Leicester City soccer club owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, a Thai tycoon, was among five people who were in a helicopter on Saturday that crashed in a ball of flames after a Premier League match, a source close to the club said.
Also onboard were one of Vichai’s two daughters, two pilots and a fifth person whose identity was not immediately known, the source said yesterday.
There were no confirmed details on whether anyone onboard survived, the source said.
Vichai, a father of four and the founder of duty-free giant King Power International, is a favorite with fans after he bought the unfancied side from central England in 2010 and they went on to stun the soccer world by winning the Premier League title in 2016.
In Thailand, officials at King Power said they could not yet comment on the crash or say whether Vichai had been aboard when it spiraled out of control and crashed an hour after the game. The club has not commented on that publicly.
The helicopter crashed just meters from the pitch in the club’s parking lot.
Team manager Claude Puel was not on the helicopter, the source said.
According to witnesses, the helicopter just cleared the top of the stadium before it started to spin. It then plummeted to the ground and burst into flames.
John Butcher, who was near the stadium at the time of the crash, told the BBC that his nephew saw the helicopter spiral out of control, apparently due to a faulty rear propeller.
“Within a second, it dropped like a stone to the floor... Luckily, it did spiral for a little while and everybody sort of ran, sort of scattered,” Butcher said.
After pumping millions of pounds into the club, Vichai helped steer them back into the top flight in 2014 before they beat the likes of Manchester United, Liverpool and Chelsea to become champions of England.
According to Forbes magazine he is the fifth-richest person in Thailand with an estimated net worth of US$4.9 billion.
A self-made businessman, Vichai founded Thai duty-free giant King Power in 1989.
The business got a boost in 2006 when it was granted an airport monopoly under the government of then-Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, and it continued to prosper even after Thaksin’s ouster in a coup that year.
Freelance photographer Ryan Brown was covering the game and saw the helicopter clear the stadium before it crashed, the BBC reported.
“Literally the engine stopped and I turned around, and it made a bit of a whirring noise,” Brown told BBC Radio 5 Live. “It turned silent, blades started spinning and then there was a big bang.”
Leicester had played a league match at home against West Ham United earlier on Saturday, drawing 1-1.
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