Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Five Alberta High School Football Players Hurt In Crash At Highway Intersection

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Oct, 2018 01:33 PM
    RAYMOND, Alta. — Five players with a high school football team are being treated for injuries in hospitals following a collision at a rural highway intersection in southeastern Alberta.
     
     
    Raymond RCMP say a northbound pickup truck with a trailer on Highway 5 crashed into a westbound pickup that was entering Highway 52 on Thursday at about 5:45 p.m.
     
     
    Const. Mike Hibbs said five youths were in the westbound truck.
     
     
    Three were taken to a Calgary hospital — one with serious life-threatening injuries and two with serious, but non-life-threatening injuries.
     
     
    Two other youths were sent to a Lethbridge hospital with non-life- threatening injuries.
     
     
    "All five youth remain in hospital," Hibbs said Friday. 
     
     
    "The RCMP Raymond detachment and an RCMP collision analyst attended the scene and the investigation is still ongoing."
     
     
    The driver of the other truck was not hurt.
     
     
    The Southern Alberta Minor Football Association said the crash involved five players with the Raymond High School Comets.
     
     
    "Please say some prayers for these young men," the association said in a post on social media. 
     
     
    "Due to unforeseen circumstances, the football game versus Catholic Central that was scheduled at 5 PM, will no longer be played."
     
     
    The Westwind School Division said students and staff have been deeply affected by the serious accident.
     
     
    "This is a heartbreaking and tragic accident and we recognize that students and families from several of our schools and communities will be impacted by it," the division said on its website.
     
     
    "We join with the community in extending an outpouring of caring, compassion and support for our students who have been injured and their families.
     
     
    "We stand by you."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Hands Off: Canada To Sign International Moratorium On High Arctic Fishing

    Canada is to join more than a dozen countries Wednesday in signing a deal that would block commercial fishing in the High Arctic for 16 years and begin unravelling ecological mysteries at the top of the world.

    Hands Off: Canada To Sign International Moratorium On High Arctic Fishing

    Canada Can Claim At Least Partial Success Of Progressive Agenda In USMCA

    Canada Can Claim At Least Partial Success Of Progressive Agenda In USMCA
    According to Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer, it was little more than "politically correct posturing" that served only to weaken Canada's negotiating position.

    Canada Can Claim At Least Partial Success Of Progressive Agenda In USMCA

    Feds Restarting Indigenous Talks Over Pipeline, Won't Appeal Court Decision

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said his government will follow the "blueprint" laid out by the Federal Court of Appeal in August, which said Ottawa had not properly consulted with Indigenous Peoples because it listened without trying to accommodate concerns.

    Feds Restarting Indigenous Talks Over Pipeline, Won't Appeal Court Decision

    Ontario Increases Hospital Funding By $90 Million To Address Overcrowding

    Ontario Increases Hospital Funding By $90 Million To Address Overcrowding
    The government will fund 1,100 hospital beds in total — including more than 640 new beds.

    Ontario Increases Hospital Funding By $90 Million To Address Overcrowding

    B.C.'s Kitimat LNG Deal Has John Horgan Juggling Greens, Liberals, Environmentalists

    B.C.'s Kitimat LNG Deal Has John Horgan Juggling Greens, Liberals, Environmentalists
    Horgan said LNG Canada's decision to build a $40 billion liquefied natural gas project in northern B.C. ranked on the historic scale of a "moon landing," emphasizing just how much the project means to an economically deprived region of the province.

    B.C.'s Kitimat LNG Deal Has John Horgan Juggling Greens, Liberals, Environmentalists

    Canada's Finance Minister Touts USMCA But Says Dairy, Steel Sectors Need Help

    Canada's Finance Minister Touts USMCA  But Says Dairy, Steel Sectors Need Help
    VANCOUVER — Finance Minister Bill Morneau says Canada's new trade deal will bring more economic stability, even as the government works to fairly compensate dairy farmers and deal with the dissatisfied steel and aluminum industry. 

    Canada's Finance Minister Touts USMCA But Says Dairy, Steel Sectors Need Help