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March 7, 2003
Harricana ends in disaster for Kuujjuaq team
Team manager suffers
cracked vertebrae, broken ankle
ODILE NELSON
Disaster hit a Nunavik
snowmobiling team Feb.26 when its mechanical support crew was involved in a
high-speed, head-on collision during Raid Harricana in southern Quebec.
The crash, which occurred
near Newport, Quebec, killed the driver of the oncoming car and sent all four
members of the Maribeau Kuujjuaq team's support crew to hospital.
The team manager, Mark
T. Gordon, suffered a broken ankle and cracked vertebrae. The other three members,
including Mark's brother Willie Gordon, all walked away with minor injuries.
The crash effectively
forced the racing team to withdraw from Harricana - the world's premier snowmobiling
race - because it prevented them from repairing a skidoo that had broken down
earlier in the day.
Willie Gordon said the
three-man racing team of Johnny May Jr., Jimmy Gordon and Steven Kleist, and
their support crew, pulled out after learning of the severity of Mark T. Gordon's
injuries.
"My brother Mark
was trying to say I'm okay to continue... [but] later that night Junior May
and the others decided it was just a race. They were more worried about us.
They didn't know how bad his back was, but [when they learned] that's when the
racing spirit was completely demolished," Willie said.
To say it was a hard loss
for the team is an understatement. The team had entered the 1,800-kilometre,
nine-day race with a fourth-place ranking.
But bad luck seemed to
find the racing team just as it tasted victory in the fifth stage of Harricana.
As the team neared the end of the Percé to Chandler, Que., segment of
the fifth stage, one of their skidoos broke down. Kuujjuaq Maribeau won the
stage but only by using the team's two other snowmobiles to drag the broken
snowmobile over the finish line, Gordon said.
The support crew's RV
rushed down a local highway toward the town of Chandler with spare parts to
repair the skidoo. But just before 6 p.m. bad luck struck again this
time veering straight into the driver's side of Kuujjuaq Maribeau's RV.
"My brother was driving.
I was on the passenger side and we were saying how nice the driving was because
there was not much traffic on the road," Gordon said. "Then we were
about to pass a car when this other car coming from the front suddenly turned
directly towards us."
Both vehicles were driving
roughly 90 km/h, Gordon said.
"We almost turned
over. The driver's side from front to back was gone. Luckily, it didn't catch
fire because we had some gas and a propane stove in the back," he said.
Since the accident, rumours
have spread around Nunavik that the man in the other vehicle was trying to commit
suicide by crashing his car into the RV.
Willie Gordon said a paramedic
at the Chandler hospital told him police were looking for the driver after he
had been involved in a domestic dispute with his girlfriend.
But Agent Claude Ross,
a police spokesperson in Rimouski, said though an investigation was continuing,
there was no evidence the man tried to kill himself.
"At this point what
we know is, yes, the person went on the other side of the road and, yes, a head-on
collision did occur with the RV. But we don't know the reason why the driver
came the wrong way," Ross said this week.
Ross stressed police were
not pursuing the man at the time of the accident and there was no warrant out
for his arrest. However, he confirmed the man was involved in a family dispute
earlier in the day.
Ross also said there was
no indication that alcohol, excessive speed, or poor road conditions contributed
to the accident, but that this could not be confirmed until the investigation
was complete.
Doctors operated on Mark
Gordon's ankle last Friday. Willie Gordon, who stayed with his brother at a
hospital in Chandler, said his brother will be in a back brace for several months
but is expected to fully recover.
The Quebec City team of
Winn's Stryker Berthec went on to win the race. L'équipe du Nord team
from Kuujjuaq, Escoumins and Fermont finished third.
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