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Forty Years Later, Soviet Athlete's Life-Saving Heroics Remembered

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  • Forty Years Later, Soviet Athlete's Life-Saving Heroics Remembered

    WBUR
    Sept 27 2014


    Forty Years Later, Soviet Athlete's Life-Saving Heroics Remembered

    September 27, 2014


    Nearly 40 years ago, a European swimming champion was out for a run in
    his home country of Armenia -- then part of the U.S.S.R. -- when a
    trolleybus went off the tracks and plunged into a nearby lake.
    Shavarsh Karapetyan dove into the lake and saved dozens of lives.

    Carl Schreck chronicled that afternoon and its impact on Karapetyan's
    life -- and swimming career -- in a piece for Grantland. Schreck joined
    Bill Littlefield on Only A Game.

    BL: Before that day at the lake, the 23-year-old Karapetyan had won
    eight European swimming titles and set some world records along the
    way. So why was he running by himself in the Armenian capital that day
    instead of training with the Soviet team?

    Several of those people were dead by the time he got them up, but he
    had no time and no possibility of figuring out who he was grabbing.
    - Carl Schreck

    CS: He had been dropped from the Soviet national team. He thinks it's
    because the Soviets wanted to feature some younger swimmers. He had
    also suffered an illness earlier in the year but says he was fully
    recovered. It's unclear exactly why they dropped him from the team.
    What is clear is that he was extremely peeved and went out on a
    mission to train as hard as he could, which is why he was out running
    by the lake that day.

    BL: Well, take us through what happened that afternoon at Lake Yerevan
    at the end of Karapetyan's 13-mile run?

    CS: He was on the home stretch, and he came up onto a bridge right
    next to Lake Yerevan and all of a sudden he heard a commotion, looked
    to his left and saw that a trolleybus had sailed over the embankment,
    crashed into some cement at the base of the lake and rolled into the
    water.

    He immediately stripped off his clothes. He swam out to the trolleybus
    -- it was about 80 feet from shore -- dove down to try to figure out if
    there was an open window or an open door. The area under water was
    just flooded with silt. It was just completely black. They couldn't
    see anything, and so Karapetyan decided that he had to kick in a
    window. So he did what he described as a karate kick -- bashed his leg
    through the window; shredded his leg -- and managed to jostle a window
    loose and then just started reaching inside for anything that felt
    human.

    Finswimmers use flippers to help them swim below water. Karapetyan's
    training included breathing techniques that he needed to dive to the
    sunken trolleybus over and over again. (Paolo Bruno/Getty Images)

    BL: According to your article, Karapetyan's training helped him a lot
    in his rescue mission. But it wasn't his classical swim training, was
    it?

    CS: His sport was finswimming, which is a niche sport. So his training
    was specifically geared toward underwater swimming. And a lot of the
    work he did was outside of the water: a lot of very serious power
    training, a lot of running and also a lot of breathwork, specifically
    to hyperventilate before entering the water, which essentially -- the
    hyperventilation makes you less likely to feel the urge to come up to
    breathe. So he was an expert on this breathing technique, which he
    utilized then when he dove into the water and proceeded to swim down
    to the trolleybus.

    BL: Karapetyan had been retrieving bodies for more than 20 minutes
    when rescue workers told him to stop. They said, "Don't kill yourself
    for nothing." How real was the warning?

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    CS: There were an estimated 90 passengers in the bus at the time. He
    knew they had a limited window to survive down there, which added some
    urgency to his mission. And so they determined after 20 minutes that
    no one else could possibly be alive down there.

    At that point he had hauled up, he and his brother estimate, about 30
    to 35 people. Several of those people were dead by the time he got
    them up, but he had no time and no possibility of figuring out who he
    was grabbing from the bus.

    BL: So, some number of people were saved by this guy. It must have
    made Karapetyan a national hero.

    CS: Well, you would think so given the act itself and the remarkable
    coincidence that possibly the world's greatest underwater swimmer -- in
    a country where a small percentage of the population can even swim --
    happened to be running by. But in fact, the Soviets as a rule hushed
    up any major accidents like this. The idea was that there's no way a
    Soviet trolleybus could fall into the water.

    BL: So, if they hushed up the accident obviously they hushed up the heroic act.

    CS: Exactly, exactly. Even the classified government report that came
    out didn't mention him at all.

    BL: What happened next for Karapetyan? Did he ever get back to
    competitive swimming?

    Even the classified government report that came out didn't mention him at all.
    - Carl Schreck
    CS: The rescue mission permanently damaged his lungs. He came down
    with pneumonia in both lungs. His temperature spiked that evening and
    his doctors say it's a miracle that he even survived. His condition
    was exacerbated by the fact that the reservoir was absolutely filthy
    and just filled with the industrial runoff. So, he was in bed for
    several weeks.

    He managed to stand up a couple weeks later and he did manage to get
    up and walk around and was back in the pool three months later. By the
    time he got back to training he absolutely despised the water. He said
    he wasn't scared; he just hated it. But he pressed through. He's an
    incredibly competitive man. And he fought through it and within a year
    had returned to the Soviet Championships and managed to set his 11th
    and final world record.

    BL: What is Karapetyan doing these days and how does he remember the
    occurrences of that day?

    CS: He runs businesses in Moscow. He's lived in Moscow since the late
    1980s. He's told the story quite a bit. His story is pretty well known
    in the former Soviet Union and ... I get the impression he, in some
    respects, is a little tired of talking about it. All his friends call
    him a very modest man, which was my impression of him as well -- so
    modest, in fact, when he was courting his soon-to-be wife in the early
    1980s, he didn't even tell her about the incident. She only learned
    about it when a Soviet reporter dug up the story six years after it
    happened and it then made it into the official Soviet press.

    http://onlyagame.wbur.org/2014/09/27/shavarsh-karapetyan-lake-yerevan

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