Tragic accident. There is a youtube pilot, Malibu Flyer, who was flying in pretty low conditions with a gusty wind. He decided a no flap landing at 90kias was the right thing to do. He touched down, bounced and initiated a go-around on the bounce. He jammed the throttle forward and proceeded to grease the airplane onto the runway. The engine stopped producing power, luckily he handled the bounce correctly and didn't porpoise, but the engine stalled, he didn't know why, he was lucky.
He was trying to figure out what happened after the fact, he had pretty good video of the instruments, the airplane and him. What he did is went from basically almost zero power throttle closed to throttle wide open with almost a panicked jam. The egts and chts dived, the rpm dropped. So he landed. This happened very quickly.
What I think happened is the engine had cooled down during the descent, by jamming the throttle rather than opening it over 3 or 4 seconds, the fuel controller loaded the engine up with fuel before the turbos, which weren't spooled up from a long low power descent, could supply enough air to burn it. He flooded out the engine, IMO.
I wonder if this is what happened to this guy. I was trained a long time ago, jamming the throttle in a piston airplane is a bad thing to do to the engine for many reasons. Jamming the throttle in a turbo is even worse. A go around or going missed should be an orderly, controlled process. Yes, sometimes there is urgency, but none of the motions should look anything like panic. Bad things might happen.
Unfortunately, sometime later, this guy wrecked his Malibu, had no insurance, and is now flying a Cherokee.
If you start around 17:30 you can see the Malibu landing.