If you know me on any level personally
you know that I eat, breathe, and sleep Dallas Cowboys. Make no bones about it,
I am one hundred and ninety-nine percent bias when it comes to professional
football—that was still a catch. You can get every head of officiating at every
level of football on every show on every network in America to tell me about
“completing the process” and bring up Calvin Johnson’s 2010 attempt that
brought this “rule” to the public forefront but that will not change the fact
that it was a catch.
What bothers me most about those that
bring up the Calvin Johnson Rule to corroborate the official’s decision to overturn
the catch is that the CJR doesn’t even apply!
*Corroborate. Such an appropriate word. Makes it sound like official
police business. Makes it sound like there was a crime committed. There was a
crime committed.*
Back to my point…
Completing the process has to do with
the receiver falling to the ground after he makes the initial grab. It has
everything to do with the receiver maintaining control of the football as he
forfeits his balance. And although it isn’t always practical, it makes some
sense. I can understand the rationale behind not wanting to concede everything
to the offensive player—even in a league intent on making defense obsolete. But
think about how difficult it is to lose your balance in the air, get hit by a
220-lb man, hit the turf with the full force of your own body and the extra
weight of your pads, and after all of that make sure that the ball does not
move after you crash onto said turf.
That’s stupid.
Still, that rule has nothing to do
with Dez Bryant’s catch on the 1-yard line. As soon as a receiver makes a “move
common to the game” the CJR no longer applies. Remember the CJR has to do with
maintaining control while at the same time losing balance. A “move common to
the game” essentially signals that the receiver is cognitively attempting some
sort of action. That cognition is assumed unachievable if the receiver is off
balance.
Dez Bryant reached for the endzone.
Dez Bryant always reaches for the extra yardage. That reach is considered a
“move common to the game.” If you think for one second that Dez didn’t reach
for that goal line and instead his arm just happened to extend due to the
position of his body as he fell then you are not only wrong, you are probably
being wrong just to spite.
I have no doubt that 88 made that
catch. I also have no doubt that 12 on the opposing sideline was cooking and would
have had the ball with over five minutes to go and a chance to win the game.
Maybe the result would have been the same.
Regardless, WE were robbed.

Still would have our chances to stop 12. I think we could have done it
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