Very difficult for the airline to deal with this sort of situation with such short notice.
Look at it this way.The inbound flight shows no sign of any technical problem until it has landed.By all accounts this was an issue with the brakes.
By the time the crew are aware of the problem all the home bound passengers are already at the airport expecting to board their flight home.
This leaves Thomsons ground handling agents with up to 260 passengers to deal with.
Initially they will not have known how long the tech issue would take to resolve and then the limited resources they have in place have to hotel a full flight.
I am certainly not trying to defend Thomson but I have now had two occasions to view favourably the professionalism of the Thomson handling agents in Goa.
I will give only one example.
On our return flight this year I had no tickets to present.Being e ticket I only had our booking reference number somehow managing to delete the email that would have allowed me to print out the flight details.
On our arrival at Dabolim due to classic Indian need for paper we were refused entry to the airport despite our names being on the passenger manifest.
The Thomson agent acted calmly and with great humour informong me that in India they needed paper tickets.
This resulted in us being held outside the terminal building while he had someone write out manually tickets.
I thought an elegant solution to a typically Indian problem.
We often criticise the Indians incompetence but I have to take my hat off to the way this man handled things.
I can only imagine how difficult things were when faced at very short notice with a whole flight full that had to be hoteled
Glad you all got back safely if very tired.
Papa