Three McDonnell Douglas F/A-18 Hornets from the USS George Washington (CVN 73), 2002. (Photo Credit: Captain Dana Potts / US Navy / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain)
In the three aircraft formation, Anderson was on the left, with Stubbs in the middle and Lt. Cmdr. Cal Worthington on the right. As the F/A-18 Hornets made their way toward the F-14 Tomcats, two completed aileron rolls, showing they’d been “killed.”
It was during these rolls that the two F/A-18s collided. Stubbs later recounted in Rick Llinares and Chuck Lloyd’s Adversary: America’s Aggressor Fighter Squadrons , “I felt a sharp shudder in the airplane, and next thing I felt was the plane rolling left with the nose pointing down about eight degrees.”
The nose of Anderson’s F/A-18 ripped part of Stubbs’ left wing off, along with half of his vertical stabilizer. As a result of the mid-air collision, Anderson lost his aircraft’s nose, canopy and drop tank. One of his engines was also damaged. After some initial confusion on the radio, it was confirmed there’d been a collision and that both pilots were physically all right and had reasonable control of their aircraft.
Stubbs recalled looking down to the Atlantic below and thinking that, if he had to ditch, he’d rather do so closer to shore, as the water would likely still be cold. Able to control their aircraft, the pair turned toward the coast. The closest runway was at the Coast Guard station in Elizabeth City, but, despite being 40 miles closer than NAS Oceana, they decided that returning to base would be the best option.
Stubbs discovered the slowest speed he could fly was 200 knots. This raised two concerns. First, the arresting equipment that would help the aircraft stop had a speed limit of 175 knots. If he landed at a speed faster than that, it could result in the F/A-18’s tail hook being ripped off. On top of this, the speed rating for the aircraft’s tires was 182 knots, and the faster speeds could have resulted in the tires blowing upon landing.
Approach and landing