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Michael Strahan won Super Bowl XLII with the New York Giants
Michael Strahan won Super Bowl XLII with the New York Giants. Photograph: Marcio José Sánchez/AP
Michael Strahan won Super Bowl XLII with the New York Giants. Photograph: Marcio José Sánchez/AP

NFL hall of famer Michael Strahan going to space with Bezos’s Blue Origin

This article is more than 2 years old
  • Super Bowl champ will join daughter of astronaut Alan Shepard
  • Duo will join four paying customers on flight

NFL hall of famer Michael Strahan is going to space next month.

Strahan, who turned 50 on Sunday and won Super Bowl XLII during his 15-year career with the New York Giants, will join Laura Shepard Churchley, the eldest daughter of astronaut Alan Shepard, on the 9 December mission aboard the New Shepard, a spacecraft named after her father and the first American in space. The Blue Origin flight, the company headed by Jeff Bezos, will also carry four paying customers and will be the third by the New Shepard craft this year to shuttle humans to space.

JUST IN: @michaelstrahan is going out of this world – literally! – and will be flying on @BlueOrigin’s #NewShepard rocket on December 9! https://t.co/zubchTcMg9 pic.twitter.com/mwVqRQ7HAB

— Good Morning America (@GMA) November 23, 2021

Blue Origin has not disclosed the ticket price for paying customers.

The 10-minute flight, five minutes less than Alan Shepard’s 1961 Mercury flight, will launch from Texas carrying six people, two more than the previous two flights this year with humans aboard.

Similar to previous jaunts, Strahan’s flight is likely to include about three minutes of weightlessness and a view of the curvature of the Earth. Passengers are subjected to nearly 6 G’s, or six times the force of Earth’s gravity, as the capsule descends.

Strahan, who is now a co-host of Good Morning America, made the announcement on Tuesday’s show.

“I want to go to space,” Strahan told GMA. “I think being there at the first launch, it really was mind-blowing.”

Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Star Trek star William Shatner flew to space on separate New Shepard flights this year. Shatner became the oldest person in space, eclipsing the previous record set by a passenger on Bezos’ flight in July by eight years.

Virgin Galactic’s Richard Branson went into space in his own rocket ship in July, followed by Bezos nine days later on Blue Origin’s first flight with a crew. Elon Musk’s SpaceX made its first private voyage in mid-September, though without Musk on board.

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