That's A Little Piece Of It, Alice!
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by Warden
It's almost exactly a year ago to the day that QB Tony Romo had his first career 300-yard passing performance, and we can trace his current status as one of the NFL's bright young stars to those first few games he started in 2006. In fact, the 27-10 win over the Cardinals on that day was only Romo's third start at that point, all road games (at Carolina, Washington and Arizona). He went 2-1 in those games en route to starting his career 5-1, and his star has only risen steadily since then.
Obviously, Romo's mannerisms, joy for the game, and gunslinger mentality remind many of Favre -- the QB he grew up idolizing -- but to me the touch on his passes and cool pocket presence bear more of a resemblance to 49er great Joe Montana. But I'm sure any Cowboys fan would take a hybrid combination of the two in a heartbeat.
NFL .com has an interesting poll question on their Website this morning, asking fans: "Which player would you most like to have to be the cornerstone of your franchise?" Listed are:
--Tom Brady --Adrian Peterson --LaDainian Tomlinson --Peyton Manning --Tony Romo
The very fact that Romo is even listed among such upper echelon talent says a lot about how far the undrafted QB from Division 1-AA Eastern Illinois has come in such a short time. Brady as you would expect leads the voting at 36%, followed by Manning (24), Peterson (20), fresh off his dismantling of the all-time NFL rushing record, then Romo (12) and LT (6). Brady was himself only a 6th-round pick back in 2000, and despite 3 Super Bowl wins and years of dating supermodels, is still only 30 years old. Peyton Manning is in his 10th season now, and the 31-year-old shows few signs of slowing down. In fact, the case can be made that a QB's prime years are often his early to mid-30s.
Now, obviously I'm speaking as a severely biased Cowboys fan, but age considerations aside, right now there are only 2 QBs I would swap straight up for Romo -- Brady and Manning. Two other top-flight QBs -- the Saints' Drew Brees and Bengals' Carson Palmer -- would also merit serious consideration. The only factor eliminating Favre, having a terrific 2007 season, is his advanced age. Otherwise, based on intangibles like upside potential and leadership as well as more black-and-white elements like statistical performance, Dallas fans should thank their lucky Silver Star that things worked themselves out precisely as they did.
And let's not overlook the decisive role one Bill Parcells played in not only taking a chance on the longshot Romo in 2003, but seeing enough of him in 2004, 2005 and 2006 to keep Romo on the roster through the QB carousel that saw Quincy Carter, Vinnie Testaverde, Drew Henson and Chad Hutchinson spinning around the position as starters after Aikman called it quits. Remember, it wasn't enough to keep Romo hidden on the Practice Squad, where any other team had a chance to claim him, but Parcells wisely kept him on the 53-man roster through most of his four seasons as Cowboys' head coach. It's that confluence of sheer luck, good timing and business sense that leads to a Tony Romo ending up on one team versus another, or making it in the league at all.
But the QB improved over the course of the year, leading the Colts to upset wins over Cleveland and Green Bay. And while he threw for 9 just TDs on the year, a scoring pass in the season finale would begin a string of 47 straight games with at least one TD pass -- an NFL record that still stands despite the wide open, pass-happy game pro football would become. He also would become the first NFL QB to throw for over 40,000 yards in a career.
That QB, of course, was the legendary Johnny Unitas, which just shows how destiny, fate and fortune interact in the National Football League -- still the greatest sport ever devised in the history of mankind.
