Here's picture #4:
Jarvis has the ball secured, knee is down. Play is over and it is a catch. Period end of story.
What happens after this point shouldn't matter because he has the ball secured and his knee is down ruling the play over.
Here's picture #4:
Jarvis has the ball secured, knee is down. Play is over and it is a catch. Period end of story.
What happens after this point shouldn't matter because he has the ball secured and his knee is down ruling the play over.
Look at it this way. If someone would post an actual video of it that would be great because I haven't seen one yet.No, it's not over. Again, you have to complete the process of the catch. When Mike Pereira says it was called correctly, I believe him. Especially when you consider the actual rule.
Look at it this way. If someone would post an actual video of it that would be great because I haven't seen one yet.
I think most people understand the rule. The disagreement comes from how long the continuation of a catch lasts. I believe that the defender throwing Jarvis and taking the ball is after the play.
So what is considered down after a catch? If Jarvis catches the ball falls to his knees, is he down or can he get back up and run?No, it's not over. Again, you have to complete the process of the catch. When Mike Pereira says it was called correctly, I believe him. Especially when you consider the actual rule.
I watched it repeatedly on Saturday. And I agree with CycloneWorld - if Pereira says it's a good call, that's where I'm going as well. Jarvis catches the ball and his knee goes almost immediately down, and in the act of going to the ground he rolls over the defender and somehow the defender has the ball. I rewound that thing 50 times, and I can't see at what point the damn thing came out. Just that when they rolled over, the defender had the ball and Jarvis didn't.
It probably had as much to do with the ruling on the field as well, although I do believe they said "confirmed" on the announcement as well.
It was like a magic trick. One second he had it, the next he didnt. Usually you see some sort of bobbling or jostling for the ball, but it was just switched. Very weird play, but the correct/right call.I watched it repeatedly on Saturday. And I agree with CycloneWorld - if Pereira says it's a good call, that's where I'm going as well. Jarvis catches the ball and his knee goes almost immediately down, and in the act of going to the ground he rolls over the defender and somehow the defender has the ball. I rewound that thing 50 times, and I can't see at what point the damn thing came out. Just that when they rolled over, the defender had the ball and Jarvis didn't.
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I mean that's true if you just completely disregard the rules of the game, yeah.Jarvis has the ball secured, knee is down. Play is over and it is a catch. Period end of story.
What happens after this point shouldn't matter because he has the ball secured and his knee is down ruling the play over.
Post the rule...I mean that's true if you just completely disregard the rules of the game, yeah.
Does Jarvis have a chance of getting a sniff at the NFL? I don't really follow that stuff, just curious. Seems like he could be a decent slot receiver/return guy.
Pictures 5, 6 and 7 say it all. Tough call.
http://www.desmoinesregister.com/pi...iowa-state-vs-kansas-state-football/15197173/
So what is considered down after a catch? If Jarvis catches the ball falls to his knees, is he down or can he get back up and run?
Obviously he cannot get back up and run. Again, he must complete the process of the catch regardless if his knee is down. Let's forget about the interception for a second. If Jarvis has the ball with his knee down like the photos show but the ball hits the ground when the rest of his body hits, it is an INCOMPLETE pass. You cannot look only at the photo during a "process of the catch" review. This is essentially what happened except the ball ended up in the K-State defenders hands.
I didn't read the rest of the thread. All that matters is when he completes the catch. If he completes the catch and then goes to the ground, he can drop it/lose possession, or have it change possession and it doesn't matter, the play is dead when he is down. If, however, he is completing the catch on his way to the ground, he must maintain possession, if the ball hits the ground it is incomplete, if the ball changes possession, the new player in possession of the ball must complete the catch. That is how the rules are stated and enforced.
If a player catches a screen pass on his knees, he is considered down,correct? If the player catches the ball on knees but the defender standing next to him rips the ball out, he is not down, correct?I didn't read the rest of the thread. All that matters is when he completes the catch. If he completes the catch and then goes to the ground, he can drop it/lose possession, or have it change possession and it doesn't matter, the play is dead when he is down. If, however, he is completing the catch on his way to the ground, he must maintain possession, if the ball hits the ground it is incomplete, if the ball changes possession, the new player in possession of the ball must complete the catch. That is how the rules are stated and enforced.