BentMikey said:
Jimbo does present his case well, but his argument is deeply flawed. The far bigger risk comes not from drivers who aren't looking where they are going, but from drivers at junctions who often don't see cyclists in the gutter (i.e. where they are not looking). Also from drivers squeezing past when they shouldn't be trying to overtake.
NO. The most common collision at junctions and especially traffic islands, is caused by motorists driving forward while still looking to their Right. Research labs call them "Front to rear slow speed shunts". 'Slow speed because 75% of them are at less than 20 mph.
When the cyclist rides onto the traffic island or across the junction not as fast as the motorist estimated in primary, Crash, bang, wollop.
When the cyclist keeps to the left, zoom, zoom.
Fortunately, most car manufacturers are developing 'crash avoidance' systems where the brakes are applied automatically when sensors detect an object ahead.