To score a touchdown, you have to break the plane of the endzone with POSSESSION OF THE BALL. I capitalized that because that is the key issue, especially when dealing with a pass. The general rule for establishing possession as a receiver is to have caught the ball, control it, and get a foot (two in NFL) in bounds, and MAINTAIN POSSESSION TO THE GROUND. There was an NFL playoff game between Tampa and Washington three years ago that had this come up. The Tampa receiver had the ball come/knocked out as he went to the ground, and therefore had the play called incomplete.
With all of that said, the pass to Bay Bay was underthrown/late. He had to slow down, and turn around, which gave the corner time to recover and make a play on the ball. A well timed/thrown ball, and that is an easy touchdown. I think it would be a definite help if Nesbitt took some time to work on his passes. Even when there wasn't pressure, or not even that much, he was throwing balls behind receivers, and far too low at times. Granted, there were also a few plays where his receivers didn't give him much help, but the overall point is that our passing game needs to get better for us to win consistently. That doesn't necessarily mean throw it more (I am in favor of the run 'n shoot package, as long as it isn't overused). It means that when we do pass, it has to be deadly accurate/efficient.