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Bluffton

The Baseball Team That Never Made It to Florida: Bluffton's HOV-Ramp Disaster

OHotheradvisorymedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

At approximately 5:38 AM EST on March 2, 2007, a charter motorcoach carrying 35 members of Bluffton University's baseball team drove up a left-hand HOV exit ramp on Interstate 75 in Atlanta, Georgia and plunged off the overpass onto the highway below. Seven people were killed, including four student-athletes, the bus driver, his wife, and a fifth player who succumbed a week later; 28 others were injured. The university issued community notifications from Bluffton, Ohio as families gathered on campus for news from Atlanta.

Alerts
3
Response
Killed
7
Injured
28
Institution
Bluffton University
Private Liberal Arts · OH
~1,000 students
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

3 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTPhone
Approximate reconstruction436 chars
Members of the Bluffton University community: We are calling to inform you that our baseball team's charter bus was involved in a serious accident in Atlanta, Georgia early this morning. Several members of our team have been injured and transported to Atlanta-area hospitals. We are working to gather information and will notify you as soon as we have more details. Please keep our students, coaches, and their families in your prayers.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Reconstructed notification reflecting Bluffton's early-morning communications as campus officials learned of the crash at approximately 5:38 AM EST on the Northside Drive HOV exit ramp of I-75 southbound in Atlanta
In 2007, RAVE Mobile Safety and mass-notification SMS systems were not yet standard at small private institutions; Bluffton's primary channels were phone trees and email to faculty, staff, and the campus community
The crash occurred nine hours into a spring-break trip to Sarasota, Florida for a tournament against Eastern Mennonite University; families and community members began gathering on campus as word spread
UPDATEEmail
Approximate reconstruction588 chars
This message is to update the Bluffton University community on the tragic accident involving our baseball team in Atlanta this morning. We can confirm that several members of our team have been killed and that others are receiving treatment at Grady Memorial Hospital, Piedmont Hospital, and Atlanta Medical Center. University President Lee Snyder and other administrators are working to reach all families. Counseling and pastoral care are available on campus. We will provide further information as it becomes available. Please hold our community in prayer during this devastating time.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Reconstructed update reflecting confirmed casualty notifications issued as Bluffton officials identified the dead and injured among the 35 bus occupants, four of whom initially died at the scene
President Lee Snyder led the institutional response; survivors were transported to Grady Memorial Hospital, Piedmont Hospital, and Atlanta Medical Center, all confirmed in Wikipedia and AJC reporting
The 2007 crash preceded widespread campus mass-alert adoption; Bluffton had approximately 1,000 students and relied on email, phone trees, and chapel announcements
FOLLOW-UPEmail
Approximate reconstruction406 chars
The Bluffton University family mourns the loss of Zachary Arend, who passed away today from injuries sustained in last week's accident. Zach was a beloved member of our baseball team and our community. His passing brings our total loss to five student-athletes. We hold his family, his teammates, and all who loved him in prayer. A community memorial service is being planned for March 12 at Founders Hall.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Zachary Arend died approximately one week after the crash, bringing the student-athlete death toll to five; the Wikipedia article and multiple retrospective news accounts confirm this timeline
The March 12, 2007 memorial at Founders Hall drew hundreds including Ohio Governor Ted Strickland, Mennonite Church officials, AirTran employees who had helped transport families, and athletic teams from opposing conference schools
Bluffton is affiliated with Mennonite Church USA, and the campus response was deeply shaped by the community's Anabaptist traditions of mutual aid and communal mourning
Context

Background

The Bluffton University bus crash is one of the most significant transportation disasters in NCAA history. On March 2, 2007, a chartered motorcoach operated by Executive Coach Luxury Travel, Inc. was carrying 35 members of the Bluffton Beavers baseball team southbound on Interstate 75 in Atlanta en route to Sarasota, Florida, for spring-break tournament games. At approximately 5:38 AM EST, the driver -- 65-year-old Mose Byler -- mistook the left-side HOV exit ramp for the continuation of the HOV through lanes. The motorcoach accelerated up the ramp at highway speed, struck a stop sign and a concrete barrier, and plunged off the overpass onto I-75 below, landing on its roof. Four student-athletes died at the scene or shortly after: David Betts, Scott Harmon, Cody Holp, and Tyler Williams. The bus driver and his wife also died. Twenty-eight others were taken to Atlanta-area hospitals, including Grady Memorial. Zachary Arend, a fifth student-athlete, died one week later from his injuries, bringing the total death toll to seven. The crash occurred before mass emergency-notification systems were standard at small private colleges; Bluffton's communications relied on phone trees, email, and campus chapel announcements. A memorial service on March 12, 2007, at Founders Hall drew Ohio Governor Ted Strickland, Mennonite Church officials, and hundreds of mourners. The crash became a landmark case for charter-bus safety reform, ultimately contributing to federal regulations mandating three-point seatbelts on new motorcoaches.
Analysis

Key Findings

Seven killed (five student-athletes, the driver, and his wife) in the March 2, 2007 charter-bus crash on I-75 in Atlanta; the fifth student-athlete, Zachary Arend, died one week later
The driver entered the HOV exit ramp at highway speed at 5:38 AM EST, crashing through a stop sign and concrete barrier before the bus fell off the overpass onto I-75 below
Bluffton had no mass-notification SMS system in 2007; campus communications relied on phone trees, email, and chapel gatherings as families converged on the Bluffton, Ohio campus
The crash helped propel federal motorcoach seatbelt legislation; new buses must now include three-point restraints for each passenger
All alert text is reconstructed (isVerbatimConfirmed: false); no verbatim Bluffton University email or call text from 2007 was recoverable
Outcome
Seven killed: student-athletes David Betts, Scott Harmon, Cody Holp, Tyler Williams, and (one week later) Zachary Arend, plus bus driver and his wife. 28 others injured. Driver operated by Executive Coach Luxury Travel, Inc. of Ottawa, Ohio. NTSB investigation followed. Families and community gathered on campus; Governor Ted Strickland attended the March 12, 2007 memorial at Founders Hall.
Provenance

Sources

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Tags
transportationcharter-bus-crashbaseballathletic-teamohioatlantastudent-deathpre-mass-alert-eraseatbelt-reformmennonitehov-ramphistoric
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion