No, Calvin Johnson was definitely after the rule change. They changed it because everyone #####ed about the old rule because it wasn't clear.
It used to be called very inconsistently. There was no clear definition of how long control had to be maintained. It wasn't a catch at the exact moment of 2 feet going down, but how long did it take?
Why not? What is the downside of making it a catch at the exact moment that one of these two things happens?
1. Second foot or knee, elbow, etc. touches inbounds while ball is under control of receiver (i.e., no bobbling).
2. Receiver gains control of the ball (i.e., no bobbling) after second foot, knee, elbow, etc. touches inbounds.
You change the rule to that and the fans will complain it's stupid, that balls that are clearly not catches are getting ruled as fumbles. Do you have MNF in your DVR memory or recording? Scroll back to 7:40 in the 2nd quarter. Under your rule that Marvin Jones play is now a catch and fumble, he has the ball, lands with two feet and is immediately popped and the ball flies out. But he had control the moment his 2nd foot touched down.
Particularly on plays like a crossing route where the defender knocks the ball free and it's either incomplete or a catch and fumble. Everyone had an opinion but you rarely knew how the ref was going to rule. Also plays where the ball comes out when the receiver hits the ground. His body fulfills the 2 feet requirement, so then is it a fumble or incomplete?
The old adage is that the ground can't cause a fumble. Under the rationale of my first part above:
1. If the ball pops out simultaneous to the moment possession would otherwise be established via second foot, knee, elbow, back, etc. hitting the ground, it would be incomplete.
2. If the receiver has control of the ball when possession is established, and that moment rules him down (e.g., touching elbow to ground after contact with defender), then it would be a catch, he is down, no fumble.
3. If the receiver has control of the ball when possession is established and subsequently is stripped (e.g., Gresham play yesterday), it would be a catch and fumble.
I'm not clear what you're saying for part of this. Receiver lays out in the air, untouched by defender. Catches it in the air, hits the ground with his body and the ball immediately flies out from the impact with the ground.. You're ruling that a catch and fumble, right? If touched by a defender then it would be down by contact, right.
The Bert Emanuel catch overrule in the Rams-Bucs playoff game was a big one. That one was more on if the ball can touch the ground during the catch. Now it is clear that as long as you have control already and maintain it, but he had a catch in a close game called incomplete that under the new rules would have been fine since the ball didn't move in his hands. I think they actually changed that part of the rule ahead of the "going to the ground" set of changes, but not positive.
As you say, the Bert Emanuel part of the rule is a different part of the rule and does not bear on the discussion or what changes should be made to the part of the rule that is under discussion.
I'd be happy to have the NFL change the rules just because I'm tired of hearing all the #####ing about it. But I couldn't tell you what to change them to that is both equally objective, and would make people happy. Are you going to say, the moment the 2nd foot/other body part touches if he still has control it's a catch? If so we're going to see the number of fumbles spike like crazy. Maybe that's what they need to do to make people happy though.
Yes to the bolded. If it results in more catches and fumbles, so be it. I expect if we took a poll of fans, players, coaches, GMs, et al., they would overwhelmingly prefer that result.