The Palm Beach Post

Dez play still hotly debated two years later

Cowboys downplay call as they prepare for Packers again.

- By Schuyler Dixon Associated Press

FRISCO, TEXAS — Dez Bryant still gets stopped all the time by people who are sure the officials blew the replay on the Dallas receiver’s famous catch that wasn’t in a playoff loss at Green Bay t wo years ago.

A n d h e f i g u r e s i f t h e Cowboys go on to win the Super Bowl as the top seed in the NFC, that play will be what fans want to talk to him about. Even if he wins another Super Bowl next year. And so on.

“Even if we were to win four or five Super Bowls, people still going to be like, ‘He still caught it,’” Bryant said Thursday. “That’s what it’s going to be.”

The Cowboys (13-3) get a divisional-round rematch with the Packers on Sunday, this time at home. And while Bryant knew from the moment Green Bay (11-6) beat the Giants last weekend in the wild-card round that the disputed play would dominate the conversati­on, he’s playing the part that coach Jason Garrett would prefer.

“I don’t even care,” Bryant said when asked if that moment was his first thought after the Packers won. “That was 2014. There’s no extra motivation, there’s no nothing. If there’s any motivation it’s just to prepare better than the last time.”

The most notable change for the Cowboys since then i s a t q u a r t e r b a c k , wi t h rookie Dak Prescott winning 11 straight games in the regular season to take Tony Romo’s job once Dallas’ 10-year starter was ready to return from a back injury.

Back then, Romo gambled on fourth-and-2 from the Green Bay 32 with 4½ minutes remaining. Bryant made a leaping grab over Sam Shields around the 2 and lunged for the end zone. What happened with the ball will be debated forever, some saying Bryant had control throughout the catch, others saying the ground jarred it loose briefly.

Referee Gene Steratore had the only opinion that mattered, and he ruled upon review after the play was called a reception that Bryant didn’t control the ball all the way through the catch. Two years later, people are still dissecting the replay.

The Cowboys trailed 26-21 when they turned it over on downs after the reversal, and Aaron Rodgers led a clock-killing drive that cov- ered the final four minutes.

“There’s a lot of emotion that goes into that play and that moment,” said tight end Jason Witten, the first to greet Bryant in the end zone when the Cowboys thought they had a first down inside the Green Bay 1.

“What a p l ay b y h i m. What’s a catch, what’s not a catch. I just don’t think any one moment like that can define any of us. Certainly we all reflect on it and look back on it. It probably hardened us some. Know what? Nobody cares. We’re t wo years later. But it’s a great example of just the margin at this point and this time of the season.”

Witten remembers the following offseason being filled with “catch, no catch” talk, even among the kindergart­en friends of his younger son.

“A n d I ’ m t h i n k i n g t o myself, you know, these guys are watching a little too much football to already have an understand­ing of that,” he said.

 ?? BRANDON WADE / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dez Bryant’s infamous playoff non-catch is a topic again as Dallas faces Green Bay.
BRANDON WADE / ASSOCIATED PRESS Dez Bryant’s infamous playoff non-catch is a topic again as Dallas faces Green Bay.

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