You're on the right track, just not completely there yet. Controller's job is to control components not elements. If you want to make element's mouseover event to be available at the component level, just refire it as distinct 'mypanelmouseover' event and use that in Controller's control().
Nice and neat.
EDIT:
Here's how to do it:
Ext.define('My.Panel', {
extend: 'Ext.panel.Panel',
constructor: function(config) {
var me = this;
me.callParent(arguments);
me.addEvents(
'mypanelmouseover'
);
},
afterRender: function() {
var me = this;
me.callParent();
// Declarative style with listeners reads better,
// but this is shorter and does the same
me.mon(me.getEl(), 'mouseover', function() {
this.fireEvent('mypanelmouseover')
}, me);
}
});
Ext.define('My.Controller', {
extend: 'Ext.app.Controller',
init: function() {
var me = this;
me.control({
'panel': {
mypanelmouseover: me.onMyPanelMouseover
}
});
}
});
Hope this helps. The main idea is to keep being declarative and decouple your code instead of creating unreadable callback chain. A nice side effect is that you're in control and can decide which events you want to refire and when, and how to react to them.