Odell Beckham Jr catches the world's attention

By Sam Rigney / Expert

In just six seconds and using only three fingers, Odell Beckham Jr did what Australian fans of the NFL have been trying to do for years.

OBJ – the New York Giants ultra-talented rookie receiver – caught a touchdown for the ages against the Cowboys in primetime on Sunday night.

With the Giants up 7-3 at the start of the second quarter, Eli Manning faked the hand-off to Andre Williams, rolled to his right and then stepped up into the pocket to hurl a bomb downfield.

Beckham, who was matched up in single-coverage with Cowboys cornerback Brandon Carr, raced down the sideline, somehow managing to stay in bounds, shook off pass interference from Carr and then threw out his right hand.

The ball stuck in three fingers of Beckham’s gloved mitt as he contorted his body in mid-air, corralling the ball against his stomach and rolling into the end zone.

The lasting image from the play is the freeze frame at the point of the catch, Beckham at full stretch, his hand somehow sticking with the football as it hurtles towards the turf. Put simply, the catch was sick and Beckham looked superhuman.

Former wide receiver and experienced ESPN sportscaster Cris Collinsworth was quick to label it one of the best catches he had ever seen. Others, like LeBron James and Giants teammate Victor Cruz, rushed to their Twitter accounts to wholeheartedly concur.

In one play Beckham had gone from promising rookie to NFL superstar.

That one fluent movement on the global stage means Beckham will claim the Rookie of the Year award, despite missing the first four games of the season.

In a deep rookie receiving class that includes Sammy Watkins (4th overall), Mike Evans (7th), Brandin Cooks (20th), Kelvin Benjamin (28th), Jordan Matthews (42nd), Jarvis Landry (63rd), John Brown (91st) and Martavius Bryant (118th), Beckham has the most potential to be one of the greats.

The catch embodied the message I have been trying to get across to NFL naysayers since I became a fan about a decade ago – American Football is home to the best athletes in the world. The game might appear slow and tedious at times, but give it a chance and you will see there is the potential for incredible plays at any moment.

The skill players – the receivers, running backs, cornerbacks, kick returners – are freaks. They boast incredible speed, acceleration and agility and can make incredible leaping catches while falling out of bounds or in tight coverage.

Beckham’s catch provided an unavoidable reminder that the NFL remains the pinnacle in terms of athleticism. The game was on in primetime and against one of the league’s most popular teams, ensuring tens of millions of people saw it live.

And because of the buzz created online, the catch was replayed thousands of times on mainstream TV around the world. The catch was shown on Fox Sports and free-to-air TV news in Australia, each time the question posed: “is this the greatest catch ever seen?”

For some it may have been the first NFL action they had seen in years. Perhaps since vision from 2011 showing Cincinnati Bengals receiver Jerome Simpson perfectly front-flipping over a Cardinals defender and into the end zone.

That highlight gained similar traction in mainstream sports outside of America and, like Beckham’s catch, provided irrefutable evidence that the NFL was still king in terms of athleticism.

There will always be those in Australia who argue the NFL is soft or that the games are slow and boring. But viral highlights like Beckham’s catch go along way to wearing down that negative resolve.

For those of us who are already NFL fans, the catch ignited debate about where it ranked against the best of all time.

If engaging in this argument, it is important to think about the circumstances surrounding a catch. There should be two lists; best catch, period, and best catch by context. Let’s take a look at a few from the past decade.

David Tyree’s helmet catch in Super Bowl XLII was a good snag. It would have claimed the top spot on SportsCentre’s top 10 list had it occurred in a regular season game against the Jacksonville Jaguars. But the fact it happened on the biggest stage, with two minutes to go and the Giants on third-and-5 and driving to win the game, makes it a great catch.

If Tyree makes the catch, but Eli Manning throws a pick on the next play the catch is not remembered so fondly or held in such high esteem.

The Santonio Holmes touchdown catch to win Super Bowl XLIII belongs on both lists. The catch itself is unbelievable: three defenders covering him in the back of the end zone, his arms extended high above his head to make the grab, the toe-tap to get both feet in bounds, the ability to hold onto the ball while falling to the ground despite taking a shot in the back.

The margin for error was minuscule, the concentration to come up in the clutch in the biggest game of his life was incredible. Holmes drops that and the Steelers may not have added their sixth Super Bowl.

Meanwhile, Beckham’s catch deserved more. At the very least it should have come in a Giants’ win. At the most it could have decided a Super Bowl or NFC Championship game. It belonged where Tyree’s did. It was something special that seemed out of place in a Sunday night, regular-season game between a 3-7 Giants team and the contending Cowboys.

It wasn’t a huge moment in a big game, but the catch itself, cut and paste into any game from any era, would be the most athletic ever seen.

The positive to take away is that Beckham is a rookie, with plenty more snaps and incredible plays to come. Give him some context to play in and Beckham could produce something even better.

After all, he’s shown he only needs six seconds and three fingers to grab the attention of the world.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2015-02-01T20:30:51+00:00

Sam Rigney

Expert


Ohhhhhhhhhhhhhh snap, doubtful.... It's been two months since your comment and guess what??? Your were 100 per cent wrong! What a shocking development!! Odell Beckham Jr wins rookie of the year and offensive rookie of the year and this catch wins play of the year. You and the other commenters on this thread who accused me of "jumping on the bandwagon" and "talking out of my backside" couldn't have been more wrong. Hahahha.

AUTHOR

2014-12-17T02:57:33+00:00

Sam Rigney

Expert


He hasn't been named Rookie of the Year yet, but have a look at this: http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000444410/article/odell-beckham-greatness-by-the-numbers?campaign=Twitter_atn_hanzus

2014-11-30T00:50:39+00:00

Luther

Guest


Really? Could you post one?

2014-11-29T20:59:05+00:00

Jameswm

Guest


I'm not a massive league fan but those guys do that sort of thing pretty regularly. And whilst there are some great athletes in the NFL, the agility and footwork in league and rugby is far superior.

2014-11-28T23:02:51+00:00

What's NFL

Guest


Here we go with another American wannabe. "That highlight gained similar traction in mainstream sports outside of America and, like Beckham’s catch, provided irrefutable evidence that the NFL was still king in terms of athleticism." Haha the "king" of athleticism? I agree that catch was athletic but seriously? I've seen athletic catches in cricket, athletic marks in AFL, NRL and rugby. All that could rival this. Just because something goes "viral" doesn't make the sport the "king" of athleticism. And are we basing athleticism now on how much "media" attention a sport gets?

2014-11-28T21:47:49+00:00

DMac

Guest


I'll still take Oronde Gadsden's effort.

2014-11-28T13:51:18+00:00

Luther

Guest


I'd like to see video of those. Particularly AFL because I've actually been surprised & unimpressed by the catching ability I've seen. Did you watch this catch?

2014-11-28T12:50:09+00:00

Brendo

Guest


Well played will, well played.

AUTHOR

2014-11-28T10:17:36+00:00

Sam Rigney

Expert


Watkins has played every game and has 684 yards and five touchdowns. ODB has played five games and has 609 yards and five touchdowns. If anyone is going to beat him out it will be Kelvin Benjamin - 768 yards and eight TDs.

2014-11-28T06:49:01+00:00

WoobliesFan

Guest


X2.... I've seen cricket better classic cricket catches

2014-11-28T05:10:54+00:00

Terrosilops

Guest


I would put money on Watkins before this guy.

2014-11-28T05:09:13+00:00

Terrosilops

Guest


Yeah okay show me a link to a catch that amazing.

AUTHOR

2014-11-28T04:53:37+00:00

Sam Rigney

Expert


I assure you I'm not jumping on the bandwagon. The point of the article was to outline that I have felt this way about the NFL since I started watching it 10 years or so ago and OBJ provided tangible evidence beamed around the world of what I had been trying to say. I'll tell you what, if he doesn't win Rookie of the Year I'll buy you a coke.

2014-11-28T04:36:33+00:00

Will Sinclair

Roar Guru


I don't think anyone is surprised that David Beckham's kids are athletically gifted.

2014-11-28T04:26:38+00:00

Distant Knight

Guest


He won't win rookie of the year, but I'd hardly call his season lacklustre: 41 receptions on 61 targets 601 yards - 37th in the league 14.9 yard avg - 23rd in the league 5 TDs - 24th in the league 87 yards per game - 9th in the league 32 first downs - 33rd in the league And keep in mind, he's done all this while dealing with Manning face...

2014-11-28T01:29:10+00:00

Doubtful

Guest


Your logic in this article is questionable on a number of fronts. Firstly, OBJ will not win rookie of the year, despite this catch. As you said he missed four games, is on a particularly bad Giants team and aside from the catch in question has had a generally lacklustre season. The NFL judges its rookie of the year award on far more than one athletic endeavour which, as you said, meant nothing in the context of the game. In addition, while the catch was hugely athletic, it doesn't indicate that the NFL is the pinnacle of all sport and athleticism by any stretch. The freakish dunks and alley-oops in the NBA, marks and goals in the AFL, great catches in cricket, incredible goals in soccer and even the seemingly impossible tries and pickups in both rugby codes demonstrate that all popular professional sports present opportunities for incredible things to happen. The NFL is a popular sport so its great moments have a propensity to go viral, more so that other sports, but this doesn't not therefore mean that its special moments are by definition better than those in any other sport. I would be happy to present you with examples of equally freakish feats of athleticism in all the sports I have just mentioned. I feel like maybe you are jumping on the bandwagon here and by saying that the NFL is the pinnacle for athleticism in sport, you have put your blinkers on in the biggest possible way.

2014-11-27T23:04:19+00:00

Distant Knight

Guest


Outside of your typical Australian tall poppyness, I do believe you're talking out of your backside...

2014-11-27T23:03:54+00:00

Keith Hemsley

Guest


It was a great catch however your going a bit overboard with your enthusiasm as I've seen it's equall in other sports such as cricket, Aussie rules for example.

2014-11-27T22:35:14+00:00

Luther

Guest


Tim, show us an athletic catch that was nearly as difficult in another sport & you'll be be taken seriously.

2014-11-27T20:44:59+00:00

Tim

Guest


Outside of the typical American hyperbole, it really wasn't anything that particularly special.

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