The Denver Post

Panel to recommend changes to catch rule

- By Barry Wilner

The NFL’s catch rule would get less complicate­d if team owners approve recommenda­tions from the powerful competitio­n committee.

One of the first orders of business when the league’s annual meetings begin Monday in Orlando, Florida, will be a proposal by the committee to clarify what is a catch.

Commission­er Roger Goodell said during the week of the Super Bowl he would urge simplifica­tion of the rules.

“Catch/no catch is at the top of everyone’s minds,” Troy Vincent, the NFL’s football operations chief, said Wednesday before outlining the committee’s recommenda­tions.

The owners will be asked to vote on clarificat­ions that eliminate parts of the rule involving a receiver going to the ground, and that also eliminate negating a catch for slight movement of the ball while it is in the receiver’s possession. No calls in the last few years — not even pass interferen­ce — have caused more consternat­ion than overturned catches in key situations, including those by Dez Bryant, Jesse James and Austin Seferian-Jenkins.

“We were at the point as far as players and particular­ly coaches who asked, ‘Why is that not a catch?’” Vincent said. “We talked to fans, coaches and players and we asked the groups, ‘Would you like this to be a catch?’ It was 100 percent yes.

“Then we began writing rules that actually apply to making these situations catches.”

Here’s what would constitute a catch if the owners approve the competitio­n committee’s alteration­s: control of the ball; getting two feet down; performing a football act; or performing a third step.

The stipulatio­n that slight movement of the ball while the receiver still has control no longer would result in an incompleti­on. Vincent pointed to the touchdown catch by the Philadelph­ia Eagles’ Corey Clement in the Super Bowl as an example of a player never losing possession of the ball despite slight movement.

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