Is that actually in the rule though? I don't remember reading that in the rule. I think it's more of an informal guideline given to officials as a way to judge when possession has been secured. I think the reasoning goes that if the player has gotten both feet down and is subsequently able to make a football move, that is a good indication he has made solid possession, whereas if he loses it before making that move, he probably never secured it in the first place. There has been talk of the Competition Committee codifying the "football move" guideline, but I do not believe that it has been done to this point.
Originally Posted by: Nonstopdrivel
I don't know if it is a rule. But I do know it is the official interpretation of the possession rule.
It is also the official interpretation of the going to the ground in the process of making a catch. They have done it many times. Catch, 2 feet in and even if you make a football move, like a step or taking a knee as in Finley's case. If you end up hitting the ground, even after 2 steps out of bounds, the ground can still cause an incompletion.
In both the Johnson catch and the one that was a pick but got overturned, they didn't follow the guidelines set by precedent.
According to the way they have been calling it, they blew the calls. If the Finly call was right, the Johnson call and the pick were blown. All were replayed. There is absolutely no excuse for a missed call on a replay.
Either the process of a catch ends when possession is established or it doesn't. The League has been saying that it doesn't for a couple years. Why did it change for this game?
http://www.nfl.com/videos/nfl-game-highlights/09000d5d81aa7bab/Catch-or-no-catch In this clip, Jackson actually catches the ball, gets both feet down, takes 2 more steps and lands on his backside jarring the ball lose. It is ruled incomplete. How is that different from the Johnson catch where he bobbled the ball after hitting the ground out of bounds. Or that catch that was a pick?
I could come up with lots of examples where the process of making a catch is extended at least 2 steps past possession. Johnson didn't even make 2. The overturned int, the receiver didn't even make 1.
I want to go out like my Grandpa did. Peacefully in his sleep.
Not screaming in terror like his passengers.