Five things that'll define Week 3: Tony Romo's success

waving monkey

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Two weeks into his broadcasting career, CBS analyst Tony Romo has already established himself as one of the game's most distinct voices -- thanks in part to the prestige portion of his act.

In addition to the breezy digestion of complex schemes and coverages, Romo can predict the future. With startling accuracy, Romo has been able to point out what the offense or defense is doing before it actually happens, thanks to more than a decade of recent experience. America quickly noticed.

In a copycat world where TV executives have seen Romo's quarterback instincts create social media wildfire, it begs the obvious question: When will other analysts be forced to follow suit? Also -- why haven't they already?

"The thing that will most likely happen, though, like everything else in life and especially in our industry is, you start getting the copycats -- they'll start saying, Well who are we going to get?" longtime play-by-play man Bob Papa told me. "And you know what? There's going to be a lot of epic fails."

In conversations with Papa, the voice of the New York Giants, and long-time color analyst/NFL Network draft expert Mike Mayock this week, a few things became clear to me. First, Romo will force those who have been asleep at the wheel calling games for decades to get back into the film room. Second, what Romo is doing isn't necessarily new -- it's just perfectly raw and what he's comfortable with for now. Third, is the reason other analysts don't call out plays at a higher volume because they're afraid to be wrong?

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap30...hings-thatll-define-week-3-tony-romos-success
 

SultanOfSix

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Romo was a dedicated student of the game who played behind center for the past fourteen years.

None of these current commentators will have the knowledge and experience to ascertain what is going to happen like he does. Nor will they even attempt to study any of it, because frankly, it's a lot of work. They are bound for failure.

The only way they could copycat what he does is if they hire someone just like him, i.e., a QB who has played in the league and was as dedicated as him.
 

stiletto

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Yep, takes a lot of work to know the intricacies of a game like professional football. Romo will eventually have to give it up a little when the game evolves and schemes change so much he has less exact idea of things but that might be like 20 years down the road. He is awesome to listen to right now. No one compares IMO. If you are only catching the highlights, he is good the whole game. Seems to really enjoy what he is doing. I am happy for him, glad he is not getting his body and brains beat every weekend now. He's going to be doing the announcing thing a long time unless he just gets an amazing offer to be a head coach or something.
 

Broges74

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Student of the game. Will make a grwat OC one day. I still think he may lace them up one more time but not sure for whom. If it's mid-season, only the Cowboys make sense but it seems he's a great student and could learn a playbook in short order so who knows. Houston is still looking for a QB so we will see.
 

BrassCowboy

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I was a Romo fan as a QB and I only saw one clip of Romo calling a game that someone recently posted, but I think him calling off what teams are about to do constantly would get on my nerves watching a game. It would be like watching a movie at the theater allwhile someone is giving all upcoming events away aloud throughout. Just wanna be like, let me watch and figure it out for myself.

Like I said, I have to watch a whole game with Romo calling it to be fair. Maybe it isn't like that. just my opinion.
 

rynochop

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I don't see Tony going into coaching with those hours, his wife probably wouldn't let him. Plus Tony probably pays more in taxes than he would make as an OC
 

ghst187

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Romo can pursue whatever path he wants but I have a feeling that when Dallas has an opening for OC, he will be the first one putting his hat in the ring. IMO, he is not done with football in that aspect. He will go into coaching when the perfect opportunity arises :thumbup:

I'm ready for him
 

DandyDon52

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I saw part of 1 game he was very good.
He won't come back to football anytime soon.
 

gimmesix

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I was a Romo fan as a QB and I only saw one clip of Romo calling a game that someone recently posted, but I think him calling off what teams are about to do constantly would get on my nerves watching a game. It would be like watching a movie at the theater allwhile someone is giving all upcoming events away aloud throughout. Just wanna be like, let me watch and figure it out for myself.

Like I said, I have to watch a whole game with Romo calling it to be fair. Maybe it isn't like that. just my opinion.

I haven't listened to a full game yet by him, but I don't think it's like he's calling out every other play. It seems to be only a few each game and he's also providing a lot of analysis explaining what the offense or defense is doing. He's essentially breaking down formations and play-calling in ways the average fan can understand, from my understanding. He's like a calmer version of John Madden.
 
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