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Colombia Plane Crash: Other Sports Teams Suffered Similar Incidents

Members of Brazilian soccer team Chapecoense were among 81 people on board a chartered aircraft that crashed late Monday in Medellin, Colombia.
Image: Plane crash survivors in 1972
Rugby players from Uruguay stand near the crashed F-227 plane's fuselage in Argentina in Dec. 1972.Sobrevivientes de los Andes/CON / LatinContent/Getty Images

Members of Brazilian soccer team Chapecoense were among 81 people on board a chartered aircraft that crashed late Monday in Medellin, Colombia. It was not immediately clear how many players were among the casualties.

Image: Players with Brazil's Chapecoense soccer club
Players with Brazil's Chapecoense soccer club celebrate after defeating Argentina's San Lorenzo during the second leg of the 2016 Copa Sudamericana semifinal on Wednesday.NELSON ALMEIDA / AFP - Getty Images

Here's a list of other sports teams involved in fatal plane crashes:

Nov. 8, 1948 — Czechoslovak national team, five members including IIHF Hall of Famer, Ladislav Trojak, in the English Channel.

May 4, 1949 — Italian soccer club Turin. The four-time league champions lost 22 members, including 18 players, in Turin, Italy.

Jan. 7, 1950 — Moscow VVS ice hockey team, 11 players, near Sverdlovsk.

Feb. 6, 1958 — English soccer champion Manchester United, eight members, in Munich.

Image: Munich plane crash in 1958
Seven Manchester United players were killed when a plane crashed near Munich in 1958.Heinrich Sanden / ASSOCIATED PRESS

Aug. 14, 1958 — Egyptian fencing team, six members, in the Atlantic Ocean.

Oct. 10, 1960 — Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo football team, 16 members, in Toledo, Ohio.

Feb. 16, 1961 — U.S. figure skating team, 18 members and 10 coaches and officials, in Belgium.

April 3, 1961 — Green Cross, eight members of the first-division Chilean soccer team plus two members of the coaching staff, in the Las Lastimas Mountains.

April 28, 1968 — Lamar Tech track team, five members and the coach, in Beaumont, Texas.

Sept. 26, 1969 — Bolivian soccer team "The Strongest," coach Eustaquio Ortuno, 16 players and two staff members, near Viloco, Bolivia.

Oct. 2, 1970 — Wichita State football team, 14 players, in Colorado.

Nov. 14, 1970 — Marshall University football team, 36 players, in Huntington, West Virginia.

Oct. 13, 1972 — Uruguayan rugby club, among the 29 casualties, in the Andes, Chile. The story was taken to the cinemas in the film "Alive."

Image: Plane crash survivors in 1972
Rugby players from Uruguay stand near the crashed F-227 plane's fuselage in Argentina in Dec. 1972.Sobrevivientes de los Andes/CON / LatinContent/Getty Images

Dec. 13, 1977 — University of Evansville men's basketball coach Bobby Watson and 14 players, in Evansville, Indiana.

March 14, 1980 — U.S. amateur boxing team, 14 members, in Warsaw, Poland.

Nov. 25, 1985 — Iowa State women's cross country team, coach Ron Renko, assistant coach Pat Moynihan, and team members Julie Rose, Susan Baxter and Sheryl Maahs, in Des Moines, Iowa.

Dec. 8, 1987 — Peruvian first-division soccer team Alianza Lima, coach Marcos Calderon and 16 players, in Lima, Peru.

April 28, 1993 — Zambia's national soccer team, 18 players and five team officials, in Libreville, Gabon.

Jan. 27, 2001 — Oklahoma State basketball players Dan Lawson and Nate Fleming, and six team staffers and broadcasters, in Byers, Colorado.

Sept. 7, 2011 — Russian hockey team Lokomotiv, 27 players, two coaches and seven club officials, in Tunoshna, Russia.

Image: Russian investigators work after 2011 plane crash
Investigators work after a plane carrying Russian hockey team Lokomotiv Yaroslavl crashed on Sept. 8, 2011.MAXIM SHIPENKOV / AFP/Getty Images