Lob -- Perhaps there was no "team failure" here in the sense that "the team failed" but instead, perhaps, the issue was that the team members didn't know what they were supposed to do. It sounds like you did not pull the other two back because you thought it would be best NOT to do so. To my mind that isn't a "team failure" issue but, to the contrary, merely a misunderstanding of the roles of the various divers (teammates).
This, in fact, reminds me all too much of my Fundies class where during the first valve drill my teammate and I both watched the actor shut down both valves. We were quite aware he was doing that and we were prepared to donate as soon as he realized he needed gas, but what we didn't know was that we were supposed to stop him before he reached that point. The instructor got on us for not stopping him but I thought then, and I think now, IF there was a "fault" it was in the instructor for not educating us as to the proper roles.
In your dive, it is pretty clear you all thought you had your roles properly defined but, in fact, you didn't. Now you know so the next time the issue won't happen. Again, to me that isn't a "failure" of the team -- if anything, it is just a result of inexperience.
This, in fact, reminds me all too much of my Fundies class where during the first valve drill my teammate and I both watched the actor shut down both valves. We were quite aware he was doing that and we were prepared to donate as soon as he realized he needed gas, but what we didn't know was that we were supposed to stop him before he reached that point. The instructor got on us for not stopping him but I thought then, and I think now, IF there was a "fault" it was in the instructor for not educating us as to the proper roles.
In your dive, it is pretty clear you all thought you had your roles properly defined but, in fact, you didn't. Now you know so the next time the issue won't happen. Again, to me that isn't a "failure" of the team -- if anything, it is just a result of inexperience.