I have no stake in the arguments, but I think Gary Gentile always got rubbed up the wrong way that he didn't get enough (or any) credit for his involvement in the discovery of the identity of the U-Boat. I have never Gentile's book, so I have no idea what information he found, or what he relayed to John Chatterton or Richie Kohler. It clearly burns him up though, because he just won't let go of it. I am also guessing that the person who was previously the most famous wreck diver in the world was a little bit ticked at being usurped in such grand fashion.
Funnily enough I did dive with a couple of "wreckies" the other day who knew Gary Gentile, and they were telling me that Gentile, and two other highly accomplished wreck divers (who were mentioned in Shadow Divers) - Tom Packer and Steve Gatto had some pretty hair raising experiences trying to access the engine room where proof of identity was eventually found.
Whether someone actually dived the wreck before the incidents described in the book or not... who knows. In the book it says when John Chatterton first went down he initially thought it was a barge, and only when he had a good look did he realise it was a U-Boat. Bouncing onto a wreck, and penetrating and identifying it are clearly very different things.
It certainly seems to touch raw nerves, though. A sample of the reviews on Amazon of Gentile's book reveals some pretty entrenched positions: Amazon.com: Customer Reviews: Shadow Divers Exposed: the Real Saga of the U-869
Funnily enough I did dive with a couple of "wreckies" the other day who knew Gary Gentile, and they were telling me that Gentile, and two other highly accomplished wreck divers (who were mentioned in Shadow Divers) - Tom Packer and Steve Gatto had some pretty hair raising experiences trying to access the engine room where proof of identity was eventually found.
Whether someone actually dived the wreck before the incidents described in the book or not... who knows. In the book it says when John Chatterton first went down he initially thought it was a barge, and only when he had a good look did he realise it was a U-Boat. Bouncing onto a wreck, and penetrating and identifying it are clearly very different things.
It certainly seems to touch raw nerves, though. A sample of the reviews on Amazon of Gentile's book reveals some pretty entrenched positions: Amazon.com: Customer Reviews: Shadow Divers Exposed: the Real Saga of the U-869
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