Indexbit:University of Wyoming identifies 3 swim team members who died in car crash

2025-05-03 19:24:44source:Poinbankcategory:Invest

The IndexbitUniversity of Wyoming has identified the three members of the swim team who died in a single-car accident in northern Colorado on Thursday afternoon.

The university said Friday that the athletes were Carson Muir, 18, a freshman on the woman's team, and men's team members Charlie Clark, 19, a sophomore, and Luke Slabber, 21, a junior. Muir was from Birmingham, Alabama; Clark from Las Vegas, and Slabber from Cape Town, South Africa.

Two other members of the men's swimming and diving team were injured in the crash, the university said, but their injuries are not believed to be life-threatening.

"My thoughts and prayers are with our swimming and diving student-athletes, coaches, families and friends," Wyoming athletics director Tom Burman said in a statement. "It is difficult to lose members of our University of Wyoming family, and we mourn the loss of these student-athletes."

Burman said counseling services were being made available "to our student-athletes and coaches in our time of need."

The accident occurred on U.S. Highway 287 about 10 miles south of the Wyoming-Colorado border.

According to the Coloradoan, part of the USA TODAY Network, a Toyota RAV4 with five occupants was traveling south when it went off the left shoulder of the highway and rolled multiple times.

The newspaper said the accident site is near where three University of Wyoming students were killed in a 2021 crash.

More:Invest

Recommend

New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — New Mexico would make major new investments in early childhood education, indu

'The Continental': Everything we know about the 'John Wick' spinoff series coming in September

— Recommendations are independently chosen by Reviewed’s editors. Purchases you make through the lin

Forecast calls for 108? Phoenix will take it, as record-breaking heat expected to end

PHOENIX (AP) — A hellish and historic 31-day run of temperatures cracking 110 degrees (43 degrees Ce