A contender for worst go around would be the student pilot in a C-152 at Taft, CA, or maybe it was Tulare... sometime in the 1990s. Doing T&Gs, while on approach she aborted the landing to go around. She left carb heat on and did not retract from full flaps. She descended in nose high attitude to impact the ground. Even though she had sustained serious injuries she was able to free herself from the aircraft prior to the post-crash fire. She survived long enough to tell the investigators what had happened.
Law of primacy; just like she had practiced many times with her CFI, she only touched each control knob or handle but without effecting a change in configuration. She succumbed to her injuries soon after that.
This accident sticks in my mind even though I've only been in a 150/152 for .5 hour.
Desertdog, the reason I was told by the CP was there had been a complaint (GCA likely suspect) that raised the issue of the unfairness that AA, under 91, was not required to pay the overflight allocations that GCA and WW paid under 135. Because AA was very near to regaining their 135 after a years long struggle with certain persons within the FAA, AA made the decision to ground their fleet for most of the 2009 season. Op Specs already were in compliance with 135, they just needed the paper. Basically, to show good faith to the FAA, the decision was made at the company level to adopt a wait and see posture.
Integral to that decision was certain persons in the employ of the FAA had made it their task to run AA right out of aviation. One particularly stupid thing an FAA employee out of the SLC FSDO did was to send a letter to AA at Page which contained verbiage, paraphrasing here, to the effect that, 'I'll make sure you (AA owner) never have operational control of another aircraft as long as I live.' I read the letter. I was so appalled a govt employee would be so stupid as to put such a statement to paper that I made a photocopy. I destroyed that copy in 2010.
Too, certain FAA personal were quite peeved that (AA owner) decided to seek relief through Scottsdale which only increased the enmity from the FAA directed at AA Many people may have an unfavorable opinion of AA but what they were up against at the FAA was astounding. Several FAA employees belong in jail. I strenuously reject the idea of govt employees with unbridled authority to dictate the rise or fall of a private business based wholly or in part on subjective personal vendetta.
About the time the decision to ground was made, Shannon pleaded to me that she wasn't the one who had made the complaint. As I had yet to learn a complaint had been made I replied, What complaint? Then she knew she had spilled the beans. She looked like she was going to explode. As if I cared. I was there to fly. I enjoyed the flying, the passengers, the scenic beauty. But that place is ground zero for petty drama, it was difficult to avoid it..
Personally, I don't give a rip about this. What I do care about is talebearers controlling the narrative. When and where I can I'll counter the rumor and gossip with fact.