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NFL Week 16: So we were talking about rules

Discussion in 'Sports and News' started by QYFW, Dec 18, 2017.

  1. TheSportsPredictor

    TheSportsPredictor Well-Known Member

    First NFL game I ever attended. It was on a press pass:



    Some dufus asked Bill Belichick in the postgame press conference a long-winded question that basically culminated in, Have you ever been part of a game where someone returned two kicks for a TD? The question probably took at least 30 seconds, maybe more.

    Belichick: "No."
     
  2. QYFW

    QYFW Well-Known Member

    Just for the symmetry of it all, I want to see the Bears lose to the Browns.

     
  3. HanSenSE

    HanSenSE Well-Known Member

  4. Michael_ Gee

    Michael_ Gee Well-Known Member

    Those are some outstanding negative stats. Thanks for citing them.
     
  5. DanOregon

    DanOregon Well-Known Member

    The weird thing about the "catch rule":
    A - The ground can't cause a fumble.
    B - You need two feet down and control of the ball for a catch.
    C - When a player "holds the ball" over the goal line and it gets knocked away - it's still a touchdown.

    And yet all of these happened on that play in Pittsburgh and it wasn't a catch. It seems if you follow the basic tenets of these things, the catch rule becomes a lot simpler.
     
  6. Batman

    Batman Well-Known Member

    Plus, one knee equals two feet and James had control of the ball when his knee hit at the 1 before he stretched the ball over the goal line. Therefore, he should have become a runner at that point, correct? And him lunging for the goal line was his "football move." And if that's the case, then the instant the ball crosses the goal line it's a touchdown and it bobbling a micrometer when it hit the ground a foot deep into the end zone should not have mattered.
    This was one of those cases, I think, where the nuances of the rule contradict themselves.
     
  7. JC

    JC Well-Known Member

    The ground can cause a fumble when you are not touched.
    The catch is not deemed completed if the player is going to the ground until he survives contact with the ground.
    It's still 2 feet and possession along the sideline.
     
    Rhody31 likes this.
  8. outofplace

    outofplace Well-Known Member

    I just posted on the Week 15 thread about Max Kellerman ranting this exact argument. My understanding is what JC posted. "Surviving the ground" takes precedence and that is why it was incomplete.

    This crap drives me nuts because I thought it was the right call the moment they reversed it and y'all are making me doubt. I'm fine blaming James for trying to do too much rather than just securing the damn catch and leaving it at that. (To be honest, I can't tell where exactly he would have landed if he didn't reach out or if he'd have had time to reach it over after landing, untouched. Probably would have been second-and-goal inside the one with 28 seconds remaining.
     
  9. QYFW

    QYFW Well-Known Member

    Thomas Davis suspension reduced to one game.
     
  10. outofplace

    outofplace Well-Known Member

    Well, it's not like he dove to deliver a a forearm to the back of the head of a player who was lying on the ground well after the whistle. Nah. That's what Gronkowski did and that was a one-game suspension, without the fake show of starting it at two and reducing it.
     
  11. trifectarich

    trifectarich Well-Known Member

    I always thought "surviving the ground" was trying to solve a problem that didn't exist, and I don't think the world would end if that part of the definition was eliminated. I don't have the play committed to memory, but didn't Dez Bryant take two or three steps before all hell broke loose?
     
  12. outofplace

    outofplace Well-Known Member

    I believe it was three, but it's tough to tell if he had control yet when the foot left the ground on the first step. It is different from the James catch in that James seemed to make a football move. In both cases, it is kind of tough to tell if the ball ever touched the ground, which made the reversals tougher for fans to swallow.
     
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