I won't criticize the crew for the same reason wave mentioned: the training departments industry-wide have been telling people for years to "fly the airplane" and not be heads down.
So, instead of criticizing the crew, I'll criticize the training departments. It's time to stop the macho bull$hit and admit that automation and technology is what has been driving down accident and incident statistics for the past few decades. Instead of telling pilots not to be heads down, instead tell them to extend the downwind and program the box the right way instead of being in a hurry to just do the approach. There is zero reason to not insist on having every approach in the box on today's aircraft. This incident easily could have resulted in the deaths of everyone on board if the crew wasn't smart enough to slam on their breaks really fast and really hard. That drop at the end of that runway would have been deadly, and it looks like it was only a couple hundred feet away. The crew deserves credit for saving everyone's ass. The philosophy of not always programming the box is what deserves blame.
So, instead of criticizing the crew, I'll criticize the training departments. It's time to stop the macho bull$hit and admit that automation and technology is what has been driving down accident and incident statistics for the past few decades. Instead of telling pilots not to be heads down, instead tell them to extend the downwind and program the box the right way instead of being in a hurry to just do the approach. There is zero reason to not insist on having every approach in the box on today's aircraft. This incident easily could have resulted in the deaths of everyone on board if the crew wasn't smart enough to slam on their breaks really fast and really hard. That drop at the end of that runway would have been deadly, and it looks like it was only a couple hundred feet away. The crew deserves credit for saving everyone's ass. The philosophy of not always programming the box is what deserves blame.