Pilots Involved In Air Canada LaGuardia P

They never had a chance.


Two young pilots, a routine landing, and a fire truck that should not have been there.

In seconds, lives ended, an airport froze, and a quiet voice on the radio whispered, “I messed up.”

They were strangers to most of the people onboard, names printed on flight plans and ID

badges, but in the space of a few violent seconds they became the center of hundreds of lives.

Antoine Forest and Mackenzie Gunther carried very different stories into that cockpit — one

forged in bush strips and maintenance hangars, the other in classrooms and ramp work — yet

both were built on the same quiet belief that skill and discipline could hold chaos back.

When the systems around them faltered, that belief was all they had left.

Passengers remember not panic, but control: a sense that someone up front was still fighting for

them, even as metal twisted and the runway disappeared beneath the sliding jet.

Investigators will map vectors, procedures, and errors, but the people who walked away will

remember something else — that when everything failed, two men kept trying, right up to the end.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *