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Tham Luang Cave Rescue

On June 23, 2018, in Thailand, a group of 12 boys aged between 11 and 17 from the local

football team, named the Wild Boars, and their 23-year-old assistant coach entered the Tham

Luang cave. Tham Luang is a large cave complex in northern Thailand along the border with

Myanmar. The cavern was popular with locals and the boys had visited Tham Luang before.

Tham Luang cave is isolated—there is no GPS, Wi-Fi, or cell phone service. The last known

survey was conducted in the 1980s by a French caving society, but many of the deeper

recesses remain unmapped.

The boys had little difficulty getting fairly far into the cave, crawling through a couple of

choke points to open spaces. They did not anticipate any problems getting back. The

monsoon rains weren’t expected until the next week, and the year before, the cave did not

begin to flood until the middle of July. The team took no food with them, because this was

going to be a brief field trip. They planned to stay for perhaps an hour, then return home to

their parents.

However, nature had different plans. Heavy monsoon rain began to fall. The Wild Boars

didn’t know about the rain at first. There was a thousand feet of rock above them and they

were more than a mile from the open forest. Heavy rains gathered in streams that disappeared

into sinks, rushing through limestone into the cavern. Water rose suddenly and quickly,

forcing the team to retreat farther and farther into the cave. The interior of the cave is not

level but rather rises and falls as it burrows into the mountain. The team scrambled for higher

ground as the water continued to rise. Finally, they settled on a mud slope and waited to see if

the water would continue to rise. It didn’t.

A mother of one of the boys contacted the police when her child failed to come home. A

teammate who had missed practice that day told people that the team had planned to visit the

cave after practice. Parents rushed to the cave, only to find their children’s bikes and cleats at

the entrance and the cave flooded.

A contingent of Thai Navy SEAL divers arrived the next day and began pushing their

way into the flooded cave. This was no easy task. The Thai frogmen were accustomed to

tropical open water, not the dark, cold currents racing through the cave. They

lacked equipment, much less expertise needed for caves, where divers cannot

just rise to the surface if something goes wrong.

The plight of the Wild Boars drew international attention overnight. Soon skilled cave

divers from around the world, including Finland, Britain, China, Australia, and the United

States, volunteered their services. At first the foreign divers were not met with open arms by

the Thai military in charge of the rescue. Many of the SEAL divers bristled at the idea of

needing foreign assistance. The divers were not even allowed into the cave. After much

political haggling, the Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs told the military chiefs to let the

foreign divers go.

Even the experienced cave divers found the conditions extremely difficult. “It was like

walking into a strong waterfall and feeling the water rushing at you,” one diver said. “It was

a horizontal climb against water with every move.”

The divers painstakingly penetrated the cave, securing guidelines needed to ensure safety.

Visibility at times was negligible. “If you put your hand in front of you, it just disappeared,”

said one diver. “You couldn’t see anything.”

Meanwhile, on the surface, policemen with sniffer dogs searched for shaft openings that

could provide an alternative entrance to the cave system. The search was augmented by

hundreds of volunteers dressed in lemon-yellow shirts and sky-blue caps, searching for

hidden cracks in the limestone that might reveal an opening to the cave. Drones were also

used, but no technology existed to scan for humans deep underground. Local holy men

created a shrine at the mouth of the cave, where they chanted and communed with the spirit

of the cave, “Jao Mae Tham.” Several times the search had to be suspended due to heavy

rains. After the team had spent 10 days of captivity without real food or water, there was little

hope among the rescuers of discovering the boys alive.

In the cave, a pair of British divers working to extend the guide ropes popped up near a

narrow ledge. First they smelled, and then they saw, 13 emaciated people perched in the dark.

The Wild Boars had run out of food and light but had survived by sipping the condensation

from the cave walls. Later it was reported that the assistant coach, a Buddhist, had led the

boys in meditation to relax and conserve energy. The ledge where they were found was about

2.5 miles from the cave mouth.

The next day Thai SEALs ferried food, water, and blankets to the Wild Boars. Four

divers, including a doctor, would stay with them until their rescue. Thai officials reported that

the rescuers were providing health checks, keeping the boys entertained, and none of the

boys were in serious condition.

Thai officials released a video made by the rescuers and shared to the world. The video

showed all 12 boys and their coach introducing themselves and stating their ages. Wrapped in

emergency blankets and appearing frail, each boy said hello to the outside world, “Sawasdee

khrap,” with his palms together in wai, the traditional Thai greeting. The video went viral.

Soon all the major newscasts across the world were covering the story. The big question then

became, now that the boys had been found, how could they be gotten out alive?

A rescue camp was set up at the cave entrance, accommodating the volunteers and

journalists in addition to the rescue workers. The camp was divided into zones: restricted

areas for the Thai Navy SEALs, other military personnel, and civilian rescuers; an area for

relatives to wait in privacy; and areas for the press and general public.

An estimated 10,000 people contributed to the rescue effort, including more than 100

divers, 900 police officers, 2,000 soldiers, and numerous volunteers. Equipment included 10

police helicopters, seven ambulances, and more than 700 diving cylinders, of which more

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than 500 were in the cave at any time while another 200 were in queue to be refilled.

The plight of the Wild Boars caught the attention of Elon Musk of Tesla and Space X

fame. He tasked engineers to build a kid-size submarine that could be used to transport the

boys out of the cave. Within days an actual submarine was sent to Tham Luang. Thai

officials praised the effort but concluded it was not practical, given the narrow passages in

the cavern.

The journey through the cave to the team took six hours against current and five hours to

exit with the current. The route had several flooded sections, some with strong currents and

zero visibility, and some extremely narrow parts, the smallest measuring only 15 by 28

inches. The boys were perched on a ledge 400 yards from Pattaya beach chamber, named

after an above-ground beach in Thailand. Chamber 3, which was dry, would be used as

rescue base.

Pumps were brought in to remove water from the cave. Although not a solution, efforts at

draining the cave began to produce results. Crags and outcroppings emerged from the murk.

The most challenging passage, which had taken five hours to navigate early on, could now be

traversed in two hours with the help of guide ropes.

As the crisis unfolded, rescuers considered several different methods to save the team.

The principal options included

Wait until the end of the monsoon season, with divers providing food and water.

Find an alternative entrance to the cave that would allow for an easier escape.

Drill a rescue shaft.

Teach the group basic diving skills and have them swim out with the divers.

Waiting until the monsoons ended in November and the water drained was the simplest

solution. The boys could walk out on their own. However, the logistics did not make sense.

Feeding 13 people, three times a day, for even 60 days is more than 2,750 meals. Every meal

would have to be ferried in by a team of divers, flirting with death each time they went under.

This was a growing concern. Four days after the boys were found, retired Navy SEAL

diver Saman Kunan lost consciousness while returning from dropping off three air tanks. His

dive buddy attempted CPR without success. Kunan had left his airport security job to

volunteer for the rescue mission. Before that fatality, three divers were lost for over three

hours in the dark cave, and rescue efforts had to be redirected to find them.

From the beginning hundreds of volunteers crawled over the hillside in search of hidden

openings. People knew the odds were slim to none, given the depth of the cave, but it was

worth a try.

Drilling through a couple thousand feet of rock would require extensive infrastructure

work and take too long. Besides, there was significant uncertainty as to where to drill.

That left the fourth option. None of the boys or the coach knew how to dive. Even if they

could master the basics, cave diving is not the same as a practice run at a resort swimming

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pool. A weakened child submerged in darkness and breathing unnaturally through a regulator

is likely to panic. Yet through long stretches of the cave, he wouldn’t be able to surface and

regain his composure—he would be in a flooded tunnel.

Privately experts thought maybe half the boys would survive the journey. But pulling it

off 13 times in a row would take a miracle.

While plans were being developed, two alarming events occurred. First, the oxygen

levels in the cave began to drop faster than anticipated. This raised fears that the boys could

develop hypoxia if they remained for a prolonged time. By July 7 the oxygen level was

measured to be 15 percent. The level needed to maintain normal functions for

humans is between 19.5 percent and 23.5 percent. Thai engineers’ attempts to

install an air supply line to the boys failed.

The second development was the weather forecast. Monsoon rains were predicted for

later in the week, which could flood the cave until November.

The Thai Navy SEALs, with the support of U.S. Air Force rescue experts, devised a plan

approved by the Thai Minister of the Interior. Rescuers initially wanted to teach the boys

basic diving skills to enable them to make the journey. Organizers even built a mockup of a

tight passage with chairs and had divers practice with local boys in a nearby school

swimming pool. Eventually it was decided that the boys were too weak to swim, and the plan

was revised to have divers bring the boys out.

On July 8 the rescue attempt was initiated. For the first part of the mission, 18 divers

were sent into the caves to retrieve the boys, with 1 diver to accompany each boy on the dive

out. The boys were dressed in a wetsuit, a buoyancy jacket, and a harness. Instead of sticking

a regulator in each boy’s mouth, they were given a full face mask that allowed them to

breathe naturally. An oxygen cylinder was clipped to their front, a handle was attached to

their back, and they were tethered to a diver in case they were lost in poor visibility.

Panic was a chief concern. The SEAL doctor administered an anesthetic to the boys

before the journey, rendering them unconscious to prevent them from panicking on the

escape and risking the lives of their rescuers.1 The anesthetic lasted about 50 minutes,

requiring the divers, whom the doctor had trained, to re-sedate their bodies during the threehour-

plus journey.

There was discussion about which boy should go first—the weakest, the youngest, the

strongest—but in the end it came to a boy who volunteered. The boys were maneuvered out

by the divers holding on to their back or chest, with each boy on the left or right depending

upon the guideline. In very narrow spots, the divers had to push the boys from behind. The

divers kept their heads higher than the boys so that in poor visibility the divers would hit

their heads first against the rocks. After a short dive to a dry section of cave, the divers and

boys were met by three divers, and the boys’ dive gear was removed. A drag stretcher was

used to transport the boys up over a 200-meter stretch of rocks and sandy hills. The dive gear

was put back on before entering the next submerged section.

After being delivered by the divers into the rescue base in chamber 3, the boys were then

passed along a “daisy chain” of hundreds of workers stationed along the treacherous path out

of the cave. The boys were alternately carried, slid, and zip-lined over a complex network of

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pulleys installed by rock climbers. The path out of the chamber contained many areas still

partially submerged, and the boys had to be transported over slippery rocks and through

muddy waters. The journey out of chamber 3 took about four to five hours initially, less later

as a result of drainage.

Soon after 7 p.m. local officials announced that two boys had been rescued. Shortly later,

two more boys appeared out of the cave. On July 9, four more boys were rescued. On July

10, the last four boys and their coach were rescued.

The four Thai Navy SEALs, including the doctor who had stayed with the boys the entire

time, were the last to dive out. When they got to chamber 3, a water pipe burst, and the main

pump stopped working. All of a sudden, the water began to rise rapidly. This forced the

SEALs and 100 of the rescuers still a mile inside the cave to abandon the rescue equipment

and scramble out of the cave.

Upon reaching the surface the boys were quarantined while health workers determined

whether they had caught any infectious diseases. The boys were on a fixed rice porridge diet

for the first 10 days. Parents initially visited their children looking through a window, but

once the laboratory results proved negative, they were allowed to visit in person while

wearing a medical gown, face mask, and hair cap.

After the rescue, the boys’ families, officials, and thousands of volunteers gathered at the

cave entrance. The group gave thanks for the lives saved and asked forgiveness from the cave

goddess, “Jao Mae Tham,” for the intrusion of pumps, ropes, and people during the rescue.

The world rejoiced with the news of the successful rescue. The head of the rescue

mission said that the cave system would eventually be turned into a living museum to

highlight how the operation unfolded. As a result of the incident, Thailand’s Navy SEALs

will include cave diving in their training programs.

On September 7, 2018, the Royal Thai government hosted a reception for all Thai and

foreign officials and personnel involved in the rescue. His Majesty the King granted a royal

decoration, The Most Admirable Order of the Direkgunabhorn, to those who were involved

in the rescue of the football team—114 foreigners and 74 Thais. The order is bestowed upon

those who render devotional service to the Kingdom of Thailand. The title Direkgunabhorn

roughly translates as “Noble order of abundance and quality.”

Three months after being rescued, the entire Wild Boar team and coach appeared on the

U.S. day-time talk show Ellen. Speaking through a translator, the team revealed that four of

the boys had had birthdays while trapped in the cave. The team and coach were stunned

when their football hero, Zlatan Ibrahimovi?, who now plays for the LA Galaxy, made a

surprise appearance on the show to meet them. The Swedish star high-fived each member.

“These kids, this team is braver than me and they showed their collective teamwork and had

patience, faith,” Ibrahimovi? said. “This is probably the best team in the world.”

8.8 Assigning Project Work

LO 8-7

Identify general guidelines for assigning people to specific tasks.

When making individual assignments, project managers should match, as best they can, the

demands and requirements of specific work with the qualifications and experience of

available participants. In doing so, there is a natural tendency to assign the best people the

most difficult tasks. Project managers need to be careful not to overdo this. Over time these

people may grow to resent the fact that they are always given the toughest assignments. At

the same time, less experienced participants may resent the fact that they are never given the

opportunity to expand their skill/knowledge base. Project managers need to balance task

performance with the need to develop the talents of people assigned to the project.

Project managers need to decide not only who does what but also who works with whom.

A number of factors need to be considered in deciding who should work together. First, to

minimize unnecessary tension, managers should pick people with compatible work habits

and personalities but who complement each other (i.e., one person’s weakness is the other

person’s strength). For example, one person may be brilliant at solving complex problems but

sloppy at documenting his progress. It would be wise to pair this person with an individual

who is good at paying attention to details. Experience is another factor. Veterans should be

teamed up with new hires—not only so they can share their experience but also to help

socialize the newcomers to the customs and norms of the organization. Finally, future needs

should be considered. If managers have some people who have never worked together before

but who have to later on in the project, they may be wise to take advantage of opportunities

to have these people work together early on so that they can become familiar with each other.

Finally, see Snapshot from Practice 8.4: Managing Geeks for some interesting thoughts from

the former CEO of Google on how to put together teams.

SNAPSHOT FROM PRACTICE 8.4

Managing Geeks*

Eric Schmidt, after a successful career at Sun Microsystems, took over struggling Novell, Inc.,

and helped turn it around within two years. Four years later he became the CEO of Google. One

of the keys to his success is his ability to manage the technical wizards who develop the

sophisticated systems, hardware, and software that are the backbone of electronically driven

companies. He uses the term “geek” (and he can, since he is one, with a Ph.D. in computer science) to

describe this group of technologists who rule the cyberworld.

Schmidt has some interesting ideas about assigning geeks to projects. He believes that putting geeks

together in project teams with other geeks creates productive peer pressure. Geeks care a great deal about

how other geeks perceive them. They are good at judging the quality of technical work and are quick to praise

as well as criticize each other’s work. Some geeks can be unbearably arrogant, but Schmidt claims that

having them work together on projects is the best way to control them—by letting them control each other.

At the same time, Schmidt argues that too many geeks spoil the soup. By this he means that when there

are too many geeks on a development team, there is a tendency for intense technical navel gazing. Members

lose sight of deadlines, and delays are inevitable. To combat this tendency, he recommends using geeks only

in small groups. He urges breaking up large projects into smaller, more manageable projects so that small

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teams of geeks can be assigned to them. This keeps the project on time and makes the teams responsible to

each other.

*Russ Mitchel, “How to Manage Geeks,” Fast Company, May 31, 1999, pp. 175–80.

8.9 Multiproject Resource Schedules

LO 8-8

Identify common problems with multiproject resource scheduling.

For clarity we have discussed key resource allocation issues within the context of a single

project. In reality resource allocation generally occurs in a multiproject environment where

the demands of one project have to be reconciled with the needs of other projects.

Organizations must develop and manage systems for efficiently allocating and scheduling

resources across several projects with different priorities, resource requirements, sets of

activities, and risks. The system must be dynamic and capable of accommodating new

projects as well as reallocating resources once project work is completed. While the same

resource issues and principles that apply to a single project also apply to this multiproject

environment, application and solutions are more complex, given the interdependency among

projects.

The following are three of the more common problems encountered in managing

multiproject resource schedules. Note that these are macro manifestations of single-project

problems that are now magnified in a multiproject environment.

1. Overall schedule slippage. Because projects often share resources, delays in one project

can have a ripple effect and delay other projects. For example, work on one software

development project can grind to a halt because the coders scheduled for the next critical

task are late in completing their work on another development project.

2. Inefficient resource utilization. Because projects have different schedules and

requirements, there are peaks and valleys in overall resource demands. For example, a firm

may have a staff of 10 electricians to meet peak demands when, under normal conditions,

only 5 electricians are required.

3. Resource bottlenecks. Delays and schedules are extended as a result of shortages of

critical resources that are required by multiple projects. For example, at one Lattice

Semiconductor facility, project schedules were delayed because of competition over access

to test the equipment necessary to debug programs. Likewise, several projects at a U.S.

forest area were extended because there was only one silviculturist on the staff.

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To deal with these problems, more and more companies are creating project offices or

departments to oversee the scheduling of resources across multiple projects. One approach to

multiple project resource scheduling is to use a first come–first served rule. A project queue

system is created in which projects currently under way take precedence over new projects.

New project schedules are based on the projected availability of resources. This queuing

tends to lead to more reliable completion estimates and is preferred on contracted projects

that have stiff penalties for being late. The disadvantages of this deceptively simple approach

are that it does not optimally utilize resources or take into account the priority of the project.

See Snapshot from Practice 8.5: Multiple Project Resource Scheduling.

Many companies utilize more elaborate processes for scheduling resources to increase the

capacity of the organization to initiate projects. Most of these methods approach the problem

by treating individual projects as part of one big project and adapting the scheduling

heuristics previously introduced to this “mega project.” Project schedulers monitor resource

usage and provide updated schedules based on progress and resource availability across all

projects. One major improvement in project management software in recent years is the

ability to prioritize resource allocation to specific projects. Projects can be prioritized in

ascending order (e.g., 1, 2, 3, 4, . . .), and these priorities will override scheduling heuristics

so that resources go to the project highest on the priority list. (Note: This improvement fits

perfectly with organizations that use project priority models similar to those described in

Chapter 2.) Centralized project scheduling also makes it easier to identify resource

bottlenecks that stifle progress on projects. Once bottlenecks have been identified, their

impact can be documented and used to justify acquiring additional equipment,

recruiting critical personnel, or delaying the project.