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IDAjeff
03-03-2009, 07:13 AM
CLEARWATER, Fla. -- The Coast Guard on Monday narrowed the search area for two NFL players and a third man missing since a weekend fishing trip off the Florida Gulf Coast after crews rescued a fourth man clinging to their capsized boat.

Survivor Nick Schuyler, a former University of South Florida player, told rescuers that the boat the four good friends were aboard was anchored when it flipped Saturday night in rough seas, Coast Guard Capt. Timothy M. Close said. Schuyler, who was wearing a life vest, had been hanging onto the hull that a Coast Guard cutter discovered 35 miles off Clearwater.


Marquis Cooper
Corey Smith

The 21-foot boat belongs to Oakland Raiders linebacker Marquis Cooper, who, along with free-agent defensive lineman Corey Smith and former USF player William Bleakley, were missing.

The Coast Guard wouldn't speculate on the men's chances of survival, but Petty Officer Robert Simpson said their size and good health were an advantage. Cooper, 26, is 6-foot-3 and 230 pounds, and Smith, 29, is 6-foot-2 and 250 pounds. Bleakley, 25, had played tight end.

"With all of these men being past, present football players, they do have a much larger physique than a lot of people," Simpson said. "So their odds are going to be definitely in their favor."

Their families have said they had life vests and flares aboard the boat.

Schuyler was conscious but appeared weak as he was being taken off a helicopter at Tampa General Hospital and placed on a stretcher. His father said his son was in serious but stable condition and that he "looks OK."

"He's got some cuts and bruises," Stuart Schuyler said. "He's dehydrated."

Schuyler's mother, Marsha Schuyler, said her son told her that he survived by thinking about how he didn't want her to go to his funeral.

The family's joy at him being found alive was tempered by the search for his friends.

"We still have three men missing, and we're not going to talk too much until we find these guys," Stuart Schuyler said. "We're all praying for them. These guys are all very close friends."

Searchers had previously covered 16,000 square miles of ocean, but the area being searched was much smaller since they found Schuyler, Close said.

Smith's family planned to drive to Florida from Richmond, Va., on Tuesday, after the snowy weather in the East made finding a flight impossible, said Yolanda Newbill, one of Smith's sisters. She said they have been in contact with the Coast Guard every few hours since the search began.

Statement from Lions, Raiders
"After receiving news today of the rescue of Nick Schuyler, we remain hopeful that Corey, Will (Bleakley) and Marquis (Cooper) will also be rescued.

"Our thoughts and prayers continue to be with the three young men, along with their families and all those involved in the ongoing search and rescue efforts.

"We applaud the Coast Guard and everyone involved in this rescue mission and remain in constant communication with the Coast Guard and local Florida authorities."

-- Detroit Lions



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"We are continuing to closely monitor the situation regarding the remaining missing passengers that includes Oakland Raiders linebacker Marquis Cooper.

"We are aware that one of the passengers -- Nick Schuyler -- has been rescued and remain hopeful that the others -- Cooper, Corey Smith and Will Bleakley -- will be located and rescued as well.

"Again, our thoughts and prayers go out to the passengers and their families. In addition, our thoughts and prayers go out and we wish to express our appreciation to those involved in the search efforts."

-- Oakland Raiders "We have never lost hope," Newbill said. "We have total faith that (he) will be coming home."

Tampa resident Ray Sanchez, a cousin of Cooper, said the family was confident the Coast Guard would find the missing men.

"My cousin's a powerful swimmer," Sanchez said.

After 18 hours in 64-degree water, hypothermia will set in, Coast Guard Petty Officer 2nd Class James Harless said.

The four men left Clearwater Pass early Saturday in calm weather, but heavy winds picked up through the day and the seas got heavy, with waves of 7 feet and higher, peaking at 15 feet on Sunday. A relative alerted the Coast Guard early Sunday after the men didn't return as expected. The Coast Guard said it didn't receive a distress signal.

The men were aboard an Everglades-manufactured boat, which is built with compressed foam encased in Fiberglas, making it difficult to sink. The weather had improved, with waves subsiding to 6 to 8 feet, National Weather Service meteorologist Todd Barron said.

However, Bob Zales, president of National Association of Charter Boat Operators, said waves that high can capsize a boat the size of Cooper's.

"A boat that size, personally, I wouldn't get out any farther than 20 or 30 miles offshore," Zales said. "But I see people all the time 40, 50 miles offshore."

Smith had 30 tackles, including three sacks, and one interception in 12 games last season for the Detroit Lions. He also played for the San Francisco 49ers and was a standout at North Carolina State.

Cooper, 26, played college ball at Washington and has spent five seasons with five different NFL teams, appearing in 26 games with the Buccaneers in 2004 and 2005. He has played sparingly since. He grew up in Gilbert, Ariz., and his father, Bruce, is a prominent sportscaster for KPNX-TV in Phoenix.

IDAjeff
03-04-2009, 08:12 AM
CLEARWATER, Fla. -- After three days of combing 24,000 miles of ocean, the U.S. Coast Guard on Tuesday stopped searching for two NFL players and a third man lost in rough, chilly Gulf of Mexico waters off the Florida coast.

Oakland Raiders linebacker Marquis Cooper; free-agent defensive lineman Corey Smith, who played for the Detroit Lions last season, and former University of South Florida player William Bleakley had been missing since Saturday when their boat capsized during a fishing trip.


Bleakley's father said he believed the Coast Guard did everything it could and that his expectations lowered after only one survivor was found Monday, nearly two days after the four friends were knocked out of their 21-foot boat.

"I think they were not to be found," Robert Bleakley said.

Coast Guard Capt. Timothy Close said officials were sure that if there were any more survivors, they would have been found.

Crews did rescue Bleakley's former USF teammate, 24-year-old Nick Schuyler, who managed to stay with the boat.

Scott Miller, a friend of the college teammates, said Schuyler told him that on the first night, a chopper shone a light right above them and that later on, as they continued to drift, he could even see lights from the shore.

Bleakley swam underneath the boat to retrieve three life jackets he could find, along with a cushion, a groggy Schuyler told Miller from a Tampa hospital. Bleakley used the cushion, and the other men wore the jackets, Miller said. But the waves were powerful, and after Cooper and Smith were separated from the boat, the college teammates tried to hang on to it.

Statement from the Lions, Raiders
"Today's news is a sobering reminder about how truly precious and fragile life can be. We will continue to pray for a miracle, though we fully understand and respect the decision of the Coast Guard.

"We were thrilled yesterday with the news of Nick's rescue, and it gave all of us hope that Corey, Will and Marquis would also be found alive.

"While we still have that hope, we have begun to cope with the grim reality of this sad and tragic situation.

"We cannot adequately express our heartfelt appreciation to the Coast Guard and all the Florida authorities involved in the rescue mission. Their heroic efforts saved at least one life, and we know they did everything possible for Corey, Will and Marquis.

"We also want to thank everyone across the country for their expressions of support. We ask that you join us as we continue to pray for Corey, Will, Marquis and their families."
-- Detroit Lions


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“We continue to hold out hope that Marquis Cooper, Will Bleakley and Corey Smith will be located and rescued.

"However, with the Coast Guard’s decision to cease search and rescue efforts, we are faced with the reality that this mission may not turn out the way that we all desire.

"Again, the Raiders would like to express our deep appreciation to all involved in the search and rescue efforts.

“We also wish to express gratitude to everyone around the world who has offered their support. We ask everyone to continue to remember these men and their families in their thoughts and prayers.”

-- Oakland Raiders
"He said basically that Will helped him keep going," Schuyler told Miller, who said he had known Bleakley since the sixth grade. "The waves were just so much. They never got a break."

Close said searchers came across a cooler and a life jacket 16 miles southeast of the boat but saw no other signs of the men.

"I think the families understood that we put in a tremendous effort," Close said. "Any search-and-rescue case we have to stop is disappointing."

Family and friends embraced and sobbed outside the Coast Guard station shortly before the announcement. They left without talking with reporters.

"I'm sure that I'll speak of Will like he's still with us for a long time," Robert Bleakley later said of his son. "He'll be an inspiration for me for a long time. He always has been. I told everybody, I call him my hero."

Lions running back Kevin Smith called Corey Smith "a good, quiet guy, who always put in an honest day's work."

Kevin Smith, a Florida native, said he has been fishing off the coast as far as the men were in boats smaller, the same size and larger than the watercraft that capsized.

"The No. 1 thing when you're out there is, you have to respect the water," he said. "I know those guys had safety vests. I'm trying not to even think about it. That's a tough way to go."

Dallas Cowboys quarterback Jon Kitna, also a former teammate of Smith's with the Lions, said he never expected something like this to happen to someone he knew.

"It's a reminder of how life is fragile," he said. "Corey was a great dude."

The four men left Clearwater Pass early Saturday in calm weather, but heavy winds picked up through the day and the seas got stronger, with waves of 7 feet and higher, peaking at 15 feet on Sunday. The Coast Guard said it didn't receive a distress signal.

Close said some family members asked about continuing the search on their own, which he discouraged but said the Coast Guard wouldn't prevent. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission might head out Wednesday to recover the boat.

Schuyler told the Coast Guard the boat was anchored when it capsized.

The Coast Guard hadn't had more detailed conversations with Schuyler "due to his physical and medical condition," Close said. Schuyler was in fair condition and told hospital officials he didn't want to speak to the media.

Cooper, who is 26 and owns the boat, was selected in the third round of the 2004 NFL draft by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He played 26 games for the Bucs in his first two pro seasons, then led a nomadic NFL existence, also spending time with the Minnesota Vikings, Pittsburgh Steelers, Seattle Seahawks, Jacksonville Jaugars and Raiders.

Cooper and Smith, 29, became friends when they were teammates with Tampa Bay. Smith signed with the Bucs as an undrafted free agent in 2002 and spent last season with the Lions before becoming a free agent. The former North Carolina State standout recorded 30 tackles and three sacks in 2008, his best NFL season.

Bleakley, a 25-year-old former tight end from Crystal River, Fla., was on the USF football team in 2004 and 2005. He had one reception for 13 yards in his career, which also included some time on special teams.

Stuart Schuyler said his son is an instructor at L.A. Fitness and had helped train Smith and Cooper.

Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press

IDAjeff
03-06-2009, 01:07 PM
no comments? thats surprising.....nfl players lost at sea and they called the search off thats sad

Nate
03-06-2009, 01:10 PM
no comments? thats surprising.....nfl players lost at sea and they called the search off thats sad

People get lost at sea more often then this...it's not any sadder then any other cases.

IDAjeff
03-06-2009, 01:50 PM
yeah your right

Avery'sDad
03-06-2009, 02:20 PM
no comments?

maybe because they already commented in the last thread. :D

http://dfwstangs.net/forums/showthread.php?t=384675

IDAjeff
03-06-2009, 02:34 PM
Oh lol i wasnt looking for it in pack porch

Shane Small
03-07-2009, 08:52 PM
Sad Stuff, I have been out of touch with the news I guess I have not even heard about any of this.. :surprised:

IDAjeff
03-22-2009, 03:47 PM
Lions retire missing boater Smith's No. 93 for 2009 season
Associated Press


RICHMOND, Va. -- The Detroit Lions will retire the number 93 for the 2009 football season in memory of player Corey Smith, one of three men lost when their fishing boat capsized off the Florida Gulf Coast three weeks ago.

Lions player development director Galen Duncan told several hundred mourners in Smith's hometown church Saturday that Smith's number would be retired for a year in honor of a player of extraordinary heart and competitive drive.

Scholarship Fund
Before his number was retired by the Lions, Corey Smith's family established the Corey D. Smith Memorial Scholarship Fund, based in Richmond, Va. More ... "I want to tell you something about Corey Smith playing with pain," Duncan said of Smith, who played with such abandon that high school teammates called him the Tasmanian Devil.

"I'd tell the coaches, 'You've got to watch Corey because he's not going to tell you he's hurt,'" said Duncan, whom Smith befriended in his three seasons in Detroit. "If you could see the way this man worked."

The Coast Guard rescued one man, Nick Schuyler, who was clinging to the 21-foot boat's overturned hull, on March 2, two days after it overturned in stormy seas. The bodies of Smith, Oakland Raiders linebacker Marquis Cooper, and former University of South Florida player William Bleakley have not been found.

Many of Smith's teammates from the Lions and from the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and San Francisco 49ers where he played his first four NFL seasons attended the memorial service. So did former teammates and coaches from North Carolina State and from Richmond's John Marshall High School.

His high school coach, Kevin Burden, tearfully conceded that he was never impartial about the quiet giant who was the team's undisputed leader.

"You're not supposed to have a favorite player when you are a coach, but he was the one who got under your skin. He was a great football player but he was an even better man," Burden said in a faltering voice.

"Tonight, when I say my prayers, I will ask God to assign me a guardian angel and he'll be wearing number 93," Burden concluded, leaving many in the crowd sobbing or wiping their eyes.

Smith signed with Tampa Bay as an undrafted rookie in 2002 and backed up Pro Bowl defensive linemen Warren Sapp and Simeon Rice on a Buccaneers team that won a Super Bowl.

An earlier injury sidelined Smith for the Super Bowl, but he was there with his team. His diamond-crusted Super Bowl ring was the only bling Smith wore, friends said. And for the rest of his career, he drove himself year-round to show the world he deserved it, said linebacker Ryan Nece, a teammate of Smith's in Tampa and Detroit.

"He was never complacent. He was always striving to prove himself," Nece said. And at 250 pounds, Smith was "an undersized defensive lineman, and some people may argue that there's no way that they can play in the NFL. But he constantly worked on his craft, constantly tried to improve."

To Lions rookie defensive end Landon Cohen, Smith was a mentor during last year's agonizing 0-16 season -- the worst in NFL history.

"We spent a lot of time together, and that's the way Corey was: he didn't say much, but he led by example," Cohen said. "He was a blue-collar working guy."

Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press