Texarkana Gazette

League evaluating adjustment­s to rule defining receptions

- By Barry Wilner

ORLANDO, Fla.—That’s a catch. Mention the names Calvin Johnson, Dez Bryant, Zach Miller and Jesse James, and what looked, sounded and felt like a catch wasn’t one. If NFL owners pass a proposal from the powerful competitio­n committee, those will be receptions in the future. According to committee chairman Rich McKay and league officiatin­g director Al Riveron, it’s time. “We want to take these great catches and make them into catches,” Riveron said Monday at the NFL meetings, where the owners likely will vote Tuesday on the adjustment­s to the catch rule. Such phrases as “slight movement of the ball” and “surviving the ground” will disappear, and fans, players and coaches will get the fulfilment of knowing what they were sure was a reception actually is. The committee looked at dozens of plays dozens of times. They discovered that the previous attempts to clarify what is a catch only confused the issue. So much so that the

language of the rules was getting in the way of making the proper call. “Every time, we tried to add language to cure a situation,” said McKay, president of the Atlanta Falcons “and that did not serve us well. “We felt like the word slight was getting people caught up. It’s really loss of control. If you lose control of the ball, then you haven’t satisfied (the process). If you have movement of the ball but haven’t lost control of it, then you still have it.” Added Riveron: “If we see total loss of control, that’s the way we’re going to rule it. But we understand there are situations where the ball is going to move. We have to see loss of control.” McKay pointed to touchdown receptions by Alshon Jeffery and Corey Clement in the Super Bowl. In both cases, the ball moved a bit in the receiver’s hands. In both cases, though, on-field officials, then Riveron handling the video review, determined there was possession throughout. “Those are catches,” he said, noting that under current language in the rules, “the ground trumped everything. It didn’t make a lot of sense.” The committee examined plays back to the 1990s and early 2000s, including a pass to the Jets’ Wayne Chrebet in which McKay said the film was “so grainy you could barely make it out.” He mentioned Bert Emanuel’s non-reception in the 1999 NFC title game when the tip of the ball touched the ground even though Emanuel had it in his clutches.

The major emphasis on re-examining the rule stems from Bryant’s noncatch in a playoff game at Green Bay. Reconstruc­ting that play through video, Riveron explained how the proposed change will seize logic—in other words, make what should have been a catch into a real catch.

“I think the Dez Bryant was the start of us realizing something needs to change,” McKay said.

Each year, there have been similar examples that made everyone from the guys throwing the ball to the coaches on the sideline to the fans in the stands and on their mobile devices wondering what was going on. When James’ apparent winning touchdown reception against New England was overturned even though the Steelers tight end made a football move to extend the ball over the goal line, it prompted Commission­er Roger Goodell to forcefully endorse seeking adjustment­s to the rule. The heeded competitio­n committee such instructio­ns.

So, a receiver must:

■ have control of the ball;

■ get two feet down or another body part;

■ make a football move: taking a third step or extending the ball or something similar.

Gone, said, is Riveron emphatical­ly surviving the ground.

“That’s out,” he said. “No mas.”

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