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The overturn of Dez Bryant's brilliant 31-yard reception in the Dallas Cowboys' Divisional Round loss robbed football fans of a defining playoff moment and penalized one of the NFL's best players for maximizing his athletic ability in an extraordinary effort to reach the end zone.

It was the correct interpretation of a frustrating "process of the catch" rule so convoluted that each of the major networks employs an officiating expert to interpret it for the NFL's world-wide audience.

Dean Blandino, the NFL's vice president of officiating, confirmed to Rich Eisen on Sunday's edition of GameDay Final that the rule will be reviewed by the Competition Committee in the coming offseason.

It's easy to understand that willingness to revisit the "process of the catch" after reading referee Gene Steratore's explanation of his game-shifting decision.

"Although the receiver is possessing the football, he must maintain possession of that football throughout the entire process of the catch," Steratore told a pool reporter after the game. "In our judgment, he maintained possession but continued to fall and never had another act common to the game. We deemed that by our judgment to be the full process of the catch, and at the time he lands and the ball hits the ground, it comes loose as it hits the ground, which would make that incomplete; although he re-possesses it, it does not contact the ground when he reaches so the repossession is irrelevant because it was ruled an incomplete pass when we had the ball hit the ground."

Fans can't be blamed for scratching their heads at that mind-numbing legalese. How can a player "reach" for the end zone without possession of the ball? It fails any simple logic test.

We learn how to catch in the backyard by the time we leave toddlerhood. We understand that Bryant's actions constitute a catch on any patch of grass outside of an NFL stadium.

Bryant made a rare play to leap 10 yards in the air and spanned five yards on the gridiron to come down with a contested ball and lunge for a potential game-winning touchdown.

"The whole thing is uncommon to me," NFL Media's Brian Baldinger said Monday on NFL Aftermath. "The whole thing is greatness. He's making a play that not many guys in this league can attempt to make -- and he's getting punished for it."

The problem the Competition Committee faces is the law of unintended consequences. If a catch is determined to be two feet down and clear possession, the NFL will see a rise in "the cheap fumble," as Peter King in the Monday Morning Quarterback.

That has to be preferable than eliminating historically great, season-shifting highlight-reel plays, with needless controversy overshadowing the season's most entertaining and rewarding weekend of football.

The NFL has unquestioned hegemony in the American sports landscape, in no small part because of the priority placed on constantly improving and evolving the product on the field.

This is a nonsensical bylaw.

Whether it goes by the name of the "Calvin Johnson rule" or the "process of the catch rule," it's one that needs to be changed for the good of the sport.
 

yimyammer

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In the future, NFL games will last months consisting primarily of week long trials litigating the outcome of every play followed by hour long choreographed celebrations of even the most mundane of plays.

The stars of the NFL will no longer be athletes but attorneys and dance instructors.

Embrace the inevitable
 

Sheik

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Don't change the rule. It's already fucked us. Maybe next year it will help us.
 

Bob Sacamano

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"The whole thing is uncommon to me," NFL Media's Brian Baldinger said Monday on NFL Aftermath. "The whole thing is greatness. He's making a play that not many guys in this league can attempt to make -- and he's getting punished for it." -- Brian Baldfinger

That's what I said yesterday.

That shit is going to decide the outcome of so many games if it isn't changed simply because of that fact.
 

dbair1967

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This Blandino guy apparently shit the bed this afternoon and evening running his mouth again...was reading on another forum where whatever he said today basically contradicted what he said last night.

At this point they'd be better off either:

1) Just shutting up about it

or

2) Man up and admit you fucking blew it

#refssuckdonkeypeen
 
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The stars of the NFL will no longer be athletes but attorneys and dance instructors.

Don't forget the officials. Nothing is more dramatic than seeing middle aged men with pot bellies huddle together while changing their minds. The thrill of victory. The agony of defeat. The human drama of athletic competition. Goodell is a fucker.

The "bad rule" was a known problem, but the NFL didn't fix it.
 

Rynie

In the Rotation
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This Blandino guy apparently shit the bed this afternoon and evening running his mouth again...was reading on another forum where whatever he said today basically contradicted what he said last night.

At this point they'd be better off either:

1) Just shutting up about it

or

2) Man up and admit you fucking blew it

#refssuckdonkeypeen

The guy in charge of all the players' contracts for the Cowboys got a call from the NFL as soon as they landed. They straight said, "yeah, we CAN'T explain the call." Of course, that's not going to be made public; they're too busy saving face all over the U.S. This is what my pal at VR told me earlier. I hope Goodell dies REAL soon.
 
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What is a cheap fumble?
It's when a receiver catches the ball, just gets two feet down, and gets whacked and the ball comes loose. One of those that would be called an incomplete pass without some kind of turn upfield, etc.
 
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