Home Forums Bike Forum Does "Barry Knows Best?"

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  • Does "Barry Knows Best?"
  • taxi25
    Free Member

    yet with the full facts at hand the court found 80:20

    Very true, at least that was the only persons opinion that really mattered, the judge.
    But as often happens there is no “absolute” proof one way or the other and it comes down the the courts judgment. Another day in a different court perhaps things might have gone differently.

    aracer
    Free Member

    Because the instructor put him in a position where taking that line was an option for a novice. I gave up trying to work out exactly what line he took, because ultimately it doesn’t really matter – it appears he was put on ground that was steeper than he was comfortable with without having been given sufficient skills training first to cope with that. The fact he was clearly hesitant is grounds to support his claim.

    We come back here to what was discussed extensively earlier in the thread – that he’d ridden a bike a lot, but was a complete novice at technical stuff like this.

    I’d be kind of surprised if a different court came up with a substantially different ruling – given the evidence presented in that report it’s the logical ruling. I think most of those disputing it still don’t understand exactly on what basis the ruling was made.

    ianbradbury
    Full Member

    Because the instructor put him in a position where taking that line was an option for a novice. I gave up trying to work out exactly what line he took, because ultimately it doesn’t really matter – it appears he was put on ground that was steeper than he was comfortable with without having been given sufficient skills training first to cope with that. The fact he was clearly hesitant is grounds to support his claim.

    I’m still not convinced by the claim that he hadn’t been given sufficient skills – he didn’t execute those skills, but that’s not obviously the same thing. For example, just watched the first half of the 4 nations final. The Kiwi players don’t lack skills, but have hardly executed well, because of the pressure exerted on them.

    aracer
    Free Member

    Have you read the court report, ian?

    hora
    Free Member

    Ianbradbury got a link to the full ruling please

    crazy-legs
    Full Member

    Ianbradbury got a link to the full ruling please

    It was only 2 pages back Hora!

    http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2016/2798.html

    hora
    Free Member

    A few issues so far and I’m only a few paragraphs in. Ones on ‘braking’.

    How do you stop your customers, new to technically challenging terrain from grabbing the brakes incorrectly in a stressful situation? The instructor thought best to teach emergency braking later on in the 15mile course.

    The other is:
    “Although the booking form which the claimant completed has not been retained”

    This part appalls me, this along with the blogs etc. Why delete them? Erase the evidence that might cumulatively go against the defendant?

    From the link it also seems(?) that he decided to go on BKB literally after the start/first climb. How the hell did he assess riders potentially from riding up asphalt?

    Shall we go on?

    atlaz
    Free Member

    How the hell did he assess riders potentially from riding up asphalt?

    They say they crossed Radnor Road.. that’d mean they went up at least some part of the forest fire road on the left hand side as you climb. Chances are they’d also have taken the double-track up some of the way. This is borne out as the statement also says “he also instructed them how to negotiate channels crossing the track”.

    The instructor thought best to teach emergency braking later on in the 15mile course.

    Maybe he didn’t want novices trying their new-found braking technique on a downward slope where their inexperience would have them over the bars. Not saying that’s the case but who knows. you don’t. I don’t.

    It’s a little odd that the claimant who is a lawyer didn’t bother to read the safety checklist he was given but signed it anyway but also doesn’t remember lots of things relating to safety that the defendant says he said. He doesn’t say it wasn’t said, just that he doesn’t remember. Admittedly I would say his recollection of the day is probably focused around his injury but it doesn’t read well.

    All that said though, it doesn’t sound anywhere near as comprehensive a beginner session as I recall from my coaching with jedi who had us ride around/over sticks in his car park for a bit to get an idea of any problems with our riding and progressed slowly from “basic” cornering on flat stuff before moving us onto the hard work of the day; the drops and jumps. I guess that’s the difference between a trail session and a session in a private bike park.

    ulysse
    Free Member

    Ed O taught us in a very public and very gnarr trail Centre and we all came back in one piece?

    hora
    Free Member

    The Lawyer told the instructor he was a novice. The evidence of this was lost by the Franchise. On its own you could say ‘maybe fishy’ however along with the other deleting going on. There’s a pattern of cover up.

    Someone has life changing injury.

    Shall we carry on reading the link and commenting?

    The crap ‘riders’ threw at him without the facts is wrong. Plain wrong.

    dans160
    Free Member

    I’ve not read every post (very few of them actually), neither have I read the full report; but why didn’t the guy just say no, this isn’t for me?

    Nobody has won this one. Sad.

    maxtorque
    Full Member

    ^^ because you weren’t “unlucky” unlike the claimant in this case!

    I’m sure plenty of people fall off their bike on skills courses (i’ve done it, and i apologized to the coach when i did so, but then i only ripped open my elbow, rather than paralysed myself) and for 99.9999% of the time, the end result is not as serious in this case.

    That’s why unfortunately, it is difficult to make a “reasoned” decision.

    Take the issues of “learning skills”. You would expect an instructor to explain what you have to do, physically and mentally. You’d expect the instructor to demonstrate how to do it. You’d probably even get to watch other people on the course trying out that skill. But at some point, sooner or later, you’re going to have to physically try that skill yourself, and there is a non-zero possibility that during that attempt (or any subsequent ones) you could fall off and injure yourself. The more severe the feature of technique you’re trying to ride, the higher the risk of injury, but risk is both not linear, and critically, hindsight provides necessary evidence too late to be useful in the assessment of that risk.

    This is why, IMO, unless there is an OBVIOUS case of un-arguable negligence (for example the instructor failing to check your bike, and the wheel coming out because the novice hadn’t known how tight to do there QR) then it’s at best 50:50, because the instructee has the final choice on if they are going to try any given skill, feature or technique.

    In this case, faced with a guy in a wheel chair, and despite significant evidence that the methodology and progress of the coach/course was fairly typical (2 out of 3 people on the course had no problem with riding the feature, all on the course attempted to ride it without duress) the court found in a significantly higher favour of the claimant.

    deadkenny
    Free Member

    There’s always the chance the claimant and defendant were happy to just leave it to insurance. I think I would. As defendant I’d have the insurance and would realise such an injury and the ongoing life cost would be fair enough to claim against my liability insurance knowing the only impact would be potentially a small premium increase (but bearing in mind these insurances are there to pay out exactly for these reasons to this kind of sum of money). As claimant I’d want to try to get costs covered somehow. Maybe I’d have my own personal injury insurance anyway but then they might insist I try to claim off the other guy first.

    Normally these would be insurance companies fighting it out, gets settled and no publicity. Like if you are in a car crash and your fault or not, just let insurance deal with it. It’s just this had been dragged to court and then picked up by bike media.

    Settlement here, 50:50 would mean less pay out for the claimant. The judge may be going for the best result for the claimant given the injuries, while knowing it’s not that big a deal for the defendant as he had insurance to cover it (or wouldn’t have been not much to him, but being publicised, his reputation may be damaged).

    atlaz
    Free Member

    The Lawyer told the instructor he was a novice. The evidence of this was lost by the Franchise. On its own you could say ‘maybe fishy’ however along with the other deleting going on. There’s a pattern of cover up.

    How is there a coverup? You don’t half talk some bollocks sometimes. You witter on about evidence for the claimant and how we weren’t there etc then try to make a jump from “there’s no document” to “he intentionally destroyed it to get rid of evidence”. I haven’t seen anything in the court report to suggest that the defendant said that he disagreed with the claimant being a novice but I bothered to read the whole thing.

    taxi25
    Free Member

    There’s always the chance the claimant and defendant were happy to just leave it to insurance.

    I’d be surprised if the defendant wasn’t inclined to defend himself robustly. It would be hard enough coming to terms with one of your clients being paralysed. The way I’d deal with this is to convince myself I’d done everything reasonable to prevent an accident.
    Accepting that your responsible for a person ending up in a wheelchair for any right thinking person would be a very heavy load to bare 🙁 . Even though the court found him largely liable I’d be very suprised if the defendant felt the same.

    deadkenny
    Free Member

    True. Like in a car accident though, neither side claims responsibility and ideally shouldn’t blame either. Just keep quiet, lay down the facts as you see it, and leave it to the insurance and/or courts. That one may rule against you isn’t a big deal. Just your insurance is the one that pays up.

    Onzadog
    Free Member

    The summing up said he was still coaching but I can’t see any sign of him anywhere. I’m guessing he’s possibly changed career.

    aracer
    Free Member

    I presume if you know that you have read the ruling, in which case you should also be aware of the difference in the ability levels of the participants, and hence why that is irrelevant.

    ulysse
    Free Member

    Reading the case notes and taking on board what the experienced tutors on here have said, on top of the way I and my group were instructed, I’m absolutely convinced the defendants methodology in tutoring was totally wrong.

    Northwind
    Full Member

    hora – Member

    This part appalls me, this along with the blogs etc. Why delete them? Erase the evidence that might cumulatively go against the defendant?

    Pretty surprising that he’s not retained the form- though, there could be reasons for that if it was paper, easy to see how it gets innocently misplaced amidst a serious injury. (pull out paperwork to check medical history notes…) (I couldn’t tell if it was a paper or online form but ime paper is the norm)

    But it’s easy to understand why he’d pull the blogs, with all the publicity. Really nothing suspicious there.

    slowster
    Free Member

    Reading the case notes and taking on board what the experienced tutors on here have said, on top of the way I and my group were instructed, I’m absolutely convinced the defendants methodology in tutoring was totally wrong.

    If the tuition was indeed seriously flawed, then a much bigger/wider issue than the court’s likely award in this particular case, is the question of whether inadequate and unsafe instruction is similarly being provided by other instructors. That raises important questions about the quality of training, assessing and monitoring of instructors by their accreditation bodies, and about whether the guidance/standards published by those bodies on the content and format of a typical beginner’s/intermediate/advanced skills course is sufficiently clear and thorough.

    It would be some consolation for the claimant and the instructor in this case, if it did result in the industry raising its standards, reducing the risk of a similar accident.

    ulysse
    Free Member

    Agreed

    neilthewheel
    Full Member

    ^ Quite. Any instructor who doesn’t read this report in detail and assess his or her own practices againt it would be foolish.

    ‘ve not read every post (very few of them actually), neither have I read the full report; but why didn’t the guy just say no, this isn’t for me?

    So, just for you, here it is again: the judge agrees with you and that is why he held the claimant 20% liable. I hope this helps.

    slowster
    Free Member

    Quite. Any instructor who doesn’t read this report in detail and assess his or her own practices againt it would be foolish.

    I am more concerned about the accreditation/training bodies. If there is a widespread (systemic) problem, then that is likely to mean that the organisations are at fault, rather than the individual instructors they train and accredit. In that respect I have great sympathy for the instructor in this case: he was always going to be the obvious target of any legal action, but I cannot help thinking that his accreditation body should very possibly take a large percentage of the blame and moral responsibility if it is not giving its own instructors adequate training and guidance.

    The MIAS technical reference material provided by the defence does not appear to be from guidance telling instructors how to instruct, and instead seems to be telling the pupil/mountain biker what they should do, which makes me suspect that MIAS may not have the sort of guidance/standards for its instructors that I would expect:

    The MIAS guidance pointed out that in relation to descents,

    “….Some rough terrain may actually be easier and safer to do at a higher speed, as it will provide the much-needed momentum. Whereas otherwise, at slow speed, your bike may come to an unexpected halt as it gets stuck on the terrain.”

    In relation to maximum deceleration it is pointed out that the most effective measure is to apply the front brake, albeit with the arms braced. It points out that this is a skill which requires to be learnt, otherwise,

    “This can cause the classic ‘over-the-bars’ crash…..”

    Moreover, in relation to descents the “Technical Tips” provides,

    “Get your bike into a low gear, 3rd, 4th or 5th gear depending on your speed. Ride at a very slow speed. Approach the descent in a straight line. As you go down the descent, position yourself to the rear of the cycle in order to maintain a gravity line. Keep your pedals on the horizontal. Feather your brakes to suit descent. Keep looking ahead. If the rear wheel of the cycle tries to overtake the front wheel, disengage brakes, straighten up and re-apply. A slope of no more than 30 degrees should be tackled.”

    ulysse
    Free Member

    Also this, slowster, I often say to people at the end of a rollocking, if nobody tells you that you are doing something wrong, how will you ever know how to correct it or improve, and it’s now your choice if you want to carry on as before or take on board what I’m telling you…

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