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Related: About this forumIndy driver Justin Wilson in coma after accident at Pocono Raceway
Indycar.com story here6abc.com story here
From the 6ABC.com news story:
IndyCar driver Justin Wilson was in a coma and in critical condition after sustaining a head injury when he was hit by a large piece of debris that broke off a car Sunday in the crash-filled race at Pocono Raceway.
Yipes. Hang in there, fella.
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Indy driver Justin Wilson in coma after accident at Pocono Raceway (Original Post)
shenmue
Aug 2015
OP
JayhawkSD
(3,163 posts)1. That was horrendous.
He is a teammate of the guy who won the race, who did not even want to talk about having won the race. One of the few times I've been glad the time ran over the allocated tv time and there were no driver interviews other than the brief one with the winner. Understandably, none of them would have wanted to talk.
mahatmakanejeeves
(61,606 posts)2. IndyCar driver Justin Wilson dies of head injury
Last edited Tue Aug 25, 2015, 11:41 AM - Edit history (3)
IndyCar driver Justin Wilson dies of head injuryPosted: Monday, August 24, 2015 9:10 pm
Associated Press |
IndyCar driver Justin Wilson has died from a head injury suffered when a piece of debris struck him at Pocono Raceway. He was 37.
IndyCar made the announcement on Monday night at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Wilson is a British driver who lived outside Denver in Longmont, Colorado. He was hit in the head during Sunday's race by piece of debris that had broken off another car. Wilson's car veered into an interior wall at the track, and he was swiftly taken by helicopter to a hospital in Allentown, Pennsylvania.
The last IndyCar driver to die because of an on-track incident was Indianapolis 500 champion Dan Wheldon, who was killed in the 2011 season finale at Las Vegas after his head hit a post when his car went airborne.
Associated Press |
IndyCar driver Justin Wilson has died from a head injury suffered when a piece of debris struck him at Pocono Raceway. He was 37.
IndyCar made the announcement on Monday night at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Wilson is a British driver who lived outside Denver in Longmont, Colorado. He was hit in the head during Sunday's race by piece of debris that had broken off another car. Wilson's car veered into an interior wall at the track, and he was swiftly taken by helicopter to a hospital in Allentown, Pennsylvania.
The last IndyCar driver to die because of an on-track incident was Indianapolis 500 champion Dan Wheldon, who was killed in the 2011 season finale at Las Vegas after his head hit a post when his car went airborne.
IndyCar Driver Justin Wilson Dead
Justin Wilsons death has IndyCar racing in mourning again
Early Lead
By Des Bieler and Cindy Boren August 25 at 7:30 AM
Veteran IndyCar driver Justin Wilson died Monday night from a head injury suffered during a race Sunday. The 37-year-old Englishman had been in a coma at a hospital near Pennsylvanias Pocono Raceway, where the tragic accident occurred.
Mark Miles, the chief executive of IndyCars parent company, Hulman and Company, made the official announcement. He said that Wilson had passed away with his family by his side, including a wife, two young daughters and a brother, Stefan, who is an IndyCar driver in his own right, although he was not in Sundays race.
Wilson was struck by debris that flew off of a competitors car when that vehicle spun out and hit a wall. Wilson tried to steer around the wreckage, as other drivers had, but a detached nose cone that was bouncing along the track hit him in the head. The race was stopped as Wilson was flown by helicopter to a hospital in Allentown, Pa.
Wilson is the second IndyCar driver killed on a track in the last four years. Dan Wheldon, winner of the 2011 Indianapolis 500 and, like Wilson, a Brit, was killed in October 2011 during the final race of the season in Las Vegas. He was killed when his head hit a fence post on a crash.
By Des Bieler and Cindy Boren August 25 at 7:30 AM
Veteran IndyCar driver Justin Wilson died Monday night from a head injury suffered during a race Sunday. The 37-year-old Englishman had been in a coma at a hospital near Pennsylvanias Pocono Raceway, where the tragic accident occurred.
Mark Miles, the chief executive of IndyCars parent company, Hulman and Company, made the official announcement. He said that Wilson had passed away with his family by his side, including a wife, two young daughters and a brother, Stefan, who is an IndyCar driver in his own right, although he was not in Sundays race.
Wilson was struck by debris that flew off of a competitors car when that vehicle spun out and hit a wall. Wilson tried to steer around the wreckage, as other drivers had, but a detached nose cone that was bouncing along the track hit him in the head. The race was stopped as Wilson was flown by helicopter to a hospital in Allentown, Pa.
Wilson is the second IndyCar driver killed on a track in the last four years. Dan Wheldon, winner of the 2011 Indianapolis 500 and, like Wilson, a Brit, was killed in October 2011 during the final race of the season in Las Vegas. He was killed when his head hit a fence post on a crash.
Justin Wilsons IndyCar death: Fluke accident links American prodigy and British veteran
Morning Mix
By Michael E. Miller August 25 at 7:30 AM
One was an American prodigy: a buff, blue-eyed, blond-haired god of gasoline; a scandalous, social-media-savvy speed demon considered by some to be the savior of a shrinking sport.
The other was a beloved British veteran: a journeyman with few sponsors but a loyal family; a small-town driving instructor who begged and bargained his way into one of the worlds most elite sports only to be betrayed by bad luck and his own body.
One, Sage Karam, was on his way up the sport of race car driving; the other, Justin Wilson, on a slow slide down.
On Sunday, their lives intersected for a terrible instant on the race track, their fates intertwined by a fluke accident and a flying piece of metal.
By Michael E. Miller August 25 at 7:30 AM
One was an American prodigy: a buff, blue-eyed, blond-haired god of gasoline; a scandalous, social-media-savvy speed demon considered by some to be the savior of a shrinking sport.
The other was a beloved British veteran: a journeyman with few sponsors but a loyal family; a small-town driving instructor who begged and bargained his way into one of the worlds most elite sports only to be betrayed by bad luck and his own body.
One, Sage Karam, was on his way up the sport of race car driving; the other, Justin Wilson, on a slow slide down.
On Sunday, their lives intersected for a terrible instant on the race track, their fates intertwined by a fluke accident and a flying piece of metal.