Summary Landing failure Crew 6 Survivors 0 Total fatalities 19 (all) Passenger count 13 | Passengers 13 Injuries (non-fatal) 0 Date 5 January 1950 Survivor 0 | |
Site Koltsovo Airport, Sverdlovsk, USSR Locations Yekaterinburg, Soviet Union, Koltsovo Airport Similar 1979 Dniprodzerzhynsk mid‑air co, Aeroflot Flight 2230, Iran Aseman Airlines Fl, Llandow air disaster, 1993 Zambia national f |
The Sverdlovsk plane crash of 5 January 1950 killed all 19 persons on board, including almost the entire national ice hockey team (VVS Moscow) of the Soviet Air Force – 11 players, as well as a team doctor and a masseur. The team was on board a twin-engined Lisunov Li-2 transport aircraft, a licensed Soviet-built version of the DC-3, heading to a match against the Dzerzhinets (Chelyabinsk) (Traktor Chelyabinsk) hockey club. Due to poor weather at Chelyabinsk, the flight diverted to Sverdlovsk. The crew attempted four approaches but during the fifth approach to Koltsovo Airport at Sverdlovsk in the Soviet Union's Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic, the aircraft crashed near the airport in extremely adverse weather conditions involving a heavy snowstorm with strong winds.
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Passengers
Team players Viktor Shuvalov and Vsevolod Bobrov, were not on the flight; Bobrov overslept and took the train instead, and Shuvalov was injured.
In memory of the crash victims, a memorial was erected near the common grave in Koltsovo.
Reaction of Vasiliy Stalin
The crash occurred two and a half weeks after the 70th birthday of Joseph Stalin. According to a recent news article, Stalin's son Vasily Dzhugashvili, an Air Force commander of the Moscow Military District and the patron of the ice hockey team, was afraid of his father's possible reaction and of the crash investigation; he decided to recruit a new Air Force team in less than a day,[1] except for three original players (including the later IIHF Hall of Fame member Vsevolod Bobrov) who for various reasons were not on the crashed plane.