When the boys didn’t return home from practice that first night, their parents were terrified. Officials soon found the team’s belongings near the cave’s entrance and realized the young athletes must be stuck inside.
Divers from the Thai Navy SEALs and other rescue groups were quickly called in to begin searching the 6-mile-long cave system, the fourth largest in Thailand. At the same time, experts set up dozens of machines to pump water out of the cave. But as fast as the water was forced out, heavy rain caused more to pour in.
Plus, parts of the cave were so dark that the rescuers could barely see underwater.
“If you put your hand in front of you, it just disappeared,” said Kaew, the Thai Navy SEAL. “You couldn’t see anything.”
Meanwhile, an estimated 1,500 journalists had set up camp nearby. On July 2, the world breathed a sigh of relief when it was reported that two British divers had found the boys, weak from hunger and with minor injuries—but, amazingly, alive.
“We weren’t sure if it was for real,” said 14-year-old Adul Sam-On about seeing the rescuers for the first time. “I was shocked.”