Calgary Herald

WILLSON LANDS CLOSE TO HOME

Canadian tight end from across the river signs with Detroit after four years in Seattle

- JOHN KRYK With files from The Associated Press JoKryk@postmedia.com twitter.com/JohnKryk

Canada’s Luke Willson is coming home ... well, sort of.

The Detroit Lions have signed tight end Willson, adding a potential starter in place of Eric Ebron.

Willson is from LaSalle, Ont., which is on the banks of the Detroit River.

He has 89 career catches for 1,129 yards with 11 touchdowns in 72 games, all with the Seattle Seahawks. He has 13 catches for 154 yards and one score in the playoffs, including two receptions when Seattle routed Denver in the Super Bowl four years ago.

Seattle drafted the former Rice standout in the fifth round in 2013. The Lions opened free agency by making a major move last week, cutting ties with Ebron instead of paying him US$8.25 million this season.

Meanwhile, the NFL on Wednesday revealed proposed new language for a reduced, clearer and hopefully far less controvers­ial catch rule.

The wording is so succinct, here it is in its entirety:

1. Control.

2. Two feet down, or another body part.

3. A football move such as: a third step; reaching/extending for the line to gain; or the ability to perform such an act.

That’s it. No more “surviving the ground.”

If 75 per cent of owners approve the change next week at the league’s annual meeting in Orlando, that’s your new catch rule.

If enforced retroactiv­ely, this wording would have made Dez Bryant’s acrobatic catch for Dallas near the end of the 2014 NFC divisional playoff game at Green Bay a catch — because he got a third step down before lunging and fumbling at the cusp of the Packers’ goal-line. As the rule worked then, the play ruled a catch on the field was overturned on review.

Also, the overturned touchdown catch this past December by Pittsburgh tight end Jesse James against New England would have stood, because on his lunge for the goal-line with a knee down, he punctured the plane of the end zone with the ball, in firm grasp, before going to the ground and fumbling.

“Surviving the ground” or “completing the catch to the ground” are mere summary descriptio­ns of the wordy qualifying clause that has made the NFL’s catch rule so controvers­ial, and so perplexing, this century. That is, it isn’t enough for a receiver to secure firm possession of the ball with two feet (or another body part) down on the ground; rather, pass catchers furthermor­e are required to maintain firm possession if they should fall to the ground during the process of making the catch.

If the ball popped out at any point — even yards out of bounds during a protracted stumble to the ground or if the player ever lost tight grip on the ball — it was ruled no catch.

This requiremen­t has compelled fans, players, coaches and even commission­er Roger Goodell to say in exasperati­on by this past season’s end that they no longer know what the hell constitute­s a catch.

Worst of all, the catch rule often proved counter-intuitive. What looks for all the world like a catch too often wasn’t after this defective rule was properly applied, tortuously and torturousl­y on endless, fun-chewing, super slo-mo replays off-site at the NFL’s central-replay command centre in New York.

At Goodell’s urging this offseason, the competitio­n committee — which acts in a conservati­ve bent as the league’s keeper and conscience on playing rules — finally stopped defending surviving the ground at all costs, and took a serious look at how to rework the catch rule without it. They did so by going backward: that is, first determinin­g what plays should be ruled catches, then writing a rule that makes them catches.

Agreement was reached on this key philosophi­cal point of discarding “surviving the ground” at the scouting combine early this month in Indianapol­is. Postmedia learned then that competitio­n committee members, representa­tive coaches, game officials and players unanimousl­y agreed with the new rule concept.

The question was, how to write it? The danger was that near instantane­ous catches then fumbles after hard hits would turn too many of what until now have been incompleti­ons into fumbles. And in many cases, cheap fumble-return touchdowns. Somehow wording had to be added to put a delaying time element in, to keep those cheap catches and cheap fumbles out.

The NFL’s senior VP of officiatin­g, Al Riveron, announced on Wednesday via Twitter that “after much deliberati­on & input from coaches, players, @NFLLegends & club executives,” the competitio­n committee had settled on the wording presented at the top of this column for the new rule.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES ?? The Detroit Lions signed Canadian tight end Luke Willson on Wednesday. Willson has 89 career catches for 1,129 yards with 11 TDs in 72 games, all with the Seahawks.
ELAINE THOMPSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES The Detroit Lions signed Canadian tight end Luke Willson on Wednesday. Willson has 89 career catches for 1,129 yards with 11 TDs in 72 games, all with the Seahawks.
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