Former NHLers among crash victims
|  | PAVOL DEMITRA teams: OTT, STL, LAK, MIN, VAN |  | RUSLAN SALEI teams: ANA, FLA, COL, DET | 
|  | Karel Rachunek teams: Ott, NYR, NJD |  | Karlis Skrastins teams: NSH, COL, FLA, DAl | 
|  | Josef Vasicek teams: Car, NSH, NYI |  | Alexander Vasyunov teams: NJD | 
|  | Brad McCrimmon | teams (as coach) NYI, CGY, ATL, DET teamS (as PLAYER) BOS, PHI, CGY, DET, HFD, PHX | |
According to Russian aviation officials, two passengers survived the crash, but are in critical condition. One of the survivors is Russian forward Alexander Galimov, who suffered burns across 80 percent of his body.
Yaroslavl airport, 150 miles (240 kilometers) northeast of Moscow. The Interstate Aviation Committee says the recorders are believed to be in the tail section of the jet, which is partly submerged in the river.
The  victims included 36 players, coaches and officials of Yaroslavl  Lokomotiv, which had been heading to Minsk, Belarus to play its opening  game of the Kontinental Hockey League season.
On  Thursday morning, hundreds of local residents gathered at the city's  Russian Orthodox cathedral to mourn the victims. Many of them wore team  scarves, some of the women using them to cover their heads as church  ritual requires.
In recent years, Russia and  some other former Soviet republics have had some of the world's worst  air traffic safety records. Experts blame the age of the aircraft, weak  government controls, poor pilot training and a cost-cutting mentality.
The  crashed jet was built in 1993 and one of its three engines was replaced  a month ago, Deputy Transport Minister Valery Okulov told Russian media  on Thursday. It is unclear whether technical failure played a role in  the crash, but the plane apparently struggled to gain altitude and then  hit a signal tower before breaking apart along the Volga.
Okulov  said federal transportation authorities are considering whether to halt  flights by Yak-42s, Okulov was quoted as saying by the state news  agency RIA Novosti. There are 57 of the planes in service in Russia, the agency said.
There were only two crash survivors and both were reported as being in serious condition on Thursday.
Among the dead were Lokomotiv coach and NHL veteran Brad McCrimmon, a Canadian; assistant coach Alexander Karpovtsev, one of the first Russians to have his name etched on the Stanley Cup as a member of the New York Rangers; and Pavol Demitra, who played for the St. Louis Blues and the Vancouver Canucks and was the Slovakian national team captain.
Other standouts killed were Czech players Josef Vasicek, Karel Rachunek and Jan Marek, Swedish goalie Stefan Liv, Latvian defenseman Karlis Skrastins and defenseman Ruslan Salei of Belarus.
Russia  was hoping to showcase Yaroslavl as a modern and vibrant city this week  at an international forum attended by heads of state, including Russian  President Dmitry Medvedev, so the crash came as a particularly bitter  blow. The forum is being held in the hockey arena.
Medvedev  has announced plans to take aging Soviet-built planes out of service  starting next year. The short- and medium-range Yak-42 has been in  service since 1980 and about 100 are still being used by Russian  carriers.
The crash is one of the worst aviation disasters in sports history.
In past plane crashes involving sports teams, 75 Marshall University  football players, coaches, fans and airplane crew died in West Virginia  on Nov. 14, 1970, while returning from a game. Thirty-six of the dead  were players.
Thirty members of a Uruguayan rugby club were killed in a crash in the Andes in 1972.
The  entire 18-member U.S. figure skating team died in a crash on their way  to the 1961 world championships in Brussels, and 18 members of the  Torino soccer team died near Turin, Italy, in a 1949 crash.
In 1980, 14 members of the U.S. amateur boxing team were killed in a crash in Warsaw, Poland.
A  plane crash in 1950 near the Russian city of Sverdlovsk, now called  Yekaterinburg, killed 13 players and officials in the Soviet air force's  ice hockey squad. A Munich air crash in 1958 cost eight Manchester  United players their lives.
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Jim Heintz in Moscow contributed to this story.
BBINT Magazine
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