annie Knight Shares Update From Hospital After Sex With 583 Men in 6 Hours
Today's Sheinelle Jones Speaks Out After Husband Uche Ojeh's Death
"It's because we all admire and respect the work that goes into the sport that we love," Alex continued, "and being able to share that with an audience and share that with each other is super special."
As for Maia, the 30-year-old echoed her brother's sentiment, emphasizing that she feels "proud to a part of the figure skating community."
"I started skating when I was 4," Maia told E!. "But as I've grown through the sport to get to know other generations of skaters, it just has become a larger family."
And the Team USA siblings are taking that family mentality into their partner training as they gear up for the 2026 Winter Olympics—even if it means butting heads occasionally.
As Alex noted, "We do have different opinions on things. We do argue."
Ultimately, their disagreements help them strengthen their performances on the ice.
"The best teams fight, and then the best teams work it out, and they communicate and they grow," Alex said. "We have this special bond that a lot of families experience, but we just get to experience it on the ice."
Of course, Alex and Maia aren't the only members of the skating world who have showed their support amid the American Airlines tragedy. Back in February, over 30 skaters stepped out onto the ice at the Legacy on Ice event to perform tributes to those who were lost to the collision.
Among those to honor the victims were Maxim Naumov—whose parents were among those who died on board the aircraft—and U.S. champion Johnny Weir.
"When you're an athlete, you're taught to have ice in your veins and to push through anything that affects your community,' Johnny told People at the time of the impact the crash had on their community. 'And ours is so small that even if you don't know everybody, you know them all. They're all family in some way."
For more on the American Airlines collision, keep reading.
What Happened to the Passengers on American Airlines Flight 5342?Who Was Onboard American Airlines Flight 5342?Who Was Onboard the U.S. Army Helicopter Involved in the Collision?What Happens Next After Recover Efforts for American Airlines Flight 5342?Who Has Spoken Out After American Airlines Flight 5342 Crashed Into the Potomac River?
For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News App

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

J.K. Rowling, Piers Morgan slam ‘woke brigade,' call for cancellation of controversial boxer
J.K. Rowling, Piers Morgan slam ‘woke brigade,' call for cancellation of controversial boxer

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

J.K. Rowling, Piers Morgan slam ‘woke brigade,' call for cancellation of controversial boxer

J.K. Rowling is leading the charge, calling for Olympic boxer Imane Khelif to be stripped of a gold medal after a leaked report revealed the controversial champion has 'male' chromosomes. The medical test on Khelif from the 2023 World Championships comes less than two days after World Boxing ruled the boxer would need to undergo sex screening to be eligible for any future appearances in female events. Last year, the 26-year-old represented Algeria and won gold at the Paris Olympic Games. Rowling, who has long criticized biological males competing in women's sports, took to X to call the news 'a win for women because they won't be battered to death in the ring by men.' She responded to a post by someone who suggested the testing was a violation against Khelif. 'If you had any idea what physical tests women go through routinely in their lives you'd know a cheek swab is no bigger deal than flossing your teeth,' the Harry Potter creator wrote. 'Any more moronic questions, wing them over.' Former collegiate swimmer Riley Gaines, who competed against trans athlete Lia Thomas, agreed. 'A cheek swab is far from invasive — certainly less invasive than having your brain prodded through your nose like they did with COVID tests, and definitely less invasive than being punched in the face by a man.' she wrote on X. The women's sports advocate added in another post: 'To all the people that insisted Imane Khelif was a woman because his passport said so, you were wrong. We were right. Sincerely, People with functioning eyes and a shred of honesty.' TV personality Piers Morgan also confronted haters he encountered for previously calling out Khelif. 'The biology-denying woke brigade abused and shamed me for saying it was outrageous and dangerous for Khelif to be beating up women at the Olympics,' he posted on X. 'I'm ready for their apology, but won't hold my breath.' Khelif was deemed eligible to compete in France despite World Boxing having previous knowledge of the 2023 test, with IOC president Thomas Bach questioning the test's legitimacy earlier this year. The document, which was first reported by 3 Wire Sports, summarized the findings on Khelif as 'abnormal,' stating, 'Chromosome analysis reveals male karyotype.' A karyotype refers to an individual's complete set of chromosomes, with Khelif's having been reported by the International Boxing Association (IBA) as XY, the male pattern. This latest revelation contradicts the claims of IOC spokesperson Mark Adams, who had described the results as 'ad hoc' and 'not legitimate' during last year's Games. The president of World Boxing has apologized after Khelif was singled out in the governing body's announcement to make sex testing mandatory. Taiwan's Lin Yu-ting also won a gold medal in women's boxing, despite having been banned by the IBA in 2023. Khelif has not yet issued a public comment on the leaked medical report. Controversial boxer Khelif not intimidated by Trump, targets second Olympic gold in L.A. Controversial Olympic boxer Imane Khelif vows to fight back after gender-based lawsuit Imane Khelif's ex-training partner bizarrely claims she was 'biologically altered'

EDITORIAL: A gold medal win for women
EDITORIAL: A gold medal win for women

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

EDITORIAL: A gold medal win for women

The bizarre tale of Olympic boxer Imane Khelif underscores the desperate need for elite sport bodies to establish clear standards on who can compete as a woman. There was an uproar in last summer's Olympic Games when it was revealed that Khelif was competing as a woman, even though there were rumours that a 2023 medical report from the World Championships showed the boxer had male chromosomes. This week, that report was leaked and the rumours were confirmed. In the Olympic welterweight bout, Khelif took on Italian Angela Carini. The match lasted 46 seconds. Carini took two powerful blows to the head. One dislodged her chinstrap; the second smashed her face. She withdrew from the match, saying, 'this is unjust.' The International Olympic Committee dismissed claims it was unfair, pointing out Khelif identified as a woman on her passport. Those who suggested it's not just unfair but dangerous for a man to take on a woman in boxing, a sport in which physical power is a determining force, were ridiculed and labelled homophobic. People like Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling and media personality Piers Morgan were subjected to a bitter campaign of cancel culture for stating the obvious: That men don't belong in women's sport. This week, Rowling took to X to acknowledge the leak of the 2023 medical report that confirmed what many had suspected. 'A win for women because they won't be battered to death in the ring by men,' Rowling said. This is not about transgenderism. Everyone has the right to live their life in the manner in which they see fit, in whatever gender they choose. The problem arises when the increasing number of trans women, many of whom have intact male genitalia, show up in elite sports to compete against biological women. World Aquatics, the body that governs swimming, has developed a sensible solution. Trans women who went through puberty as a male cannot compete with biological women but can take part in an 'open' category for people of all genders. With the Olympics on the horizon in 2028, bodies governing elite sports must establish fair and firm rules. If they fail to do so, they will destroy competitive sports for biological women and turn it into a farce. And Khelif should return the gold medal. Did controversial boxer Imane Khelif know about being biologically 'male' at Olympics? J.K. Rowling, Piers Morgan slam 'woke brigade,' call for cancellation of controversial boxer World Boxing apologizes for singling out Imane Khelif in sex test policy

NBA working on plan for US-vs.-world format at All-Star Game next season, AP source says
NBA working on plan for US-vs.-world format at All-Star Game next season, AP source says

Boston Globe

time6 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

NBA working on plan for US-vs.-world format at All-Star Game next season, AP source says

Silver addressed the idea on March 27 as well at the league's most recent board of governors meeting, when he revealed that the NBA was scrapping the All-Star mini-tournament format that was used this season. At that time, the AP reported that the 2026 game — to be played Feb. 15 in Inglewood, Calif., just past the midpoint of the Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics — will be moved from its traditional prime-time Sunday night slot to one that starts on Sunday afternoon. That's happening because the game will be aired on NBC under the terms of the new 11-year media rights deals that kick in next season. NBC is also the Olympic broadcaster in the US. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up So, NBC could show Olympic events in the morning and early afternoon, then the All-Star Game, then have prime-time Olympic programming. Related : Advertisement The move comes on the heels of a popular tournament, the 4 Nations Face-off, that essentially took the place of the NHL All-Star Game this year, as well as strong competition at the Paris Olympics, where the Americans won a fifth consecutive gold medal by rallying past Nikola Jokic and Serbia in the semifinals, then topping host France and Victor Wembanyama in the title game — Advertisement 'What better time to feature some form of USA against the world?' Silver said on FS1. 'I'm not exactly sure what the format will be yet. I obviously paid a lot of attention to what the NHL did, which was a huge success. . . . But also, going back, last summer, our Olympic competition was a huge success.' There is one big challenge regarding any US-vs.-world format. About 70 percent of NBA players are American, while 30 percent are international, so it would in theory be easier for an international player to make the All-Star team — if the rosters are the same size. International players, when asked at this year's All-Star Game if they would want a US-vs.-world matchup, sounded enthusiastic. 'I would love to. My opinion is that it's more purposeful,' Wembanyama said back in February. 'There's more pride in it. More stakes.' Added Milwaukee's Giannis Antetokounmpo, who's from Greece: 'I would love that. Oh, I would love that. I think that would be the most interesting and most exciting format. I would love that. For sure, I'd take pride in that. I always compete, but I think that will give me a little bit more extra juice to compete.' The Advertisement The

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store