View Full Version : Very sad day for women's cycling...
Technotart
07-19-2005, 08:53 AM
Amy Gillet News Story (http://sports.yahoo.com/sc/news;_ylc=X3oDMTBpcWU3ZWcyBF9TAzk1OTEyNTc0BHNlYwN0aA--?slug=reu-germanyaustralia&prov=reuters&type=lgns)
Amy Gillet was killed and 5 of her team mates seriously injured in a training ride in Germany. They were hit by an out of control car on a stretch of wooded road.
Messages of condolence for the injured and the riders families can be sent to the following email address:
feedback@ausport.gov.au
Cyclingnews.com Story (http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/?id=2005/jul05/jul19news4)
DeniseGoldberg
07-19-2005, 10:23 AM
I absolutely hate to hear that accidents like this one have happened. I wish there was some way to prevent them - and this one sounds truly senseless with what sounds like a driver on the wrong side of the road.
My heart goes out to her family and friends, and to the other cyclists who were injured as well.
--- Denise
spazzdog
07-19-2005, 10:50 AM
What a horrible situation for these women and their families. For one car to virtually wipe out an entire team... unbelievable!
betagirl
07-19-2005, 11:21 AM
Wow. That's absolutely horrible.
That really hurts... I feel really horrible too, and all of my thoughts are with the cyclists, their families and friends, and all of the cycling community. ouch...
wabisabi
07-19-2005, 11:51 AM
Oh, so sad. I imagine that most of us can imagine all too well what happened. This past weekend we were coming down a big long hill, and a driver, going too fast, was in our lane, and had to swerve to get out, the exact situation where an overcorrection can occur, which sounds like what happened here.
RoadRaven
07-19-2005, 12:01 PM
Dayam <insert profane swearing here>
This kind of thing makes me so mad
When it is operator error (and the driver lost control from inexperience) it is not an accident. An accident is something that is preventable. This was preventable. This was simply a crash.
I feel awful for the 18 year old learner driver, but dayam... this should not have happened.
I'm at a loss for words... I've always felt that the invention of the car gave us one of the most widely available potential lethal weapons, and this is a great example
I will write to the email, thank you Tech... but at the moment I am at an absolute loss as to what to say --- this should not have happened
Be safe out there, wonderful women of TE
Ride hard... but be safe
SpinSis
07-19-2005, 01:20 PM
How absolutely horrible. Thank you for passing along the news. How senseless and unfortunate. I hope her teammates are able to get the support they need, as well as that young driver. Words may be hard to find for an email, but don't underestimate the impact of the act itself. Sadly it is reminding me of the sudden death of Nicole Rinehart. I lived just down the street and watched that race...the flowers from strangers were there for years.
Be safe everyone.
julbee
07-19-2005, 02:46 PM
Thanks for the post, Techno...
It is sad... and seems so senseless.
My heart goes out...
I'm with Road Raven on this one... this is very angering!
I was out on my first "official" road ride this past Sunday... and we were clearly within the "confines" of the "bikepath" lane...when a truck, with a trailer in tow, came along, speeding and swerving over the line into our lane! We could have tapped the windows on his vehicle... or worse!
What's it going to take to get motorists to acknowledge the presence of bikers and to observe their right to be "safe" on a bike path lane? We were quite upset at the time.
~Inner Peace~
MightyMitre
07-19-2005, 03:00 PM
This is such sad news about Amy Gillet.
I also can't even start to imagin how the friends and family of the team must be feeling with their love ones so far away from home at such a critical and desperate time.
My thoughts go out to all those involved.
PinkRacer
07-19-2005, 03:03 PM
This too awful... you see motorist everyday who don't obey the laws and use the bike lane etc...
Some peace the other day I witnesses a drive get a ticket for making a right hand turn using the bike lane as a turn lane….
This is so sad... :(
RoadRaven
07-20-2005, 03:50 AM
Here is a picture from the Sydney Morning Herald of how it happened... I felt sick for the coach who saw it all unfold in front of his car!
http://www.smh.com.au/media/2005/07/19/1121538976011.html
:(
bikerchick68
07-20-2005, 10:40 AM
this is truly sickening... it will change ALL of their lives forever... including that young drivers... she too, will have to live with the permanence of her actions...
so very, very sad for all involved...
Lynne
07-20-2005, 10:55 AM
I was really hoping that the men's austrialian team member would have been able to take the stage (I forgot his name) in yesterday's Tour. I guess moving up to 7th place overall was a good memorandum, right? I'm sure he was very sad-from listening to the announcers, the male team is likely very close to the female national team.
I guess I'm a softie, but I also feel very badly for the young driver. Too inexperienced, too fast and it looks like she hit a defect in the road.
Technotart
07-20-2005, 04:31 PM
I was hoping yesterday that he would win too - it would have been for them...it still was, but If I had been hanging out in front of him, well, I don't know that I would have fought him for it when he went to sprint past....
Pedal Wench
07-20-2005, 07:54 PM
I've been haunted by this story all day. It could have happened to any one of us. I'll be riding with a black ribbon on my bike this weekend to remember those women, and to remind myself to ride safe and strong - life is short.
SnowMouse
07-21-2005, 04:16 AM
I didn't realise this thread was here....
It was great to see Cadel Evans honour the girls in his ride. I'm sure it gave him something deep to dig from, to ride well for the girls. This just makes me so incredibly sad, I don't know what to say. Keep them in your prayers, two of the girls are still not out of deep water. I feel so vulnerable now from learning of this. I was always so scared of cars from behind me. A fellow woman mtbiker was also hit while out on the road earlier this year and is still recovering from a fractured hip. I am so $%#&@%# off.....
http://www.cyclingnews.com/photos/2005/diaries/AIS/riders/amy_gilletttn.jpg
http://www.cyclingnews.com/photos/2005/diaries/AIS/team_ais.jpg
Technotart
07-21-2005, 05:56 AM
The sad thing is - they weren't hit from behind. You know, they could have been riding in a small car and been killed or hurt just as badly. They had their coaches protection from behind, who could have predicted a freak accident? They could have been ANYWHERE but they were right where that car happened to veer off...Yes it's scary, but I doubt ANY of them would say anyone should give up cycling on the roads because of it. The best way to remember Amy Gillett and to honor her team mates is to keep riding. Be smart about it, but keep riding. Any of us could round a corner on foot or in our cars any day and be killed.
RoadRaven
07-21-2005, 11:07 AM
Ah... still feeling dreadful about this
Snowmouse, thanks for posting their pics here - I was coming to do that today...
Here's the latest from the Sydney Morning Herald...
Three cyclists on mend, two critical
July 22, 2005
Amy Gillett sped to the front of the pack only seconds before the car that killed her hit her.
Her Australian teammates say she was inspiring them to ride faster when the car swerved across the road and skidded sideways into the group.
It hit her then collected her five cycling teammates before flipping over and into a ditch by the side of the straight road near Zeulenroda, Germany.
These recollections of Katie Brown, 22, Kate Nichols, 20, and Lorian Graham, 27, offer the first glimpse into the moments before the accident.
Gillett's husband, Simon, arrived in Germany yesterday to collect the body of the woman he married only a year ago.
Her teammates, in hospital, have told Greg Boorer, a mechanic for the national women's cycling squad, that the 29-year-old had been forcing the pace as the group practised the first stage of the six-day Thüringen Rundfahrt on Monday.
She sped past the group at more than 70kmh and was only a few metres ahead when the car struck the team.
They recall seeing the car come "tearing up the hill" and swerve violently across to the wrong side of the road before turning sideways and "skittling the girls like a tenpin bowling set", Mr Boorer said. Married to the former Commonwealth Games cyclist Margaret Hemsley, he has visited the cyclists in hospital with the national coach Warren McDonald, who was driving behind the team at the time of the accident.
"They're really brave. They have a lot of injuries but they can see they're going to improve and get better," Mr Boorer said on Wednesday.
Three of the cyclists are starting to talk and move again, while their two teammates remain in a critical condition.
Nichols, from Sydney, could be released from hospital as early as next week after suffering only multiple cuts and bruises in the collision.
She and Brown, also from Sydney, and Graham, of Queensland, have a "very good chance" of returning to competitive cycling, according to doctors at Jena University Clinic, south of Leipzig.
Brown, who is sharing a ward with Nichols, underwent a second successful operation on her left knee and right leg on Wednesday. She is expected to be discharged from hospital in two to three weeks.
"They were very happy when the two Kates met on the ICU [intensive care unit]. It was a very heartbreaking moment. I think it is very important that they stay together," said Dr Gernot Marx, acting head of the intensive care unit.
Alexis Rhodes, 20, of South Australia, and Louise Yaxley, 23, of Tasmania, are unconscious and still face "a life-threatening situation". However, Peter Fricker, the Australian Institute of Sport director, who arrived at the hospital on Wednesday, said both women "are very fit and strong and we have reason to be optimistic about their recovery".
He said the parents of the five cyclists "want everyone to know they are optimistic about their daughters' recovery".
Yaxley and Rhodes are still on ventilators, and are expected to remain in hospital for four to six weeks.
Graham was moved to the hospital on Wednesday afternoon from a nearby clinic. Her parents and boyfriend arrived in Germany yesterday.
Parents of all five cyclists have now arrived.
The 18-year-old driver remains in an unidentified hospital. Her injuries were not major, said Dr Raik Schafer of the Jena University Clinic, who arrived at the scene in a rescue helicopter 10 minutes after the accident.
Police are waiting to speak to the driver and other witnesses. They have not yet laid charges, which could include involuntary manslaughter. It appears unlikely, however, that the driver will receive a prison term.
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