Why tony romo is a good qb




















I know for a fact dea caught that ball and the did announce it was a catch. We would of won and then won Seattle. Keep in mind we beat the earlier in the season already at their home. And we would of beat the patriots. But the ref fucked Dallas over. Keep that in mind. If you search in google greatest 4th quarter qbr of all time than Romo is the first name to pop up because he has the best of all time. But for some reason he is known as the worst qb and only throws interceptions.

He has more tds and less ints than staubach and aikman but they are the best just because of Super Bowl wins. Most game winning drives among active qb's Most come from behind 4th quarter wins since he started playing in Owns nearly ever Cowboys qb record Has between the highest qbr ranking in NFL history.

Not to mention the guy has played through a litany of injuries to still win. Tony Romo is an elite quarterback. His stats place him among the best, and by the time he's done that'll be more clear. Our defense has been terrible, there's plenty of stats to show that too, leaving all the pressure on Tony Romo. Carrying America's Team on your shoulders isn't an easy task, and shouldn't be so criticized. Everything he does, it is talked about and criticized.

Too criticized. They expand it and blow it out of proportion. People love to hate Kobe and love to hate Tony.

Every QB makes mistakes. Brett Favre set records left and right for mistakes. The expectations he has and the criticism he receives would be overwhelming for anybody, yet he goes out there and dominates. Watch his film, read his stats, ask his teammates, ask players around the league. He's taken hits upon hits, that line hasn't always been elite. He's clutch and he can win games. Stats will prove all of this as will the tape. If you were to black him out on tape just leaving an outline and watch him play, then get told his stats and success, you wouldn't be so critical.

If you were to guess who that player was, guarantee there'd be some pretty notable guesses. Choking is pretty attached to his name, which is ridiculous. Look up his 4th quarter stats and game winning drives. But that Romo, in particular, would be the quarterback to blaze the trail is a surprise. Whereas Brady, widely considered the best quarterback in league history, exploits inefficiencies like a quant at a hedge fund, Romo was more improvisational—a little loose, even, as if he were just playing with friends in the back yard.

The quarterbacks coach at the University of Southern California once invited me to try one of these V. Going in, I knew the speed would be incredible. The linemen heaved, the little guys flitted, and I felt as though I were watching a flock of birds in synchronous motion.

It was fascinating to witness, but all the players appeared to be following some dictate that surpassed my understanding. I asked Parcells if I watched enough film, thousands and thousands of hours, could I or another layman see the field like Romo does? Not unless I was an unusually quick thinker, he said. Romo, though, learned to make sense of such disorder while riding the bench for three years.

He prepared diligently and thought quickly; very rarely was he liverwurst on rye. In the course of his career, he watched hundreds of plays from the bench, lived through thousands more on the field, and then relived them many times over in the film room—perfect training for a commentator. But plenty of other ex-Q.

Romo has long delighted in talking. On the old NFL Films tape, you can see him babbling and bantering; he rarely shuts up. They run the play, and it results in a touchdown. We have romanticized what the former Cowboys QBs have done. Sure, Staubach won Super Bowl VI and XI, but look what he did in the playoffs: 19 games, 19 interceptions 24 touchdowns and a completion percentage of Solid, but not spectacular.

But of course, Captain Comeback won games, with a record and those two Super Bowls. Aikman won three Super Bowls and 11 of his first 13 playoff games. Seven interceptions, one touchdown and a QB rating that sat below the Mendoza line. Meredith was in the postseason, like Romo, but Meredith threw more interceptions than touchdowns.

Four TDs, two interceptions. Yes, Romo has cost the team some games, but he is now figuring out how to win them for his team. Enjoy our content? Join our newsletter to get the latest in sports news delivered straight to your inbox!



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