Dave, how much influence does the pilot have in correcting that once its landed???
It's a bit of a cliche but the landings not over till you pull onto stand, hes touched down and bounced and then tried to land it again, hence the nose wheel landing and then the two wheel brown trouser moment.
After a bouncing arrival best to just keep pulling and make sure the mains take the pain, if you try to right a wrong the ground shall rise up and smight thine nose wheel like in the vid
There some basic errors in there, he's too much sink on landing and no into wind aileron on rollout as he was distracted by the arrival which led to it all going tits up, the 146 is actually quite narrow in track for its wingspan same as my steed so technique is touchdown, Into wind aileron and heavy braking, spoilers then reverse...it gets all the energy out of the wing and gets the weight on the wheels...
It's a double whammy for pax being shaken not stirred on approach and then banging their heads on the seat in front with max autobrake!
It's pretty much avoided now with predictive windshear technology, my avionics are latest gen and I even get two colour windshear warning red/yellow to predict either increasing or decreasing performance....red means you get the f*ck out of dodge and I'd probably bug out on yellow too especially at City