JoeKing
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People were not complaining about the CJ rule (generally), but rather the misapplication of it.
That's a distinction without a difference.
People were not complaining about the CJ rule (generally), but rather the misapplication of it.
The full sequence was:
catch in the air with control
left foot down
right foot down
Falling toward the ground
left foot down again
right hand, wrist and elbow
left knee
left forearm
ball touched the ground.
"...If he regains control prior to the ball touching the ground, the pass is complete"
Didn't this also happen after ball popped up and Dez "re-caught" it while in the endzone?
The new rule means he's not a runner yet, because the official can simply say he hasn't been upright long enough. Control and both feet down won't matter anymore on this kind of play. The player could even wave the ball in the air as he's going down, but if it comes out when he lands, it's like the catch never happened.
No, because the agent that caused it to pop up was the ground. And in the case of the rule, ball movement when in contact with the ground, held by a falling receiver, constitutes no catch.
How about control and 2 feet and you are done?
Falling OOB maintain control.
Two feet don't land in the field of play/endzone maintain control.
Man that was so hard no wonder the rules committee could not come up with it.
The trick is, you have to call him a receiver in order for that rule to apply. Call him a runner, and it's "the ground can't cause a fumble."No, because the agent that caused it to pop up was the ground. And in the case of the rule, ball movement when in contact with the ground, held by a falling receiver, constitutes no catch.
How about control and 2 feet and you are done?
Falling OOB maintain control.
Two feet don't land in the field of play/endzone maintain control.
Man that was so hard no wonder the rules committee could not come up with it.
The trick is, you have to call him a receiver in order for that rule to apply. Call him a runner, and it's "the ground can't cause a fumble."
Under the old rule, you can't call him a receiver because he'd completed the three-part catch process of control, both feet, and at least one football move. Under the new rule, you could have called him a receiver for not being upright long enough.
Hence the rule change, that we were told wasn't going to happen because it wasn't necessary.
Control must be maintained toi the ground. I did not read your post and essentially posted the same thing about the ground and the ball.
But in the case of Dez, when he starts leaning, by contact with the defender, it is construed as a motion consistent with falling. His attempt to dig in an foist himself toward the goal line is not a football move since it was precipitated by what the league and the rule considers "falling."
As I have said, I don't like the way it ended up.
But it followed the rules, and no matter what, there is still interpretation by the officials in almost every penalty, or review.
Dez took a lot of steps on that play before falling. Not the same kind of play. If you're looking for control, three steps, reach, ball comes loose on contact with the ground, and it's ruled a catch, here it is...
This is an interesting take, because you realize that the rule should not have been changed, and yet don't seem to have thought about why it was changed. Look at it this way: If the rule hadn't been "broken" (in their eyes) they would not have "fixed" it (again, in their eyes.) Still, there's a common thread of misunderstanding among those who insist that it was not a catch, and most of it centers around the catch process and establishing oneself as a runner.The Calvin Johnson rule was around long before Dez got his chance to test it. I don't see the protest threads about this rule on CZ before then so why are we seeing it now? Cowboys fans are so inconsistent with their complaints. It wasn't a catch and will never be a catch and no amount of protest by you will ever change that fact. Crying about it at this point is just laughable to me. Being mad about the re-write of the rule however, is something I believe is justified. It is now truly the Dez rule.
The Calvin Johnson rule was around long before Dez got his chance to test it. I don't see the protest threads about this rule on CZ before then so why are we seeing it now?
Well, nobody likes the way it ended up, but we're talking about the application of a rule that doesn't apply in Dez's case. Yes, control must be maintained to the ground. But only if the pass hasn't been caught yet. If the pass has been caught, Dez is no longer a "receiver" going to the ground, so a rule about receivers going to the ground becomes irrelevant.Control must be maintained toi the ground. I did not read your post and essentially posted the same thing about the ground and the ball.
But in the case of Dez, when he starts leaning, by contact with the defender, it is construed as a motion consistent with falling. His attempt to dig in an foist himself toward the goal line is not a football move since it was precipitated by what the league and the rule considers "falling."
As I have said, I don't like the way it ended up.
But it followed the rules, and no matter what, there is still interpretation by the officials in almost every penalty, or review.
He already had control, had 2 feet inbounds, and made a move common to the game by turning and begining a 3rd step before that contact that caused the fall. In other words the catch process was complete before any going to the ground occurs.
Review the video.
Well, nobody likes the way it ended up, but we're talking about the application of a rule that doesn't apply in Dez's case. Yes, control must be maintained to the ground. But only if the pass hasn't been caught yet. If the pass has been caught, Dez is no longer a "receiver" going to the ground, so a rule about receivers going to the ground becomes irrelevant.
There is such a thing as the catch process. Not all players who catch a pass and later fall down are "receivers going to the ground." If you think they are, then you need to look a similar plays and how they were ruled. Julius Thomas in week 2 of 2013 is an example of how the Dez play should have been ruled (or more accurately, how it was ruled prior to being overturned).