DFWJC
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Either that or like he has for years, Romo will just let it slide.Don't be surprised to see Romo take the high road this weekend with an apology .........which would make Deion's response look even worst. I'm guessing CBS has no intention seeing two of their top employees in a public bloodbath......
fwiw, here's one CBS affiliate's take
http://boston.cbslocal.com/2017/11/06/media-beef-deion-sanders-tony-romo-tackling/
"By Micheal Hurley, CBS Boston
BOSTON (CBS) — On Sunday afternoon, Chiefs cornerback Marcus Peters followed up his historical level of unwillingness to tackle from Week 8 with a more run-of-the-mill whiff on a tackle attempt in Week 9.
Peters threw a diving shoulder toward the ankles of Ezekiel Elliott, who leaped over Peters to gain a few extra yards. On the broadcast, first-year color commentator Tony Romo commented that Peters is such a poor tackler that, “He makes Deion Sanders look good at tackling sometimes.”
It was a shot at Sanders, technically, but it wasn’t off base in the least. It’s been reported that Sanders wouldn’t even wear shoulder pads at some practices and he'd explain it by saying, “I’m not gonna tackle anyone anyway.” It’s also been said that Sanders has been known to openly discuss his “business decisions” to let speeding ball carriers pass on by, lest they injure him in some way.
There’s plenty of video evidence out there, too.
So it wasn’t really a shot at Sanders at all. If anything, it was a comment that might upset Peters, who’s still playing and probably doesn’t enjoy being called out on a broadcast that aired in every market except for the Seattle and San Francisco markets. A proper response from Sanders would have been a dig at Romo’s golf game, or something along those lines.
Nevertheless, Sanders put his thin skin on display when he took to the NFL Network airwaves to tear down Romo as a player."
......
and this
"This wasn’t the first instance of Sanders taking exception to such a criticism, as he didn’t respond too kindly to Rodney Harrison pointing out all of his missed tackles back in January of 2009. You’d think that in the near-decade that’s passed, Sanders might have used GPS technology to find that high road.
Nevertheless, Sanders got pretty nasty in firing shots at Romo, who likely worried a bit more about offending active players than he worried about offending retired players when he started the job a few months ago.
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