It seems like the deputy pulling his car in the middle of the road thinking that the cyclist will have plenty of time to stop - 100 yards away from them - is a typical case of automobilists misunderstanding cycling physics:
car drivers underestimate cyclists' speed
and
car drivers overestimate cyclists' capacity to slow down/stop.
This is made much worse by the fact that the cyclists were a whole peloton, probably going very fast too.
Thankfully the cyclists seem to have been experienced for the most part - this was a racing event, even if not an official one - and dealt with the crash pretty well under the circumstances.
Based on the information at hand, there's no doubt in my mind that the deputy made a mistake. I am tempted to think that the mistake was induced more by his cluelessness about cycling than by his desire to hurt anyone. This could easily have turned out the same way as the stupid accident that took down the whole Australian women's cycling team and killed their leader last year in Germany. They were all lucky to escape with nothing worse than a dislocated shoulder and some road rash.
This being said...
YES, cyclists have right,
but NO they do not have the right to spontaneously race on the open road any more than automobilists do. Racing on a closed course is one thing. That event is definitely something else... Anyone knows more about that Arizona thing?



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