Man rescued after blacking out while attempting to break record for world’s deepest dive | NY Post

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 27 окт 2024

Комментарии • 345

  • @sebastiannai4381
    @sebastiannai4381 Год назад +630

    Incredible rescue!!!! Perfect teamwork, and everybody was going HARD without air. Well done!!!

    • @HackerLewis77
      @HackerLewis77 Год назад +9

      except for the camera guy haha

    • @testtor2714
      @testtor2714 Год назад +26

      I'm not so sure about this. Record holder Herbert Nitsch had a similar problem and because they brought him up too the surface too quickly he became handicapped afterwards. Also I find it totally idiotic to not put even a SINGLE scuba diver there who could supply air under water in an emergency situation. To me this looks completely foolish.

    • @tingwei1016
      @tingwei1016 Год назад

      @@testtor2714Please educate yourself before making silly remarks like this. We do not ever use scuba safety because if you take one breath from the regulator at depth, you now have to deco your way up. What they are trying to do is to get the unconscious diver to the surface asap, so they can wake him up or give him oxygen if needed.

    • @leonardofernandez3978
      @leonardofernandez3978 Год назад +10

      @@testtor2714don't quote me but basically at the depth they go on a breath hold to give them oxygen from a tank at that depth isn't exactly air we breathe on the surface so I believe something along the lines of their lungs exploding would happen if they got them air at that depth

    • @testtor2714
      @testtor2714 Год назад +3

      @@leonardofernandez3978 No. It doesn't make a difference whether you're scuba diving or free diving. Otherwise all the scuba divers would always die. And even if the surface level uncompressed air would be a problem, he could simply breath out before taking a new breath from a scuba diver in an emergency situation.

  • @alison4316
    @alison4316 Год назад +178

    Great team effort. 100% saved his life. Im sure he's very grateful.

  • @Coconautify
    @Coconautify Год назад +258

    The safety guys were all deep too... that was hardly a 'shallow' water blackout... great rescue, job well done!

    • @NunoTorpedo
      @NunoTorpedo Год назад +13

      Miguel Lozano dived to 125 meters. For a dive this deep the first rescue diver should appear around 40, second at 35 and third around 30 meters

    • @mephistotel87
      @mephistotel87 Год назад +1

      ​@@NunoTorpedoAnd what would happen if he blackout before reaching these 40 meters?

    • @NunoTorpedo
      @NunoTorpedo Год назад +12

      @@mephistotel87 those cases are extremely rare (not to say they never happened) but just in case, there's a safeguard system: a counter-weight on the other end of the main line that when released pulls the diver up (that's why they always have a lanyard connecting them to the main line)

    • @sharko108
      @sharko108 Год назад

      @@NunoTorpedo Thank's for the details! :) But how is the line released as the diver collapsed? And there is not more deep scubadiver ?( Like with Pascal Bernabe for example for Audrey Mestre's tragedy)

    • @fanfarigoule
      @fanfarigoule Год назад +3

      @@sharko108 From the safety guidelines :
      The recovery system should be activated if
      • Motionless athlete is either visible by safety team, live cameras or visible with sonar
      (With sonar, the system will activated if we see a stop of at least 10s, a stop is
      considered as a speed of descent or ascent of less than 0.2m/s).
      • The athletes touches the bottom at least 30s late according to bottom dive time
      declared at the beginning of the competition.
      • The athlete is not in sight of the safety freedivers at the end of the announced dive
      time.

  • @randle1292
    @randle1292 Год назад +182

    That’s one heck of a team right there. Great job!!

  • @user9b2
    @user9b2 Год назад +95

    And the safety team were all holding their breath just as long as the divers - 👍👏👏👏

    • @vallsz
      @vallsz Год назад +6

      yea not really, they plan the diving time, regarding athletes record the danger zone is always between 40 and 0, so one goes as at -40 then one -35 and so one with more and more safety as it is close to surface

    • @yangz1036
      @yangz1036 Год назад +13

      @@edadanI think is that scuba diver requires 3-5min safety stop when dive deeper than 30ft. Freedivers can directly ascend from any depth.

  • @crocodile2006
    @crocodile2006 Год назад +85

    Love how he checks his watch.... gotta find out his time after death...

    • @FUTBOLOCO90
      @FUTBOLOCO90 Год назад +8

      thats a dive computer thats to know his depth and time holding his breath.

  • @365tonkatruckfit2
    @365tonkatruckfit2 Год назад +27

    One of the most perfect examples of we all need each other even when we are jumping.

  • @kamazzaki2147
    @kamazzaki2147 Год назад +40

    Big kudos to the Team!! everyone knew their assignments

  • @berrex5152
    @berrex5152 Год назад +81

    safety guys casually breaking the records and saving the guy at the same time

    • @paulchen3993
      @paulchen3993 Год назад

      😂

    • @Vanessa-sb6qz
      @Vanessa-sb6qz Год назад

      😂😂 for real

    • @NunoTorpedo
      @NunoTorpedo Год назад +1

      @berrex5152 Haha, but not quite. Miguel Lozano dived to 125 meters. For a dive this deep the first rescue diver should appear around 40, second at 35 and third around 30 meters

    • @daquanfromtheblock6448
      @daquanfromtheblock6448 Год назад +1

      they casually have giant flippers on

    • @VonJay
      @VonJay Год назад

      Did we watch the same video? There’s a point where they didn’t dive as deep as him.

  • @brianlee7212
    @brianlee7212 Год назад +15

    The safety divers are the athletes that should be celebrated

  • @czakoof
    @czakoof Год назад +23

    He is a machine, great work safety team✨👏

  • @KatieEJ21
    @KatieEJ21 Год назад +13

    A friend and former work colleague was involved in resuce. The safety divers were part of his team. He's implemented safety divers for events such as this and trying to make it a standard across the board. He also teaches safety diving courses and instructor courses. I'm just so proud of him for what he's accomplished. So happy that the diver is ok. If you're thinking of free diving, always, always make sure your instructor is accredited

  • @HarmlessComment
    @HarmlessComment Год назад +36

    These rescues are so scary but beautiful at the same time

  • @shairuno
    @shairuno Год назад +5

    The level of preparation and teamwork is amazing

  • @krist6074
    @krist6074 2 месяца назад

    Those safety guys were ready and well trained for the job! Incredible to see how they saved this man's life!!!

  • @MaxMax-th7uz
    @MaxMax-th7uz Год назад +7

    Team work ! First diver had really impressive speed !

  • @RackwitzG
    @RackwitzG Год назад +45

    What's crazy is that all those helpers were down their with him without oxygen. I guess that ensures that they can quickly ascend without decompression sickness.

    • @Coco_Loco95
      @Coco_Loco95 Год назад +1

      Speaking of decompression, didn’t the guy need to decompress a while before they brought him up?

    • @xtherealest
      @xtherealest Год назад +24

      ​@@Coco_Loco95Nah they're freediving. You only worry about decompression stops when diving with a scuba tank because you're breathing and as you go up with the oxygen you just inhaled the lung expands because there's less pressure and your lungs could even explode. If you dive one breath only you're still on one breath of oxygen which means the air can't expand more than what you had when you started the dive.

    • @Coco_Loco95
      @Coco_Loco95 Год назад +1

      @@xtherealest thanks for the info

    • @xtherealest
      @xtherealest Год назад +2

      @@Coco_Loco95 Np 💯

    • @alexcanino2501
      @alexcanino2501 Год назад +2

      @@Coco_Loco95 That's for scuba divers. Freedivers dive on a single breath which makes decompress unnecessary.

  • @jaxypassionblocks
    @jaxypassionblocks Год назад +24

    the dramatic swim up is what made me realize
    how deep that truly is.

  • @schimma20
    @schimma20 Год назад +2

    Crazy sport

  • @g2166
    @g2166 Год назад +6

    Amazing team work 💛

  • @ВсеволодВоронов

    Deep respect to the rescue team !

  • @abdiqadirabdi940
    @abdiqadirabdi940 Год назад +19

    I noticed that rescue team are not diving all the way to bottom but just wait at 20 last meters, what happens if diver black out at the bottom?

    • @TH-dg2mm
      @TH-dg2mm Год назад +25

      I think it's because the blackouts mostly occur when you're resurfacing. He didn't just randomly run out of breath, something happens with the pressure/oxygen in your lungs.

    • @FinlayDaG33k
      @FinlayDaG33k Год назад +24

      ​@@TH-dg2mm Correct. It's called "hypoxia of ascent".
      When you are deep, the pressure of oxygen remains sufficiently high that you can maintain consciousness.
      However, when you rise up too fast, this pressure decreases too fast and lights out it is.

    • @TH-dg2mm
      @TH-dg2mm Год назад +10

      @@FinlayDaG33k Yeah, I watched a few other videos and most of the blackouts actually happen really close to the surface.
      It must be tough knowing you dove all that way and made it all the way back up, only to black out a few meters from the surface!

    • @UFCSTAN
      @UFCSTAN Год назад +6

      There is 100% a diver down below thats breathing tri-mix he just can’t surface or else he could die. He needs to decompress on his way up.

    • @krismachowski1668
      @krismachowski1668 Год назад +6

      If he were to black out below the safety teams rescue depth, then there is another safety procedure. He is attached to that line with a clip, so they drop a counterweight off the back of the floating platform, which pulls the line up from the bottom. He will then be yanked up with the line to the surface where he can be rescued.

  • @tishamagofna3841
    @tishamagofna3841 Год назад +3

    Epic team work everyone…The guy trying to unhook the safety wire and he did 😈 epic just epic ❤

  • @babaayaga9380
    @babaayaga9380 Год назад

    this is what legendary team work is

  • @sonicaminoa
    @sonicaminoa Год назад +19

    I get brain damage by reading this comment section. More dangerous than blacking out when freediving with professionals like in this video

    • @xtherealest
      @xtherealest Год назад +1

      Yeah 😂 people think a scuba tank is a right way to rescue. The person would be dead if these people were to rescue someone 💀

  • @MrSpook-ri8kv
    @MrSpook-ri8kv Год назад +2

    That man owes his life to the men that prevented his death, they were Johnny on the spot.

  • @flowfaster
    @flowfaster Год назад +44

    Why do human beings have the need to test their limits, even knowing that it could cost them their lives? I could never understand it.

    • @kisstheworldanddie
      @kisstheworldanddie Год назад

      These are the humans who build the world you lean so for granted in.
      There was a time where humans had been dominated by so many things, look where we are today because of all the individuals who kept pushing!

    • @dianahd5203
      @dianahd5203 Год назад +6

      bc it’s rad. 🤟🏾

    • @youtubecomments5951
      @youtubecomments5951 Год назад +12

      But that’s why we still exist today. It’s that very nature of pushing the limits. Very early on we also built boats when people though the earth was flat. The went places that have never been discovered by those humans not knowing if or ever they will reach land. There are people who are scared of everything and some who aren’t and complete we have a working civilization. That has the technology and lifespan we have today.

    • @Kevin12321
      @Kevin12321 Год назад +5

      We wouldn’t be flying planes if not. We would have never known what was over the cliffs or on the other side of the sea. It’s human nature

    • @youtubecomments5951
      @youtubecomments5951 Год назад

      @@Kevin12321 yep. But we need all sorts of people in the world to get to where we are at today. People with no empathy like psychopaths “presidents” people with adhd and most are normal people that just work a 9-5. The sheeps of the world to be used basically. Strong minded people weak minded people that’s used by the strong minded.

  • @aaniuxx
    @aaniuxx Год назад +7

    Wow, this was actually very intense to watch.

  • @benski98
    @benski98 Год назад +3

    The only reason I could find to go back, is that the team did so well at doing their own jobs, they guaranteed your return in the most efficient time possible

  • @suzannepatrick9516
    @suzannepatrick9516 Год назад +6

    Amazing rescue. Well done guys!!

  • @zackhickey4922
    @zackhickey4922 Год назад +47

    He could learn a lot from the safety guys. They’re amazing swimmers

    • @cristobalbalenciaga7295
      @cristobalbalenciaga7295 10 месяцев назад

      What do you mean..? They have on flippers, so they swim faster. But why do you feel like he could learn a lot from them? He’s using a different technique to persever oxygen, not because he’s a worse swimmer 😂

    • @NamberGuan
      @NamberGuan 7 дней назад

      He is better than the safety divers

  • @upnriding-surfculture6701
    @upnriding-surfculture6701 Год назад +2

    Man these are professionals

  • @Krakhne281
    @Krakhne281 6 месяцев назад +1

    My hobby is gardening safest among all❤

  • @CEOof
    @CEOof Год назад

    What a team

  • @claudiacastano3479
    @claudiacastano3479 Месяц назад

    Este reporte me pareció intrigante y sorprendente por la capacidad de aguante que tienen los deportistas

  • @christinamontoya388
    @christinamontoya388 Год назад +1

    Looks like he tapped his forehead to signal to the rescuers that he knew he was losing consciousness. Great job everybody.

  • @NiluMustika
    @NiluMustika Год назад +3

    True heroes!! Risking their own lives for those who want to break records

  • @buildersandinteriorexperts
    @buildersandinteriorexperts Год назад +2

    RIP Stephen Keenan.

  • @peachiepeachie
    @peachiepeachie Год назад

    At least they had professional and competent crew! Rescue executed perfectly

  • @sammencia7945
    @sammencia7945 Год назад +7

    A friend, dive pro, spotted another free diver doing this.
    No issue but he would be one of the 12 helping if something happened.
    All of these divers are fish. Can dive 30 feet like it is nothing

  • @jerzynawrocki3727
    @jerzynawrocki3727 4 месяца назад +1

    Freediving is insane.

  • @Wil_Dasovich
    @Wil_Dasovich Год назад +5

    goosebumps

  • @Benjamin-j8u
    @Benjamin-j8u Год назад

    Well done rescur team👏👏

  • @GP-ed1ti
    @GP-ed1ti Год назад +3

    Why? I just don't get it.

  • @Crysisplaya
    @Crysisplaya Год назад +2

    Safety guys were babysitting this dude

    • @FrostbitexP
      @FrostbitexP Год назад

      Well hes the one diving to crazy depths, not the safety guys waiting at shallower depths.

  • @mayraballesteros3612
    @mayraballesteros3612 Год назад +2

    Amazing safety team wow

  • @imdoc7872
    @imdoc7872 Год назад +1

    I loved the guy filming the whole thing 😂

  • @antreid9596
    @antreid9596 Год назад +16

    Bro you did that!!!! Even tho you almost checked out smh you stilll accomplished sumn most mfs wouldn’t even think of 💯 💪🏾 GREAT work to the ENTIRE TEAM !!!

    • @benedictcumberbatch4275
      @benedictcumberbatch4275 11 месяцев назад

      Don’t you have to make it back to the surface for it to count?

    • @basselsolomon3749
      @basselsolomon3749 3 месяца назад +1

      @@benedictcumberbatch4275 Yes, you do. Safety divers actually have to make the difficult decision of determining when it's 'time' to give you a hand. Once they do, it's over for your record, even if it's just a little push and they back off. So they have to be 'sure' but not wait till they're 'too sure' lest they be late.

    • @benedictcumberbatch4275
      @benedictcumberbatch4275 3 месяца назад

      @@basselsolomon3749 I agree. I was just pointing that out to the op who said “you did it!”. When it was the safety divers who dragged him back up there lol

  • @JohnS-gf4sz
    @JohnS-gf4sz Год назад +4

    It ain’t worth it people

  • @CatholicForever1
    @CatholicForever1 Год назад +4

    Okay...why waste all this medical care, stress, etc...to break a world record?! Just for bragging rights? We really need to get our priorities straight

    • @rossmccabe3667
      @rossmccabe3667 Год назад +2

      Karen calm down sweetie

    • @ricksanchez1079
      @ricksanchez1079 Год назад

      You: "waste all this medical care"
      The medical care: *Saves a mans life, ON CAMERA.*
      Are you sure you're catholic? If so you should get your priorities straight, poser.

    • @xtherealest
      @xtherealest Год назад

      There's no medical care needed. When you pass out your throat shuts so no water gets in and it they bring you back to the surface you're going to wake up almost instantly. There's nothing dangerous about that. Find some information on the internet before you type something on the internet.

  • @idupaul8063
    @idupaul8063 Год назад +2

    What a graceful rescue

  • @abdaz7159
    @abdaz7159 10 месяцев назад

    Tolong beritahu saya
    Apa yang menyebabkan blackout saat diving

  • @quietmav
    @quietmav Год назад +3

    Why would they do that!! That's scary!

  • @eM-ed5pz
    @eM-ed5pz Год назад +7

    Elite team

  • @theginge.
    @theginge. Год назад

    Your one lucky guy mate

  • @itsallbusiness1
    @itsallbusiness1 Год назад

    The rescuers are Gs!!!!!

  • @stRaightFunk
    @stRaightFunk Год назад +1

    Kudos to the whole team! Just watched the docu on netflix, im in tears after. Always in awe after a successful rescue 🙌🙌🙌

    • @iamaaliyah_4468
      @iamaaliyah_4468 Год назад

      What’s the documentary called ?

    • @K20Ashiqin
      @K20Ashiqin Год назад

      @@iamaaliyah_4468 The Deepest Breath, it's worth watching

  • @dunepred
    @dunepred Год назад +3

    Who really cares about a free drive record.

  • @MachinistNumbr7
    @MachinistNumbr7 Год назад +14

    Life is so precious, I don't understand why people have to do this to themselves.

    • @AriCalifornia-yu7vq
      @AriCalifornia-yu7vq Год назад +14

      Some people don't define sitting on your couch all day as living

    • @MachinistNumbr7
      @MachinistNumbr7 Год назад +12

      @@AriCalifornia-yu7vq At least people on couches can breathe.

    • @kriskyandii
      @kriskyandii Год назад +6

      ​@@AriCalifornia-yu7vqcan still enjoy the water without jeopardizing their safety and others then when mfs get eaten by a shark yall wanna cry😂

    • @xtherealest
      @xtherealest Год назад +4

      This just happens sometimes. If you have divers that will bring you back up there's nothing to worry about. When you pass out your throat shuts so water doesn't get in and they just have to bring him back to the surface and wake him up and everything is fine.

    • @tripledigit1205
      @tripledigit1205 Год назад

      Stupidest sport in the world.

  • @wallybingbang4350
    @wallybingbang4350 Год назад +1

    This was bizarre. He tapped when he felt ok and sat up. I watch MMA and you tap out when it's over -
    This is the deepest blackout rescue I have seen -
    Yikes !!

  • @ch007eh7
    @ch007eh7 11 месяцев назад

    0:39 Even though I'm sitting comfortably on a sofa, I could feel the need to breath but I remembered that even with the panic, you can't.
    Horrible.

  • @keepingit100-ss3hx
    @keepingit100-ss3hx Год назад

    I like how the man is blacked out and there is a photographer taking photos 😂😂😂

  • @oguimalan_j
    @oguimalan_j Год назад

    Watta save!!

  • @FullJikama
    @FullJikama Год назад

    Those are the realest aquaman’s I have ever seen.

  • @ysmindean6611
    @ysmindean6611 Год назад +5

    Dios mio, que este bien.

  • @themechanic4222
    @themechanic4222 Год назад

    Real lifeguard ❤

  • @lettea4600
    @lettea4600 Год назад

    Is that considered a world record? Or not completed

    • @mweh6953
      @mweh6953 Год назад

      no it's invalid since the diver didn't manage to complete the dive.

  • @quest808
    @quest808 Год назад +1

    Don’t do that. Our bodies aren’t made to do that

  • @Mike-01234
    @Mike-01234 Год назад +1

    410 feet deep how did those guys rescue him.

  • @lisamcgee8535
    @lisamcgee8535 10 месяцев назад +1

    What an intelligent sport 😂

  • @audreytelles
    @audreytelles Год назад +1

    Ego putting everybody in risc

  • @Ghost-oq8fw
    @Ghost-oq8fw Год назад +1

    Why don't the safety divers have scuba gear

  • @R.A.D.G59
    @R.A.D.G59 Год назад

    Did he win?

  • @ArabellaPottery
    @ArabellaPottery Год назад

    How did water not rush into his lungs when he blacked out?

  • @Dannysoutherner
    @Dannysoutherner 3 месяца назад +1

    Drowning class.

  • @chewygaming1
    @chewygaming1 Год назад +1

    Nobody had a scuba tank? You prepare for the worst and hope it never comes to.

  • @michaelmitchell5458
    @michaelmitchell5458 Год назад

    Life savers!

  • @SOlah-yc1bk
    @SOlah-yc1bk Год назад

    why was he swimming without fins?

  • @BackpackeRom
    @BackpackeRom Год назад

    cameraman >>>

  • @kevingp12
    @kevingp12 Год назад

    Dang almost missed this happened in Roatan, in my parent's homeland of Honduras.

  • @griffith500tvr
    @griffith500tvr Год назад +1

    You will have the bends I imagine

  • @kanohane
    @kanohane Год назад +2

    Ever wonder why humans aren't fish?

  • @Blazifyr
    @Blazifyr Год назад

    The deepest dive record is to the people in the submarine after it imploded 💀

  • @jordanalston3506
    @jordanalston3506 Год назад

    Was he holding his breath? Like, there’s no oxygen tanks?

  • @user-ro5nn3fj1c
    @user-ro5nn3fj1c Год назад

    This is so scary

  • @MONKEFOREVA
    @MONKEFOREVA 3 месяца назад

    What’s his name?

  • @amywaterman17
    @amywaterman17 3 месяца назад +1

    Who came from DailyDoseOfInternet

  • @brianoneal2547
    @brianoneal2547 Год назад +8

    Safe and effective

  • @ussrusa6679
    @ussrusa6679 Год назад

    4 days ago Alexey Molchanov set a new record - 133 meters!🥳

  • @2010RSHACKS
    @2010RSHACKS Год назад +2

    If the whole team dove down there why does the guy that passed out get the credit lol

    • @xtherealest
      @xtherealest Год назад

      Because he just dove to 127 meters on one breath 💀

    • @basselsolomon3749
      @basselsolomon3749 3 месяца назад

      He didn't actually. Once you're rescued, it doesn't count.

    • @mweh6953
      @mweh6953 2 месяца назад

      The safety team will only dive up to 50m

  • @skywalkerking2448
    @skywalkerking2448 Год назад +2

    I couldn't count everyone but how many idiots did you guys count?

  • @elizastar1973
    @elizastar1973 Год назад

    Why.

  • @chenzenzo
    @chenzenzo Год назад

    This is Herbert Nitsch, the world's best deep free diver.
    What you are actually seeing is not people rescuing him, because he is still hold air. These men are forcing him to the surface before he should be there, which caused oxygen from his blood to force it's way into his brain. What they should have done was wait and allow his body to acclimate to the pressure, and slowly move him up. This dive almost killed him.

    • @robertmanjonpancorbo6559
      @robertmanjonpancorbo6559 Год назад

      Hi, he is Miguel Lozano, my freedive instructor, and the speed of ascension in freedive is not very important if you have safety guys.

  • @BubblesNoSoap
    @BubblesNoSoap Год назад

    so wait he made it down, does it still count?

    • @xtherealest
      @xtherealest Год назад

      Nope, you have to be conscious when you reach the surface. If you black out the whole try was for nothing.

  • @sansnom1606
    @sansnom1606 Год назад

    So the team broke the record?

  • @Bryanpeacock33
    @Bryanpeacock33 10 месяцев назад

    Ill pass lol for real tho this is amazing and I'm glad they have proper protocols to keep divers safe

  • @blackitikatt533
    @blackitikatt533 Год назад

    You have to have permission from that realm to enter. That is a totally different dimension. 😑

  • @wisdomteller9252
    @wisdomteller9252 Год назад +1

    Someone tried this and died.

  • @latigresseNYC
    @latigresseNYC Год назад +1

    Wow! The ocean is not our domain.

  • @chloestella7
    @chloestella7 Год назад

    They need to start making mini oxygen tanks for safety divers. It makes no sense for them to do the same thing and be expected to expend more energy saving someone.