We saw Travis barker's jet went off the runway at CAE when it should have taken off, the experienced FO yelling "go, go, go" and the relatively inexperienced Captain being indecisive in the moment. Upon further digging, had failed multiple checkrides, and when interviewing the CP of that place, it turned out he never did a sim check on her interview because she came "highly recommended" even though the sim check was part of the normal interview process. Now granted, she couldn't have known the squat switch was affected and the TRs actually made their situation worse, but aborting over V1 wasn't smart in that particular case. The FO felt that plane would fly and recommended doing so.
When some here suggested an operator error with a gust lock engaged in a Gulfstream jet at BED, quite a few went the other way with it-could-have-been-anything. Once the theory gained traction, the evidence painted a clear picture.
The Embraer Phenom in Maryland is still under investigation, but IIRC the NTSB made some comments on a recovered recording device that showed the airspeed as dangerously low followed by a stall onset that was not recovered.
UPS in BHM. Fatigue cited as a huge issue.
Now in this AKR case, I understand we're open to anything that could have happened. Sure, a wing could have fallen off. Or a tail. I too would like to give the benefit of the doubt, but historically speaking a crash in this phase is almost invariably boil down to operator error, with a possible fatigue contributing factor.