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The Randle non-TD ... "football move" ??? in endzone ??? ..

Mike in Raleigh : 9/27/2014 1:11 pm
REALLY ??? Why would a player have to make a "football move" in the end zone after having the ball and 2 feet down? Makes no sense whatsoever ... As soon as the ball is posessed ... it's a TOUCHDOWN!!!
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Yes ... it was bang-bang ... but I thought after review ... it was a TD. Ended up not mattering (thank goodness).
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So when Fells catches the pass in the end zone  
The Turk : 9/27/2014 2:38 pm : link
and immediately places the ball gently on the ground is that a "football move"? Because I have never seen a player catch a ball and place it on the ground and thought "oh, that's a football move
Mike  
Joey in VA : 9/27/2014 2:38 pm : link
I wondered the exact same thing as I'm sure we all did. How is Randle's TD not a catch if a toe tapping near the end line with two feet in is a catch. Who the hell has to make a football move in the endzone? Isn't the ball crossing the plane a TD? The ball crossed the plane, was caught and controlled...how on earth is it NOT a TD?

This is part of what is fing up the NFL, the rules are wide open to interpretation. It should go back to two feet down, with control, end of story. A football move?? This is simply killing the game.
Many on the NFLN thought it was a TD as well  
Mason : 9/27/2014 2:47 pm : link
Boomer Esiason said it was a TD and he has no clue about NFL officiating anymore. I agree with that sentiment.
It was a TD.  
That Said : 9/27/2014 2:50 pm : link
The officials screwed up. In other earth-shattering news, the sun will come up tomorrow.
RE: 2013 Rule Book  
ray in arlington : 9/27/2014 2:53 pm : link
In comment 11887000 mrvax said:
Quote:


Quote:


CATCH
A catch is made when a player inbounds secures possession of a pass, kick, or fumble in flight (See 8-1-3).
Note 1: It is a catch if, in the process of attempting to catch the ball, a player secures control of the ball prior to it touching the
ground and that control is maintained during and after the ball has touched the ground.
Note 2: In the field of play, if a catch of a forward pass has been completed, and there is contact by a defender causing the
ball to come loose before the runner is down by contact, it is a fumble, and the ball remains alive. In the end zone, the same action is a touchdown, since the receiver completed the catch beyond the goal line prior to the loss of possession, and the ball is dead when the catch is completed.




By the rules, it is a touchdown.


This was addressed on another thread. First of all, note 2, says "if the catch has been completed". For the Randle play, the issue is whether the catch was completed. It it is, we have a TD. Note that the rule you cited said "(See 8-1-3)". 8-1-3 is where you will see the conditions for completing a catch "football move" stuff.


i meant to type  
ray in arlington : 9/27/2014 2:54 pm : link
conditions for completing a catch AND the "football move" stuff.
we should do away with replay altogether and just play  
gtt350 : 9/27/2014 2:54 pm : link
2 blown calls on replay in that game and both maddening. the knockout where the receiver puts his head down and charges forward yet he is claimed defenseless and the Randle call.
RE: Mike  
ray in arlington : 9/27/2014 2:56 pm : link
In comment 11887010 Joey in VA said:
Quote:
I wondered the exact same thing as I'm sure we all did. How is Randle's TD not a catch if a toe tapping near the end line with two feet in is a catch. Who the hell has to make a football move in the endzone? Isn't the ball crossing the plane a TD? The ball crossed the plane, was caught and controlled...how on earth is it NOT a TD?

This is part of what is fing up the NFL, the rules are wide open to interpretation. It should go back to two feet down, with control, end of story. A football move?? This is simply killing the game.


The sideline catch is covered by a separate item in the book.

The ball crossing the plane rule only applies when the ball is carried in.

The caught and controlled was a perfectly fine rule that the NFL screwed with to justify some calls that were made and to adhere to the concept that a catch in the end zone should be not different from a catch in the field of play.
You're supposed to do  
JoeCabbie : 9/27/2014 3:01 pm : link
a TD dance, that's the "football move".
IMO  
ray in arlington : 9/27/2014 3:05 pm : link
the niles paul call was blown.

the randle call was based on a judgement call that arises from a rule that is hard to interpret and should have been left alone. my judgment is that it was a TD, although not for reasons folks are citing here.

also I'll point out the rule book says that you don't have to make a football move, you just have to "control the ball long enough to make a move common to the game".
RE: RE: 2013 Rule Book  
mrvax : 9/27/2014 3:25 pm : link
In comment 11887024 ray in arlington said:
Quote:


This was addressed on another thread. First of all, note 2, says "if the catch has been completed". For the Randle play, the issue is whether the catch was completed. It it is, we have a TD. Note that the rule you cited said "(See 8-1-3)". 8-1-3 is where you will see the conditions for completing a catch "football move" stuff.



Ray, I don't think "football move" applies in the end zone. If so, please post rule 8-1-3. Most people can clearly see that Randle made a completion. He didn't bobble it, drop it, and it never touched the ground. So according to 3-1-7, the ball is dead and a touchdown awarded.

The only debate I can see is the amount of time Randle held the completed catch before it was knocked down. If that's the case, where is the rule requiring how many seconds a ball must be held before it can be a completion?
RE: RE: RE: 2013 Rule Book  
ray in arlington : 9/27/2014 3:41 pm : link
In comment 11887050 mrvax said:
Quote:
In comment 11887024 ray in arlington said:


Quote:




This was addressed on another thread. First of all, note 2, says "if the catch has been completed". For the Randle play, the issue is whether the catch was completed. It it is, we have a TD. Note that the rule you cited said "(See 8-1-3)". 8-1-3 is where you will see the conditions for completing a catch "football move" stuff.





Ray, I don't think "football move" applies in the end zone. If so, please post rule 8-1-3. Most people can clearly see that Randle made a completion. He didn't bobble it, drop it, and it never touched the ground. So according to 3-1-7, the ball is dead and a touchdown awarded.

The only debate I can see is the amount of time Randle held the completed catch before it was knocked down. If that's the case, where is the rule requiring how many seconds a ball must be held before it can be a completion?


Unfortunately I have a .pdf (can't dump the text here). The relevant rules are 3-1-7 and 8-1-3. The time language used in 8-1-3 is "long enough". 3-1-7 was changed (on another thread we had the 2004 version and the 2013 version) to include the end zone.

Maybe the NFL will backtrack when they realize that a defender should be able to pop a guy in the end zone and justify it by saying he hadn't held it long enough to make a football move.




actially 3-1-7 is kind of weird  
ray in arlington : 9/27/2014 3:43 pm : link
and might not apply here.

look for the "act common to the game stuff" in 8-1-3. This corresponds to what Carey said on the broadcast.
RE: actially 3-1-7 is kind of weird  
mrvax : 9/27/2014 4:08 pm : link
In comment 11887072 ray in arlington said:
Quote:
and might not apply here.

look for the "act common to the game stuff" in 8-1-3. This corresponds to what Carey said on the broadcast.


It's incredibly vague. "act common to the game stuff" sounds like something some lawyer made up. I believe Carey was wrong, according 7-1-3. In the end I hope they finally clarify the end zone catch because this isn't the first time it's happened and won't be the last.
sorry it's not 3-1-7 it's 3-2-7  
ray in arlington : 9/27/2014 4:08 pm : link

Start with description of "Touchdown" in 11-2.

See supplemental note 1 that says you have to complete a catch to get a touchdown. It says to see 3-2-7.

3-2-7 item 2 has the "football move" stuff. It specifically mentions the end zone.

And then there's the note you posted (also part of 3-2-7 that tells you to look at 8-1-3).

The rule book sucks. I've had enough.
From 3.2.7  
SwirlingEddie : 9/27/2014 4:26 pm : link
Quote:
Item 2: Possession of Loose Ball.
To
gain possession of a loose ball that has been caught, intercepted, or recovered,
a player must have complete control of the ball and have both feet or any other part of his body, other than his hands,
completely on the ground inbounds, and maintain control of the ball long enough to perform any act common to the
game.
If the player loses the ball while simultaneously touching both feet or any other part of his body to the ground,
there is no possession. This rule applies in the field of play and in the end zone.


I'm with Ray on this, the Rule may stink, but I think the Officials can justify the call under the Rules as written. Bear in mind that the Rules also state that when possession is in doubt, the default call in incomplete pass.
There is something wrong with the rules  
steve in ky : 9/27/2014 4:33 pm : link
When a runner while never getting in the end zone himself can simply reach out with the ball and hold it just barely over the line and then fumble the ball a split after doing so and yet it counts as a TD and a recover can make the catch take a couple of steps have a helmet knock it loose and it not count.

I'm definitely one who feels it was a TD...  
M.S. : 9/27/2014 4:51 pm : link
...no questions asked.

But I gotta say that the comparison with a running back flying through the air; stretching out and hitting the pylon with the ball; and then the ball comes flying out...

...is NOT a good example to prove why RR's catch should have been a TD.

Why?

Because the RB in this example IS making a football move. He doesn't have to prove he has made a football move. He already made -- maybe a gazillion football moves -- to get to the point where he's airborne toward the pylon.

I get the football move issue with RR... but in the endzone -- given what happened -- that "football move" rule is a crock of SHIT!!!
MS  
steve in ky : 9/27/2014 5:04 pm : link
I think you completely misunderstood what I wrote. I wasn't saying it proved anything. I understand why it wasn't called a TD and never argued that point. What I said was there is something wrong with the rules which allow those to extremes to exist.
steve in ky...  
M.S. : 9/27/2014 5:15 pm : link

...I agree 100% with your comment. You created a great example that highlights the absurdity of the rule.

Truth be told, I confounded what you said with someone else on another thread who mentioned that -- if RR didn't deserve a TD -- neither does a RB flying through the air and hitting the pylon with the ball.





MS  
steve in ky : 9/27/2014 5:18 pm : link
No problem, I have done the same thing myself.
Why does this matter at all?  
PaulN : 9/27/2014 5:20 pm : link
They intercepted on the same possession by Washington and then scored a TD, it probably does not even affect the final score even, yet this is a big issue here? Is it the lost TD pass and int. that bothers you when you defend Eli? Is it the old NFL conspiracy crap against the Giants? It was close whether he had it long enough, they did not explain it well or correctly at all, who gives a fuck in a 45 - 14 game though. They looked great, Eli looked great, the Oline looked great, the defense looked great. What am I missing?
TD rules  
ray in arlington : 9/27/2014 5:30 pm : link
I think that trying to combine the TD arising from a ball carrier and a pass catcher, is not so easy. First of all, it's considered normal that the pass catcher has to get 2 feet inbounds in the end zone (or something other than the feet) but the runner carrying the ball in does not. Also we are familiar with the ball carrier diving to the pylon for a TD but I don't think people would want to have a pass catcher go into the air, land on the pylon, and get a TD.

So I think it works best as two separate cases, although I don't think any "football move" stuff should be involved in a situation where there is no need to advance the ball.
PaulN...  
M.S. : 9/27/2014 5:30 pm : link

...I'm pretty sure that several on this thread are really only commenting on this because it seems like a very strange call, and that the "making a football move" is the sort of rule that can cause a lot of mischief.

That's at least why I've been blabbing/yapping on this thread.
ray in arlington...  
M.S. : 9/27/2014 5:33 pm : link

...I think you're onto something when you say that, "...I don't think any "football move" stuff should be involved in a situation where there is no need to advance the ball."

"No need to advance the ball" is IMO the nub of the issue. I think you hit the mark.
RE: TD rules  
ray in arlington : 9/27/2014 5:35 pm : link
I mean combining the TD rules, not combining the TD.
Bill Polian Explained at Length It Was the Right Call,  
clatterbuck : 9/27/2014 5:54 pm : link
according to the rule. This was on NFl radio Friday morning. He doesn't like the rule be he said the zebras got it right.
So,  
Doomster : 9/27/2014 6:19 pm : link
a receiver, turns around in the endzone....both his feet are on the ground....he catches a pass....there is no juggling of the ball...it hits him directly in the hands.....as soon as he "catches it", someone hits the ball out of his hands....no football move was made.....so it is incomplete?
suppose the ball is hit 0.5 seconds after the catch? one second? two seconds? three seconds? four seconds? Which one is a touchdown? Or are none because a football move wasn't made?

If one is a TD, then it's based on an amount of time? Then why isn't there a minimum specific time in the rule book?
RE: So,  
ray in arlington : 9/27/2014 6:27 pm : link
In comment 11887307 Doomster said:
Quote:
a receiver, turns around in the endzone....both his feet are on the ground....he catches a pass....there is no juggling of the ball...it hits him directly in the hands.....as soon as he "catches it", someone hits the ball out of his hands....no football move was made.....so it is incomplete?
suppose the ball is hit 0.5 seconds after the catch? one second? two seconds? three seconds? four seconds? Which one is a touchdown? Or are none because a football move wasn't made?

If one is a TD, then it's based on an amount of time? Then why isn't there a minimum specific time in the rule book?


I think we all agree that the rule sucks.

Ray-here is 8-1-3  
skunk333 : 9/27/2014 6:43 pm : link
COMPLETED OR INTERCEPTED PASS
Article 3 Completed or Intercepted Pass. A player who makes a catch may advance the ball. A forward pass is complete (by
the offense) or intercepted (by the defense) if a player, who is inbounds:
(a) secures control of the ball in his hands or arms prior to the ball touching the ground; and
(b) touches the ground inbounds with both feet or with any part of his body other than his hands; and
(c) maintains control of the ball long enough, after (a) and (b) have been fulfilled, to enable him to perform any act
common to the game (i.e., maintaining control long enough to pitch it, pass it, advance with it, or avoid or ward off an
opponent, etc.).
Note 1: It is not necessary that he commit such an act, provided that he maintains control of the ball long enough to do so


So...
Looking at section c, the question really is did he control it long enough to perform a "move common to the game" as described there, whether or not he made one. The section on end zone catches clearly states that this applies to end zone as we'll.

Looking at the play, it was very close. I would love to see it in a non-Giant game to really see it impartially. I think both ways to call it can be defended frankly
And the difference with the running back  
skunk333 : 9/27/2014 6:45 pm : link
Leaping analogy is that in the RB situation he already has possession...In that situation the instant the ball crosses the goaline the play is dead
RE: So,  
BlackLight : 9/27/2014 6:45 pm : link
In comment 11887307 Doomster said:
Quote:
a receiver, turns around in the endzone....both his feet are on the ground....he catches a pass....there is no juggling of the ball...it hits him directly in the hands.....as soon as he "catches it", someone hits the ball out of his hands....no football move was made.....so it is incomplete?
suppose the ball is hit 0.5 seconds after the catch? one second? two seconds? three seconds? four seconds? Which one is a touchdown? Or are none because a football move wasn't made?

If one is a TD, then it's based on an amount of time? Then why isn't there a minimum specific time in the rule book?


Because it would be impractical to enforce. Say it was 1 second. So, whenever a border case presented itself, it wouldn't just be a typical instant replay review. You'd have to get a stopwatch out then it all hangs on when you start the clock vs. when you stop it.

By and large, I'm all for using technology to aid the officiating process, but at a certain point, it does become an intrusion. There will always be a balancing act between getting the call right and keeping the game entertainment. I would argue that anyone who comes down 100% on either side of it hasn't really considered the implications.
i believe the paul call was wrong also imho  
sgf : 9/27/2014 7:08 pm : link
how is he a defenseless receiver when he catches the ball, clearly took more than two steps down field, had enough time
to put both hands over the ball and lowered his head anticipating getting hammered? he saw both defenders flying at him.
isn't he a runner at that point in time?
not sure but i don't think it was helmet to helmet either, he lowered his head.
even Extremeskins called  
SHO'NUFF : 9/27/2014 7:27 pm : link
it a TD
The fact that Redskins fans think it was a TD  
BlackLight : 9/27/2014 7:36 pm : link
matters about as much as it matters that I'm a Giants fan and I think it wasn't. Neither fact on its own stands as an argument.
well hell...in that case, why is there a thread on this?  
SHO'NUFF : 9/27/2014 9:03 pm : link
why is there a forum for football in general?

The point being...Extremeskins...maybe the most delusional one-sided fans on the planet...thought it was a TD and were worried the call would be reversed since they are the only team that is both cursed and hated by the NFL refs.

However, they did say the hit on Paul was dirty and Demps should be suspended.
Heard Bill Polian  
geemanfan : 9/27/2014 10:33 pm : link
On Sirius and he said the Reffs got the call right. I don't agree . If that's not a TD then neither is the Ben to Santonio Holmes in the Super Bowl .
I guess they are trying to make the endzone catch the same  
xman : 9/27/2014 11:26 pm : link
as an in the field catch. Possession for a certain amount of time for it to be a reception
Folks were asking for a GIF...  
BigBlueinChicago : 9/27/2014 11:37 pm : link
you shall receive. I'll give 2 angles



i think it's a td  
ray in arlington : 9/27/2014 11:53 pm : link
there was an extra step in there that works for me as the "football move"

the caveat is that the gif is not in real time, so I don't know how to deal with a rule that says "long enough"
Slowing down the play  
BigBlueinChicago : 9/27/2014 11:55 pm : link
RE: Slowing down the play  
ray in arlington : 9/27/2014 11:57 pm : link
In comment 11887656 BigBlueinChicago said:
Quote:


at that speed it is clear that he stepped back and turned after 2 feet were down and ball was controlled in his hands. TD.
That pisses me off...  
M.S. : 9/28/2014 5:30 am : link

...looking at that slo-mo video.

The refs just didn't want to reverse themselves.

Bad.

Real Bad.
The notion of making a football move in the end zone  
UberAlias : 9/28/2014 8:15 am : link
Is absurd. If you catch the ball in the field of play the play is still going on and receiver needs to advance the ball, protect himself, etc. Football move make sense. But a catch in the end zone the play is over so what the hell does a football move mean, that the player is in the process of starting a TD celebration? If a player catches the ball and stands there, is a catch not established and the play still live because standing still is not a football move?

At best you can argue the play was too bang bang and hence had not yet established firm control for long enough. Bad call, but at least it isn't buried in nonsense like football moves in the endzone.
Well  
BigBlueShock : 9/28/2014 8:32 am : link
if the defender would have flattened the player there, it would have absolutely been a late hit. I've seen it called a thousand times, and not just in the new, super sensitive NFL. He took two steps, and turned around while basically giving himself up because it's a TD at that point. Watch that GIF. You can see him start to ease up right before the ball gets knocked loose
RE: The notion of making a football move in the end zone  
BigBlueShock : 9/28/2014 8:34 am : link
In comment 11887766 UberAlias said:
Quote:
Is absurd. If you catch the ball in the field of play the play is still going on and receiver needs to advance the ball, protect himself, etc. Football move make sense. But a catch in the end zone the play is over so what the hell does a football move mean, that the player is in the process of starting a TD celebration? If a player catches the ball and stands there, is a catch not established and the play still live because standing still is not a football move?

At best you can argue the play was too bang bang and hence had not yet established firm control for long enough. Bad call, but at least it isn't buried in nonsense like football moves in the endzone.

This.
I'd love to hear an explanation on what co notates a football move in the end zone. Where's the player going? What's he supposed to do once he scores? Do laps around the end zone?
No way did he possess the ball long enough  
Don Draper : 9/28/2014 10:17 am : link
To whip out a sharpie and autograph that ball; ergo, incomplete pass!
The GIF shows  
mrvax : 9/28/2014 11:22 am : link
he had 3 feet down. Made the catch, left foot down, right foot, left foot, BOOM.

The refs messed this up. What SHOULD happen is the NFL reviews the tape, publicly announce an official bad call, makes every ref watch the tape and move on from here.
"maintains control of the ball long enough"  
Doomster : 9/28/2014 11:36 am : link
So...
Looking at section c, the question really is did he control it long enough to perform a "move common to the game" as described there, whether or not he made one. The section on end zone catches clearly states that this applies to end zone as we'll.

Looking at the play, it was very close. I would love to see it in a non-Giant game to really see it impartially. I think both ways to call it can be defended frankly....

So, it basically comes down to, how long does he hold the ball, and that is not specified in the rules....so, if a catch is made in the endzone, no bobble, both feet down, a defender can come and knock the ball out, if he doesn't "maintain the ball long enough", which is a discretionary timeline in a ref's head? Hope TC gets a definitive answer as to what the timeline on a catch is....
Dropbox suspended the GIF  
BigBlueinChicago : 9/28/2014 12:53 pm : link
due to "excessive traffic" on it. I'll need to use another site if I can find it to bring it back.
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