it's a bigger issue than Seahawks/Lions. If you can't rely on the refs to know and enforce the rules then that's an issue across the league. This is a majorly blown call and we haven't heard anything about the repercussions if any and whether anything is going to be put into place some way to recover from this kind of mistake in the future. This is important even for those who don't really care about the fate of the Seahawks and/or Lions, such as myself.
The ref knowing that rule and calling it correctly would have had just as many people saying how stupid it is the next day.This highlights more the ridiculousness of the rule book.
Try explaining what is a catch these days.
a catch is a catch except when it's not it's not that hard =Pbut in all seriousness i don't think this rule is really that stupid. It makes a degree of sense to require players to 'play the ball' rather than bat it away and take advantage of the rule that you somehow can get a turnover without actually recovering the football. Myself i'm with Harstad that the actual stupid part of how the rules work is that the defense gets the ball in this situation (barring dumb penalty (or with dumb penalty but without ref calling the penalty)).
also, if the ref knew and correctly called the rule sure it would have been the same discussion as to whether the rule is dumb or not but since they did blow it there is a whole other aspect two it. Davearm is right there are two real issues here.
The dumb part is knocking out of the endzone is bad, knocking out on the sidelines is good.Many of the rules are way over thought.
The old adage I have heard that makes sense is if you ask the people watching the game at a bar if that was a penalty you go with that (avoid the drunk guys in the jerseys), what looks obvious.
Dez Bryant caught the ball, Brady was not tucking the ball,
Golden Tate didn't make that catch, etc. The play the other night was obvious I thought.