tool name

close
tool goes here

Plane crash kills Oklahoma State coaches

STILLWATER, Okla. – Kurt Budke turned Oklahoma State’s women’s basketball team into a winner and hoped he’d found the place where he’d coach until he retired.


BRYAN TERRY/THE OKLAHOMAN
Oklahoman State women’s basketball coach Kurt Budke, right, and assistant coach Miranda Serna were among four people to die in a plane crash Thursday night near Perryville, Ark.
Published: 11/19/11 12:05 am
0 comments

STILLWATER, Okla. – Kurt Budke turned Oklahoma State’s women’s basketball team into a winner and hoped he’d found the place where he’d coach until he retired.

Miranda Serna had passed up opportunities to leave his side, staying loyal to the man whom she had helped to win a junior college national title and then rebuild a big-time college program.

Having succeeded together, Budke and Serna died together — perishing in a plane crash on a trip aimed at building their team’s future.

Budke, the head coach, and Serna, his assistant, were killed Thursday when the single-engine plane transporting them on a recruiting trip crashed in steep terrain in Arkansas, the university said Friday.

The pilot, 82-year-old former Oklahoma state Sen. Olin Branstetter, and his 79-year-old wife, Paula, also died when the plane sputtered, spiraled out of control and dived into the Winona Wildlife Management Area near Perryville, about 45 miles west of Little Rock.

There were no survivors.

“This is our worst nightmare. The entire OSU family is very close, very close indeed,” OSU president Burns Hargis said at a news conference. “To lose anyone, especially these two individuals who are incredible life forces in our family, it is worse beyond words.”

The crash was the second major tragedy for the sports program in about a decade. In January 2001, 10 men affiliated with the OSU men’s basketball team died in a Colorado plane crash.

“When something like this happens and, God forbid it happened again, we have to pull together as a family. We’ve got to try to do that,” Hargis said, as he broke down in tears.

After the 2001 crash, the university required that planes used by the school’s sports team undergo safety checks before travel. Hargis said coaches were not bound by the same rules and that the school left such decisions to their discretion.

Hargis called Budke “an exemplary leader and man of character,” and credited him with elevating the team. Serna, he said, was “an up-and-coming coach and an outstanding role model” for the players. Former assistant coach Jim Littell will serve as interim coach. The team’s games scheduled for today and Sunday were canceled

Perry County Sheriff Scott Montgomery said hunters called emergency officials about 4 p.m. Thursday after they saw the plane nosedive into a heavily wooded area.

“The plane was spitting and sputtering and then it spiraled and went nose first into the ground,” Montgomery said.

Similar stories:

  • No upstarts among women’s Final Four

  • Boise, Kellen Moore make most of BCS snub

  • Oklahoma St. tops Stanford

  • North Dakota State captures FCS crown

  • Pilot dies in military trainer jet crash in Calif.

JOIN THE DISCUSSION | Register here

We welcome comments. Please keep them civil, short and to the point. ALL CAPS, spam, obscene, profane, abusive and off topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked. Thanks for taking part — and abiding by these simple rules. A thorough explanation of rules of conduct can be found in our Terms of Service. If you have any questions, including why your comment may not be showing immediately after you submit it, be sure to visit the commenting FAQ.

The News Tribune had 80,054 visitors yesterday

South Sound Rentals .com
VIEW ALL »

Park Tower

Located in the beautiful and convenient Stadium Historical neigh
Just steps from Tacoma\'s most celebrated shopping, restaurants, night life, theaters, art and antique galleries, and the