Flight landed safely, by the way.
In the book Outliers, it is pointed out that more accidents occur when the Capt is flying, because he outranks the FO, and the FO is less likely to question his judgement.
When the FO is flying, if he makes an error, it is more likely that the Capt will point out the mistake, and correct it right away.
I was just curious what the statistic was based on, because if the captain logs more hours and lands more flights, then it stands to reason they will have more accidents than their first officers will.
It's a little hard to quantify these days as flight operations have progressed quite a bit in the last number of years, (both in good ways and bad). There is more interaction between Captain and FO than in the past. Much of the "Captain bravado" is gone, (but not all) which would have the skipper feeling undermined by the FO and proving his point, or "pulling rank". Over managing or micromanaging can also be detrimental, just like mismanaging. These issues have caused a number of accidents in the past, human factors have been studied and changes made.
There is more of a team approach today, but specific duties are generally well defined. For example; though verbiage and actual procedures may differ between airlines, the basic concept is when weather is at or below limits on a precision approach, the FO will fly the approach and the Captain will be looking outside approaching decision height or altitude, the FO will call "decide" and depending on the approach the Capt. will either say "go around" and the FO will fly the go around, "continue" and the FO will continue until the Capt. says "landing I have control" where he takes control and lands. So it standt to reason that during a low visibility landing the Captain has more of a chance of having an accident.
Although the Captain has the ultimate authority it usually isn't excercised as militarily as in the past, but it still happens. Now accidents happen when no one's hands are at the controls and either the autopilot gets overloaded and kicks off, unnoticed or otherwise, or no one is monitoring the thing and it goes just where it was erroneously programmed to go. Gotta love progress and technology, but it brings new challenges.