It had been almost 10 days, with hardly any food and little water, when 12 Thai boys and their soccer coach trapped inside the Tham Luang cave in North Thailand, saw two heads emerge from the darkness in front of them.
In Monday night’s episode of ABC’s Four Corners, we were shown the moment the Wild Boars soccer team were found by two British divers.
As the heads of 57-year-old Rick Stanton, and 47-year-old John Volanthen, popped up from the pitch black water, one of the smallest boys perched on the cave platform can be seen quickly retreating, likely startled by the presence of two new people in the isolated cave.
The first words the boys say in the footage are simple, with a hint of desperation: “Thank you, thank you.”
Stanton, a retired firefighter, and Volanthen, an IT consultant, ask “How many of you?” and when they discover there are, indeed, 13, they exclaim, “brilliant”.
The boys want to know when they will be rescued, and the British divers assure them there are “many people coming. Many, many people. We are the first, many people come.” They tell them their rescue will not be today.
“What day?” one boy insists, but when the answer is “tomorrow” he seems unsatisfied.
“No, no, no,” the second British diver interrupts, “What day is it they are asking. Monday. Monday.
“One week and Monday. You have been here ten days. Ten days.”
Watch: British diver Jason Mallinson on what happened inside the cave. Post continues after video.
Top Comments
It’s quite amazing to me that one of the experienced cave divers also just happened to be an anaesthetist - wonder what the odds of that happening were!
Doctors have hobbies and interests too! Sure, our schedules are busy, but anaesthetics in particular can allow for a bit more flexibility in one's work-life balance, so unsurprising he's had opportunity to cultivate his interests.
I’m not saying it’s amazing he has a hobby at all, just that it happened to be the specific one needed here. I would think that cave diving is a somewhat unusual hobby, and the odds of being a cave diver who is ALSO an anaesthetist must be pretty high.
You'd be surprised! Medicine is a pretty large community, and the luxury of a higher disposable income often facilitates a range of unusual/thrill seeking/esoteric past times. ;)