Are you truly saying that Gerry is such an arrogant and narcissistic individual that when faced with evidence from two witnesses that he was not where he thought he was he doubles down on his recollection? That when doubling down on his recollection undermines his main witness Tanner he still does it? His daughter has just, according to him, been abducted but it means more to him to appear right rather than accept that he may be wrong.
No, that's not what I'm saying. But the fact you are trying to put words in my mouth and deliberately misrepresent what I was saying is comforting. It means you have absolutely nothing of worth to challenge what I actually said.
I'm saying Gerry says that's where he was stood, because that's how he genuinely remembered it. If it was all a lie, it would be easy for him to change his story to align it with the others and say he was mistaken (although if he did that, I'm sure you'd cite that as being equally suspicious). He's saying he was stood further over because he's just being honest about what he remembers. For what it's worth, I think he is probably incorrect in his recollection. The same as I think Martin Smith is incorrect in his. Is Martin Smith an arrogant narcissist for not aligning his view to that of Peter and Aoife, who disagreed that the man was Gerry?
Taking each of the various accounts, I suggest they were probably stood just off the kerb near the corner of where the pathway starts. Memories are fallible, alcohol had been consumed, there was no special reason to etch into their minds where exactly they stood. But piecing together all three accounts, that seems the most likely place, but it's still not certain either.
This is just a typical example of variations in recollections that people try to twist and contort into having a bigger meaning. I'm yet to hear a credible reason for why Jane would lie about passing them though.