Robbie Shorter, world road race sidecar championships record breaker at Isle of Man TT. 16 July 2015 Bay of Plenty Times Photograph by John Borren BTG 21Jul15 - JOB DONE: Robbie Shorter back
Nowhere in sport is the line between life and death so finely balanced than at the infamous Isle of Man TT course.
Last month Australian sidecar rider Dwight Beare and two other solo riders were killed there bringing the total to 252 competitors, including seven New Zealanders, to lose their lives on the Snaefell Mountain course since 1911.
Tauranga sidecar passenger Robbie Shorter and Auckland driver Colin Buckley were just two bikes behind close friend Beare, 27, and witnessed the carnage.
Shorter, 41, who is married with two young children, says it was devastating.
"You know who it is but you just hope for the best. Sometimes you can look at an accident and know the outcome pretty much and unfortunately he lost his life," Shorter said.
Shorter knows he could have been another statistic after he and Buckley crashed during practice at around 170kph.
"It was the first time I have crashed with Colin," Shorter said.
"We were trying pretty hard and unfortunately we got into a position on the road we shouldn't have been in, came through the corner and the bike got airborne and crashed into a wall.
"Luckily we hit the air bag and not the wall.
"It could have been a lot worse. There was a little bit of damage to the bike, bent forks and a disc and bearing damage, but we were pretty lucky to get away with it really.
"There are not many people who crash at that place and walk away.
"Anywhere on that circuit is pretty treacherous. There are not many areas where you are going to get away with it."
Dave Molyneux, who has won 17 TT titles, loaned the Kiwis a replacement set of forks to get them back into the competition.
Race one was going well for Shorter and Buckley on their K7 Suzuki powered BLR chassis bike before the race was stopped after Beare's crash.
At the restart the Kiwis got off to a flying start in lap one before an electrical fault forced the pair to retire.
"Until people have been around that circuit they won't know how rough and brutal it is," Shorter said.
"It is a battle of attrition for riders and equipment. It shakes you about.
"There are guys with wheel bearings collapsing, motors expiring and for us unfortunately it was a vibrating thing that had broken an ignition wire in the loom.
"You can't plan for that. Up to that point the bike had been running flawlessly."
In race two they finished 11th which Shorter says "was a fantastic result".
He is not sure if he will be back next year for his third consecutive TT event.