Euclid is a mix of residential streets and higher-traffic routes. That combination can create common crash patterns:
- Intersection conflicts: turning vehicles misjudge a cyclist’s speed or fail to yield.
- Door-zone hazards: cyclists are squeezed between parked cars and moving traffic.
- Lane changes near busier stretches: drivers merge or change lanes without properly checking for bikes.
- Construction and resurfacing: temporary lane shifts can force last-second steering.
- Utility and curbside activity: delivery vehicles and roadside work can narrow safe travel space.
In these situations, fault may not be obvious at first. Insurers frequently argue that the cyclist “should have been able to avoid it.” Your case has to show what happened, where it happened, and why the collision was caused by someone else’s failure to act reasonably.


