The Ravens lost a huge game to the Steelers on Sunday, 27-22. The win, in tandem with the Bengals’ loss to the Bills, puts Pittsburgh very much in the driver’s seat for the AFC North title and a playoff berth. Baltimore, meanwhile, faces an uphill battle to playoff contention and will look back on several moments from Sunday’s game with great regret. The Ravens will also likely be upset for quite some time about a pivotal and controversial ruling by the officials that took away an Isaiah Lively touchdown.
With fewer than three minutes remaining and Baltimore down by five, Lamar Jackson dropped back to pass in Steelers’ territory. He found Likely streaking across the middle and hit him for what was initially ruled a touchdown despite Likely losing control of the ball after a few steps. But after review, the officiating crew ruled Likely did not complete the process of a catch. The TD was taken off the board and the Ravens instead would turn the ball over on downs three plays later, never to score again.
It was obviously a massive call that swung the outcome of a critical game in the AFC playoff race. The CBS broadcast team brought on rules analyst Gene Steratore to explain the controversial decision, and his reasoning did not land with the audience. His primary point was that, in order to complete a catch, a receiver must maintain control of the ball long enough to make a football move; according to Steratore, Likely did not do that.
“In order for this to be a completed catch, he must complete all three elements of the catch,” Steratore said on the broadcast. “Likely has possession, we saw two feet down, great look here. Possession, two feet. But he has to have the time to make a football move or a football move. It’s that element right there that he did not finish the third element.”
Steratore took to social media to lay it out plainly for anyone following along there instead of on the broadcast.
To have a completed pass, the receiver must:
— Gene Steratore (@GeneSteratore) December 7, 2025
1.) Secure control of the ball ✅
2.) Have both feet or a body part (other than hands) in-bounds ✅
3.) Perform a football move (take a third step, tuck the ball away, turn upfield, avoid/ward off an opponent) or to maintain control… pic.twitter.com/H6qxuVybd6
Fans didn’t really buy the explanation, pointing to Lively extending his arms as proof he did make a “football move” as defined by the rulebook, and pointing out the flaws in the logic that led to the play being called incomplete.
Is holding the ball with outstretched arms to keep away from the defender as best as possible not a “football move”?
— Tyler Loechner (@LoechnerNFL) December 7, 2025
So toe taps technically aren’t touchdowns bc you can’t make a ball carrier move when falling out of bounds?
— Rob West (@the_rob_west) December 7, 2025
The action is literally in the rule book. pic.twitter.com/Mmg0TehEQ7
— Z.J. (@ZJBeatdown) December 7, 2025
Please tell us how Rodgers had secure control of the ball and performed a football move next!!
— AJ (@AJ3Jazz) December 7, 2025
He stretched the ball out. That is a football move stated in the rule book.
— STONE (@stone_2x) December 7, 2025
Why is extending the football away from his body not considered a "football move"?
— Matt Wise (@TheMattWise) December 7, 2025
He did not catch the ball with arms extended.
He intentionally extended to move the ball away from the defender.
It feels both "common to the game" & in the same vein as "avoiding an opponent". https://t.co/vxn4WUlj6s
This is the root of the problem with the NFL's catch rule. A player catching the ball on the sidelines just needs two feet and possession. You never see 3) brought up on those plays, even though no football move is made. So why does it apply this way on this play? https://t.co/Ps5w7oQZJn
— Baltimore Beatdown (@BmoreBeatdown) December 7, 2025
Would absolutely love to hear how the explanation for how this was ruled a non-catch, yet in the same game Rodgers was given the catch on the tipped pass that was obviously intercepted by Buchanan. Likely does WAY more of a "football move" than Rodgers did. https://t.co/ItLd85IlmA
— Ryan Wormeli (@RyanWarmly) December 7, 2025
It is yet another confusing call that makes fans question what is a catch and what is not. It was obviously a significant decision in regards to the outcome of the game and the Ravens were never going to be happy about it. But even unaffiliated fans were frustrated with the call.
The sentiment of Steratore’s explanation was echoed by NFL VP of instant replay Mark Butterworth. He told reporters afterwards Likely didn’t take a third step before the ball was knocked out and therefore did not complete the catch.
“The third step is an act common to the game and before he could get the third foot down, the ball was ripped out,” Butterworth told The Athletic’s Jeff Zrebiec. “Therefore, it was an incomplete pass."
Another week of NFL football, another controversy about a catch. This one proved quite meaningful to the fate of the Ravens, both on Sunday and potentially their season overall.
Ravens react to controversial Isaiah Likely call
As one might expect both the Ravens’ players and their coach were not happy with the decision to take Likely’s TD off the board.
“You know what, I believe a lot of things,” coach John Harbaugh said when asked if he believed Likely scored on the play, via Ravens reporter Sarah Ellison. “I think the Aaron Rodgers play—and we're just talking about rules here, it's not an officiating issue. It comes from New York. But when you're making a catch, you have to survive the ground. He didn't survive the ground. He's not down by contact. He was catching the ball on the way down with another person, so you gotta make a catch there and survive the ground. I don't know why it was ruled the way it was on that one.
“All of those things I'm sure they'll explain it to us, but they had plenty of time to look at it and they're the ones that are the experts on the rule.”
“I believe (it was a touchdown),” said Jackson when asked the same question, per reporter Giana Han. “In the end zone, take a step, guy punching at the ball... It’s all I can say.
A clearly emotional Lamar Jackson on the Likely TD being called back: pic.twitter.com/2hRpbkHoJr
— Giana Han (@giana_jade) December 7, 2025
Likely didn’t have much to offer reporters when the man himself was asked about the touchdown he lost due to the call.
“They made a call, gotta live with what the ref said at the end of the day,” Likely said, per reporter Carita Banks.
Isaiah Likely on his overturned touchdown: “They made a call…gotta live with what the refs say at the end of the day.” #RavensFlock pic.twitter.com/B9RwjX4tZG
— Carita Parks (@CaritaCParks) December 7, 2025
Safe to say this play will be a matter of much debate over the remainder of the season.
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This article was originally published on www.si.com as Fans Weren't Buying Rules Analyst's Shaky Explanation of Why Refs Took Away Ravens TD.