Thanks for sharing that.
I once came upon four coyotes that had a fork-horn mule deer backed up to a sheer drop rim rock....on the top, so the drop off was behind the deer. His rump was all bloodied, and the reason I had hiked up there was I had seen him through binoculars, and he had that humped up look, of a wounded animal. Well, me and my buddy got up there, and the coyotes scattered. We were under-gunned, hunting muzzle loader season. There was a small bowl like depression, about 100 yards wide, and the coyotes had the high ground, and nowhere for the deer to run.
When the coyotes left, the deer started off kind of unsteadily, but in about 300 yards he warmed up, and lit the afterburners. I'd like to think he made it.