OmerV
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Because prior to 2015, a "runner" was simply a player in possession of a live ball. "Upright long enough" didn't enter the rules until 2015. Until that time you could complete the catch process even while falling. That's why Blandino had to say he looked for a football move even after Dez started to fall, and why he should have had to prove Dez did not perform any acts common to the game before he hit the ground -- that he simply fell.
If you missed it, here's the casebook example of a player establishing himself as a runner while he is falling:
A.R. 15.95 Act common to game
Third-and-10 on A20. Pass over the middle is ruled incomplete at the A30. The receiver controlled the pass with one foot down and was then contacted by a defender. As he went to the ground, he got his second foot down and then still in control of the ball he lunged for the line to gain, losing the ball when he landed.
Ruling: Reviewable. Completed pass. A’s ball first-and-10 on A30.
In this situation, the act of lunging is not part of the process of the catch. He has completed the time element required for the pass to be complete and does not have to hold onto the ball when he hits the ground. When he hit the ground, he was down by contact.
That's from the 2014 casebook. When the football move was spelled out in 2016, the examples put in by the catch committee were "tucking the ball away, turning upfield, taking additional steps."
If you agree with the overturn, then either you're saying at least one of those things wasn't considered an act common to the game just two years earlier, or you're saying Dez didn't do even one of these things.
Which is it?
"Upright long enough" wasn't in the rule then, but the rule about going to the ground was.