Wimbo;4356347 said:
Man, I think you are either missing the point, or are just arguing for the sake of argument.
My point, as evidenced by my first post on this thread, is:
The fact are clear. Romo is putting up stats that are on par or better with some of the best QB's to ever play the game. If you can't see that, I don't know what to tell you.
The Cowboy's lack of success is not because Romo isn't good enough. It's because he doesn't have the team around him to go any farther than he has. Put Brady, Rodgers, or Eli behind this team's OL & I don't think any of them do any better - that part is my opinion.
As far as the 4000 yards point... you are the one that brought it up, saying that good passers are throwing for 4000+ yards per season now days. I just pointed out that Romo is, too.
I responded directly to what you said, so you can't say I'm missing the point.
The fact is, Romo is putting up great stats compared to a lot of players in the past, I never denied that.
But I also said that for many of those same players to be considered "great" they either had to put up phenominal career stats or have a track record of getting to the postseason and/or some real postseason success. Or some combination thereof. And my point was that as of now it doesn't look like Romo is on that path. Likely too short a time frame left to put up the phenominal career stats, and he has very limited post season exposure and even less postseason success.
And I also said that you can't limit comparisons to players of the past, and have to look at today's players, where 4,000+ yards and 25+ TD's are still very good but not not uncommon, and where there are others who have done that and more
AND have had post season success, and where young kids barely out of college are putting up similar or better stats.
As for 4,000, what was the point of saying that Romo also is putting up 4,000 yard seasons. My point was not that others are doing it while Romo is not, it was that by putting up 4,000 yards in today's NFL you are standing out the way Marino and Moon were when they did it. When Marino and Moon were putting up 4,000 yard seasons, 3,000 yard seasons were the standard for top NFL QB's. In other words, Marino and Moon, for their time, were statistically comparable with Brees and Brady today, not Romo and Rivers.