RiverDog wrote:Watching it live, I thought there was no doubt it was a catch. But when I saw it from the reverse angle, the ball clearly touched the ground before it was secured. I don't know what all the controversy is about. I thought the replay was as conclusive as any replay I've seen, certainly as conclusive as Earl's near interception yesterday.
I think Zorny is right. There would not be any questions asked had it not involved the Cowboys. Frigging Cowpukes were benefiting from calls/missed calls all game.
Catching the ball with 2 hands, switching it to his left arm, and taking 3 strides before reaching towards the goal line albeit falling at the same time.
Hawktown wrote:By rule incomplete. If it was called a catch, people would be throwing a fit saying it was incomplete, lol.
Can someone explain why that should not have been incomplete? i kind of like the rule to control the ball trough out the process to the ground but would like to hear a reasonable explanation why this is a catch (though not by rule). Then, where do you draw the line from catch to non catch???
Regarding the going to the ground, what happens if a player is in the same position as that play and stumbles for 15 yards before hitting the ground?
Would that still be a fumble? He would have possessed the ball for probably 5 or 6 strides before hitting the turf so nobody could say he did not control the ball.
By letter of the rule, it would be incomplete as he is still 'going to the ground', but nobody in their right mind would think it wasn't a catch.
kalibane wrote:I don't think that's the problem really mykc. People just don't like the rule. They see the Dez catch (or the Calvin Johnson catch) and there is no part of their body that feels it's not a catch (removing the rule from consideration). Therefore they just don't understand how they can have a rule that ends up ruling that it isn't a catch.
It is pretty telling that I have yet to see a single person argue that it wasn't a catch in the abstract sense. Remove the teams (and fan bias) involved. Also remove any rule book definition of what a "catch" is. Everyone sees that play if it was left up to their discretion would call it a catch. The only defense to the call, while valid, includes the words "by rule" or "by the letter of the rule".
That's the problem.
Old but Slow wrote:The problem, of course, is the rule. It is too demanding, but it is the direct result of the replay technology. Because of the ability to watch a play frame by frame and from multiple angles the rule has to be very precise so that the replay officials can be consistent.
Maybe we will see the rule lightened up a little next season.
So you're telling me that a player that catches a ball, switches it to a single arm then stumbles for 15 yards (maybe even using his hand to stay up) and dives into the end zone only to have the ball bounce a little isn't a catch?
NorthHawk wrote:So you're telling me that a player that catches a ball, switches it to a single arm then stumbles for 15 yards (maybe even using his hand to stay up) and dives into the end zone only to have the ball bounce a little isn't a catch?
According to the rule it isn't if this last call was any indication.
NorthHawk wrote:I understand according to the rules it isn't.
But, really is it not a catch? Two feet on the ground, steps taken, full control of the ball for 15 yards and probably 2 or 3 full seconds...
The rule is a bad one how it's currently written unless they can define what is a catch, not what isn't.
burrrton wrote:
I think chances are they modify this rule, but I seem to recall, at the time Calvin Johnson was bit by it, that there is reasonable rationale behind it, and that modifying it opens up a pandora's box of "what about this, then?", so I won't be dumbstruck if they leave it as-is.
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