NFL Players Caught Offshore in High Seas

The day started out mild as four friends
left the Clearwater, FL launch ramp at 6:30 AM last Saturday morning. By mid-afternoon
the weather turned nasty and the sea began building up. By Sunday the nation learned
of the four missing anglers, two of whom were NFL players. Monday morning the USCG
rescued one of the men, Nick Schuyler, who had managed to perch himself atop the
capsized hull and was holding on to the outboard motor’s lower unit. The three other
men were not found after an extensive USCG search and yesterday the mission was
called off because after 72 hours in the 68-degree water the men must have succumbed
to hypothermia if not drowned. The boat involved was a 21’ Everglades, a brand that
is well-known to have among the best floatation systems in boats. The fact that
the boat floated level in its capsized state is credited with saving Schuyler’s
life.


Late-breaking story from the St. Petersburg Times -- Did Football Players Give Up?
--



Accident 1
Nick Schuyler sitting
on boat with legs wrapped around outboard’s lower unit.





Corey Smith, a defensive lineman with the Detroit
Lions; Oakland Raiders linebacker Marquis Cooper, who owned the 21-foot boat; and
former South Florida player William Bleakley are presumed lost from their ill-timed
fishing trip 35 miles into the Gulf of Mexico from Clearwater, Florida.




corey_smith

marquis_cooper
Two NFL players, Corey Smith (l) and Marquis
Cooper (r) .


Cooper owned the 21-footer.



On the ill-fated boat were Corey Smith, a defensive lineman with the Detroit Lions;
Oakland Raiders linebacker Marquis Cooper, who owned the 21-foot boat; former South
Florida player William Bleakley; and, Nick Schuyler, a former South Florida football
player, the lone survivor.


Weather Turns Nasty



The weather at first was pleasant, with temperatures in the high 60s. But the National
Weather Service issued a caution for small boats, said Rick Davis, a meteorologist
in Tampa. The forecast called for 15 mph winds and six-foot waves. ''When they headed
out, conditions were fairly light,'' Davis said. ``But, as our forecasts had in
it, the seas were building all day, and they got extremely rough on Sunday.''



The waves rose as high as 14 feet as the wind gusted to 40 mph.



Authorities said Schuyler told rescuers that the boat was capsized by a wave late
Saturday evening while the men were trying to raise the anchor. According to search
a friend of the survivor, William Bleakley swam under the capsized boat and retrieved
three life preservers and a Type IV throwable life cushion. Bleakley took the cushion,
it was reported.



The alarm at 1:30 AM Sunday morning when the four men had not arrived home.


Some Had Reservations…



According to newspaper accounts, Cooper had invited the boat's captain, Clay Eavenson,
on Saturday's trip but he declined -- in part because he was worried about going
50 miles from shore in a 21-foot boat.






willbleakley
A 2006 file photo of Will Bleakley who played
football at the University of South Florida.



Mario Bridges, the best friend of Corey Smith, told Early Show anchor Maggie
Rodriguez that Smith had expressed some concern before this weekend's trip.



"He actually said that he was never going to go back out there," Bridges told Rodriguez.
"He said that Sunday when he came back, that he was never going to go because, you
know, they were far out, and he felt like the boat was a little small for how far
they were out.



"And
then Friday he called and said that he was going. And I was surprised at that.
We talked about it. But he said he was going to go ahead and go this last time."




nick schuyler
Former University of South Florida player
Nick Schuyler, the only survivor.


The Survivor Speaks



The average person can survive in waters of 60 to 70 degrees for about two days
before succumbing to hypothermia, according to information from the Mayo Clinic.
The Gulf waters' temperature was 68, according to the National Weather Service.



Rescued ex-football player Nick Schuyler said Monday he managed to survive more
than 36 harrowing hours lost at sea by thinking about his mother. "Mom, you're not
going to go to my funeral," Nick Schuyler, 24, told his mom moments after being
plucked from the capsized fishing boat.



"He said they were overturned by a wave while raising the anchor and all four men
were clinging to the boat," said Coast Guard Petty Officer Robert Simpson. A cousin
of Cooper told the St. Petersburg Times that all four men initially managed to cling
to the capsized boat, but only Schuyler was able to hold on.



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. But the waves
were powerful, and after Cooper and Smith got separated from the boat, the college
teammates tried to hang on.


High Waves the Problem



“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.”



Seas were reportedly as high as 15’ in the area on Sunday. Sources said Schuyler
told family members the others clung to the overturned boat for 12 to 16 hours into
Sunday morning before slipping away.



By Monday, harsh sea and weather conditions were starting to subside. Waves were
6 to 8 feet, still enough for a small craft advisory, but considerably smaller than
Sunday's 15-footers, said National Weather Service meteorologist Todd Barron.


Football Players who Liked Fishing



Defensive end Smith, 29, appeared in 12 games with the Detroit Lions in the past
season, his seventh in the NFL. Linebacker Cooper, 26, played in eight games with
the Oakland Raiders last year. The two were teammates with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers
during the 2004 season.



Former Buccaneers linebacker Ryan Nece said both of the NFL players are "good guys"
and responsible individuals. He said: "As soon as I heard the news, I felt it like
they were people in my own family. Those are two guys I really respect and two guys
who are just blue collar good guys.



"They work hard. They are family guys. They are simple guys who just like to go
out on a boat and just hang out and relax. They are not flashy."



"They are the opposite of what a football player's image is portrayed to society.
I'm just praying for them and everybody is praying that it turns out a different
way," he told the Tampa Tribune.


In next week’s newsletter BoatTEST.com will conduct
a forum on this tragedy to draw out the lessons learned from it, as well as what
boat owners might be able to do in the future to avoid capsizing, and what measures
to take if it happens.



Please give us your input below to be part of next week’s discussion.