On theses lifts there is a control box on the platform and on the side of the lift. You can control all aspects of the lift(driving, height of the lift, and power) all from the platform and you can control the exact same thing from the ground minus the driving aspect. On the box on the ground there is a key switch where you can select which box has power...so essentially if you select the control box on the ground, the box on the platform will not work. So if someone wanted the kid to get stay up there against his will it is possible.zerocooldog said:<span style="font-weight: bold;">The control handle on lifts like that stay with the platform, its not like he got on the platform and somone sent him up there and wouldn't bring him down. </span>
As far as him being properly trained to use the lift, I'm sure he was, I can't believe ND would be that negligent. To me it seems like he went up there, it got windy, he tweeted how "terrifying" it was, probably all the while not thinking anything serious would happen, then something serious did happen. </p>
if someone wanted the kid to get stay up there against his will it is possible.
and there has yet to be one that doesn't have rules and a plan to protect the film guys in wind. Ole Miss even takes them off towers if the wind goes over 25 mph and they have permanent towers which are very unlikely to fall in any speed wind. There was a quote from an Oklahoma coach that was in the paper the day <span style="font-weight: bold;">before</span> this accident where he moved practice indoors because the wind was over 25 mph and he wanted to protect the film crew. They had several coaches who use these scissor lifts who said they make sure the film crew has training on how to use them, they carry a hand-held wind meter because ground wind and wind at 40ft can be different, they are instructed to drop it to 20ft if the wind gets over 10mph and to come down at 25mph, and most importantly they make sure the film crew knows that if they EVER feel uncomfortable they need to get down.hullabaloodog said:But at most programs (including MSU) the coaches video crew works directly with the coaching staff. They are employed by the athletic department, but film whatever is requested by the coaching staff.
I can say from experience that film study takes more time out of a coaches day than anything else. It's their life. All of their scouting is tied directly to video. It their #1 teaching tool. (Opponent scout, self scout, etc.) I don't know many coaches that would have handled the situation much differently than they did at ND, and that's a shame. Coaches at the Division 1 level are constantly trying to get ahead and stay as prepared as possible, so if you take away 30 minutes of film (roughly 6 drills of practice) they feel like they can't do their job and it pisses them off.