About the appearance of 85 knots, then Kaboom into the tower. Did not happen.
He hit one or more wires, slid along, slowing from friction and direction change, then hit just hard enough to embed the engine into the structure, and lock there. Some of the pictures showed a wide area of scratching the full length of one wing. The current passing through the plane tried to weld it in place, too. Those towers are quite rigid, and would not have swayed much with the impact, plus those very strong wires to the next towers would have transferred the forces.
From an electrical point of observation, the relays in the substations detect a direct short and initiate trip in about 2 cycles, the auxiliary devices take another cycle, and circuit breaker interrupt time, another 3 cycles. Therefore, 6/60th of a second or one tenth of a second from first spark to line is dead. That is a lot of arcing. Neighbors thought it was a wild lightning storm until the lights went out.
If a wing reached the other feeder on that tower, there would have been another tenth of a second event, starting at a slightly later time. Before I retired, I worked in the department of PEPCo that calibrated and timed those relays, and participated in the original energizing of those lines.
I would love to inspect that plane for arc damage!
The guys that went up in the bucket truck have my admiration. I know and understand the sequence of steps to verify not energized, apply grounds, and then move in to work. That is a very simplified version. I have been up in buckets several times, and even higher supported by a tall crane.. Happily, a rare event for me.