Flight carrying OKC Thunder hits something in mid-air, resulting in huge dent

The Oklahoma City Thunder basketball team took a night flight from Minnesota to Chicago. When they landed, the players noticed something strange about their plane.

The chartered plane had apparently encountered some unexpected object while flying, and was left with a giant dent in the nose.

The players were concerned about the massive depression in the plane’s front and took to social media to show the damage and wonder how it happened.

DELTA AIRLINES PAYS WOMAN $4,000 TO GIVE UP HER SEAT

“What possibly could we have hit in the SKY at this time of night?” Carmelo Anthony wrote alongside a shot of the damaged plane on Instagram. “Everyone is Safe, Though,” he added. “All Praise Due #ThunderStrong.”
Another player simply wrote on Twitter, “Guess we hit something? 30,000 feet up…”
Josh Huestis

@jhuestis
I guess we hit something? 30,000 feet up…

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9:09 AM – Oct 28, 2017
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But Thunder center Steven Adams, originally of New Zealand, wanted an explanation, so he reached out to NASA, Neil Degrasse Tyson and Bill Nye on Twitter to see if they could identity what happened.

“Hey @NASA @neiltyson @BillNye We had a rough flight to say the least. 30000 feet in the air. Flying to chicago. What caused this?”
Steven Adams

@RealStevenAdams
Hey @NASA @neiltyson @BillNye
We had a rough flight to say the least.

30000 feet in the air.
Flying to chicago.

What caused this?

View image on Twitter
14.7K
9:14 AM – Oct 28, 2017
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But before the scientific community could reach out, Delta offered some answers in a statement to The Oklahoman.

“Delta flight 8935, operating from Minneapolis to Chicago-Midway as a charter flight for the Oklahoma City Thunder, likely encountered a bird while on descent into Chicago,” a Delta spokesperson said.

Twitter isn’t exactly buying the birdstrike — one user tweeted a picture of Sesame Street’s Big Bird saying it was the “only type of bird that could have caused this.”
Steven Adams

@RealStevenAdams
· Oct 28, 2017
Hey @NASA @neiltyson @BillNye
We had a rough flight to say the least.

30000 feet in the air.
Flying to chicago.

What caused this?

View image on Twitter

Austin Butler
@austintbutler1
Only type of bird that could have caused this

View image on Twitter
2,854
10:43 AM – Oct 28, 2017
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343 people are talking about this
FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK FOR MORE FOX LIFESTYLE NEWS

Patrick Paterson had his own hypothesis about the plane’s accident. In a video he posted in his Instagram story, he suggested Superman was the culprit, writing over the photo, “When you accidentally hit Superman while flying.”The Oklahoma City Thunder basketball team took a night flight from Minnesota to Chicago. When they landed, the players noticed something strange about their plane.

The chartered plane had apparently encountered some unexpected object while flying, and was left with a giant dent in the nose.

The players were concerned about the massive depression in the plane’s front and took to social media to show the damage and wonder how it happened.

DELTA AIRLINES PAYS WOMAN $4,000 TO GIVE UP HER SEAT

“What possibly could we have hit in the SKY at this time of night?” Carmelo Anthony wrote alongside a shot of the damaged plane on Instagram. “Everyone is Safe, Though,” he added. “All Praise Due #ThunderStrong.”
Another player simply wrote on Twitter, “Guess we hit something? 30,000 feet up…”
Josh Huestis

@jhuestis
I guess we hit something? 30,000 feet up…

View image on Twitter
1,505
9:09 AM – Oct 28, 2017
Twitter Ads info and privacy
753 people are talking about this
But Thunder center Steven Adams, originally of New Zealand, wanted an explanation, so he reached out to NASA, Neil Degrasse Tyson and Bill Nye on Twitter to see if they could identity what happened.

“Hey @NASA @neiltyson @BillNye We had a rough flight to say the least. 30000 feet in the air. Flying to chicago. What caused this?”
Steven Adams

@RealStevenAdams
Hey @NASA @neiltyson @BillNye
We had a rough flight to say the least.

30000 feet in the air.
Flying to chicago.

What caused this?

View image on Twitter
14.7K
9:14 AM – Oct 28, 2017
Twitter Ads info and privacy
7,368 people are talking about this
But before the scientific community could reach out, Delta offered some answers in a statement to The Oklahoman.

“Delta flight 8935, operating from Minneapolis to Chicago-Midway as a charter flight for the Oklahoma City Thunder, likely encountered a bird while on descent into Chicago,” a Delta spokesperson said.

Twitter isn’t exactly buying the birdstrike — one user tweeted a picture of Sesame Street’s Big Bird saying it was the “only type of bird that could have caused this.”
Steven Adams

@RealStevenAdams
· Oct 28, 2017
Hey @NASA @neiltyson @BillNye
We had a rough flight to say the least.

30000 feet in the air.
Flying to chicago.

What caused this?

View image on Twitter

Austin Butler
@austintbutler1
Only type of bird that could have caused this

View image on Twitter
2,854
10:43 AM – Oct 28, 2017
Twitter Ads info and privacy
343 people are talking about this
FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK FOR MORE FOX LIFESTYLE NEWS

Patrick Paterson had his own hypothesis about the plane’s accident. In a video he posted in his Instagram story, he suggested Superman was the culprit, writing over the photo, “When you accidentally hit Superman while flying.”

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