Openai/693c6f0b-81e4-8010-bb10-5c129535932a


This conversation was exported from ChatGPT[1]

gpt-5-2 edit

User: is this a touchdown? edit

is this a touchdown?

Assistant: Short answer: no — by the rulebook, this is not a touchdown. edit

Short answer: no — by the rulebook, this is not a touchdown.

Here’s why, step-by-step, strictly under NFL catch rules:

What the rules require edit

For a completed catch in the end zone, the receiver must:

  1. Secure control of the ball
  2. Get two feet (or another body part besides hands) down inbounds
  3. Maintain control through the process of the catch - If going to the ground, the ball cannot move or be assisted by the ground
What happens on this play edit
  • The receiver gets his hands on the ball, but:
  • The ball moves and shifts as he’s coming down
  • The ball contacts the ground
  • He does not clearly re-establish control after that contact before it pops loose

Under replay:

  • Ground contact aids the control
  • There’s loss of control during the process
  • That automatically fails the “survive the ground” requirement
Why people think it looks like a TD edit
  • Full speed: looks clean
  • Still frames: look convincing
  • The motion is fluid and athletic
  • Fans intuitively judge intent (“he caught it”) rather than rule-defined control

But replay officiating is binary, not vibes-based.

Bottom line edit

📕 By the current NFL catch definition, this is incomplete. Not controversial once you apply the rule consistently — even though it’s unsatisfying and ugly for the sport.

Your earlier point about AI is actually dead-on here: This is exactly the kind of objective, frame-by-frame, repeatable determination a machine would be better at than humans trying to reconcile rules with emotion.

If you want, I can:

  • Compare this directly to the Dez Bryant, Jesse James, or Calvin Johnson catches
  • Or rewrite the catch rule in plain English to show why fans hate it

References edit

  1. "Touchdown or not". ChatGPT. Retrieved 2025-12-13.