Nike CEO, others safe on ground after landing-gear drama (AP) Updated: 2005-11-22 10:42
The pilot of a Nike corporate jet got a stuck landing gear to drop into place
and landed the plane safely after putting it through a series of stressful,
high-altitude maneuvers, passenger and Nike CEO William Perez said.
The six-hour drama in the sky over Oregon was carried live Monday on national
television. The Gulfstream jet circled to burn off fuel before making the
emergency landing at Hillsboro Airport, where it had taken off.
The suburban airport is just west of Portland and near Nike's Beaverton
headquarters. Nike Inc. is the world's largest athletic shoe and clothing
company.
Besides Perez, two other Nike executives, Perez's assistant and a crew of
three were on the plane for a planned flight to Toronto.
The crew was finally able to get the right main landing gear fully extended
and locked into place after talking for hours with Gulfstream officials. The
plane took off at 6 a.m. and made its emergency landing at 12:11 p.m. on all
three wheels.
Perez said the pilot tried various things to try to get the right wheel
unstuck, including an ascent to about 20,000 feet (6,000 meters) and "some zero
gravity maneuvers."
"We did a few maneuvers and it (the wheel) came down," Perez said. TV footage
had showed the wheel only about one-quarter extended shortly after takeoff.
 A Nike Inc. corporate jet makes a successful
landing after having landing gear problems in Hillsboro, Oregon on
November 21, 2005.[Reuters] | Earlier, the
Gulfstream performed two "touch and go" maneuvers at the airport, touching down
briefly on the fully extended left landing gear, apparently to try to jostle the
right one into place.
"I wasn't worried one bit. You're dealing with professionals in the cockpit
and you shouldn't worry," Perez said.
"Everybody was calm. We were sending e-mails. We were talking. The phones
were working part of the time. You could use cell phones," he said.
Still, Perez told reporters at the airport that "it's nice to be on the
ground."
John O'Meara, chief test pilot for Gulfstream, was at Hillsboro to help the
executive jet land. He told MSNBC that "with some basic airmanship on the part
of the crew, who did a magnificent job and maintained their calm and demeanor,
they were able to get the gear down."
The plane, a Gulfstream V, is a 2002 aircraft acquired by Nike earlier this
month, said Joani Komlos, a company spokeswoman. The plane had been through the
appropriate testing, she said. The company doesn't know what caused the
malfunction but will be working with Gulfstream to find out, Komlos said.
Nike co-founder Phil Knight was not on board the jet. Perez joined the
company last year when Knight stepped down from daily management of the
company.
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