Romo stats

rkell87

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hey this really directed towards adam but if anybody else can help out it would be apperciated.

i work with a guy who is interning with rivals.com and he is a big stat guy and is always bashing romo and i always try to come back at him with stuff but i cant remember all the stats off the top of my head and he cherry picks bad stats. i just want to be able to rebutle him with everything romo has done cause all this guy understands/cares about is stats and i just want to shut him up.:D

thanks in advance
 

WarDaddy

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Do a thread search and you will see tons of stuff already posted on this site to help prove your point. Romo should stack up well against anyone he throws at you.
 

AdamJT13

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Here's a start, some stuff written a couple of weeks ago --

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/writers/kerry_byrne/09/16/aikman/index.html?eref=T1

Just 40 starts into his career, Romo is on pace to challenge or even rewrite the records in some of the most important indicators of quarterbacking success. He's certainly living up to the standards of a franchise that's been consistently blessed for more than 40 years with some of the best field generals in the game. But not even Dallas legends Aikman, Staubach or Dandy Don put up these kinds of numbers.

Romo is still shy of the minimum 1,500 attempts needed to qualify for official NFL records (he's attempted 1,334 passes). He'll reach that milestone some time in October -- and when he does he'll find himself in very elite statistical company.

Passer rating

You might not have noticed (that's what we're here for), but Romo's performance on Sunday propelled him past no less a statistical juggernaut than Peyton Manning and into the No. 2 spot on the all-time passer rating leaderboard. Both players entered Week 1 of the 2009 season with career passer ratings of 94.7. Manning remains at 94.7 today. But with Romo's explosive effort against the Bucs, his career mark improved by a full point to 95.7.

Only Steve Young (96.8) boasts a better career passer rating. But that record is clearly in jeopardy. With two or three more excellent outings, Romo will leap past Young and stand as the most efficient passer in the history of the game. Hard to believe, considering that Romo was an undrafted free agent in 2003 that nobody had heard of as recently as 2006.

Yards per attempt

As Cold, Hard Football Facts followers know, we put a lot of stock in yards per attempt. It's a very easy-to-understand yet telling indicator of an individual's ability to get the ball downfield and a very telling indicator of team success. Generally speaking, the most successful teams and most successful quarterbacks throughout history have boasted the highest average per attempt.

Romo finds himself in very exclusive company in this telling indicator, as well.

Cleveland's Otto Graham is No. 1 on the YPA list (8.63). Not so coincidentally, he was the most successful quarterback in history, leading his Browns to six straight championship games in his six seasons as an NFL quarterback (1950-55), winning three of them. (Graham also led the Browns to four straight championships in the AAFC before the club joined the NFL -- he averaged a stunning 9.51 yards per attempt against that league's inferior competition.)

Chicago's Sid Luckman is No. 2 on the YPA list (8.42). Not so coincidentally, he was the most successful quarterback of the 1940s, virtually inventing the modern position that we know today while leading the Bears to four NFL titles.

Then there's Romo at No. 3. Following Sunday's performance, he has averaged 8.18 yards per pass attempt in his career. To put this figure another way, it makes Romo more effective at getting the ball down field than any passer since Graham hung up the black high-tops 54 years ago.

That's elite company.

Victories

For better or for worse, quarterbacks are ultimately measured by the bottom line: wins and losses. In this area, too, Romo is in elite company. He's 28-12 (.700) as a starting quarterback. Among contemporary players, only Tom Brady (88-24; .786) and Ben Roethlisberger (52-20; .722) have won more consistently. (It should be noted that San Francisco's Shaun Hill might someday enter the discussion: he's 8-3 in his 11 starts, a mark of .727.)

Brady and Roethlisberger, of course, are also the only two quarterbacks in the game today with multiple rings in their back pocket. Therein lies the next challenge for Romo, who's 0-2 in his two playoff appearances, and did not play well in either game.

The record books will soon show that he's among the pest passers in the history of the game. But it will take nothing less than a Super Bowl victory or two to truly earn the right to be mentioned among these all-time greats.​






Some other stats --

-- When the game is within seven points in the fourth quarter, Romo's career passer rating is 113.9. Just for comparison, Peyton Manning's is 89.6, Tom Brady's is 87.0, Drew Brees' is 82.3, Ben Roethlisberger's is 83.2, and Eli Manning's is 92.0.

-- Romo's career passer rating in the second half of games is 105.0. Peyton's is 93.0, Brady's is 91.2, Brees' is 88.6, Roethlisberger's is 85.4, and Eli's is 76.6.

-- Romo's career passer rating in the final two minutes of a half is 104.4. Peyton's is 78.3, Brady's is 83.9, Brees' is 84.4, Roethlisberger's is 72.4, and Eli's is 77.4.

-- Romo's career passer rating on third downs is 92.9. Peyton's is 85.3, Brady's is 83.8, Brees' is 92.6, Roethlisberger's is 84.8, and Eli's is 77.4.

-- Romo's career passer rating on third-and-very long (11 or more yards) is 89.1. Peyton's is 65.4, Brady's is 77.2, Brees' is 83.6, Roethlisberger's is 74.7, and Eli's is 64.6.
 
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rkell87;2984516 said:
hey this really directed towards adam but if anybody else can help out it would be apperciated.

i work with a guy who is interning with rivals.com and he is a big stat guy and is always bashing romo and i always try to come back at him with stuff but i cant remember all the stats off the top of my head and he cherry picks bad stats. i just want to be able to rebutle him with everything romo has done cause all this guy understands/cares about is stats and i just want to shut him up.:D

thanks in advance

Well, you can tell him that once Romo gets to 1,500 passes, he will very likely have the second highest QB rating in NFL history, behind only Steve Young and ahead of Manning, Montana, Unitas, Aikman, etc.

That's pretty damn impressive, even with his occasional, mind bending decisions.

I'm sure Adam will verify my statement above.

UPDATE: already done
 

htownboyzfan

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Adam also posted this the other day about road victories:

If we beat Denver this week, Tony Romo will move past Joe Montana for the best road winning percentage by any starting quarterback during the Super Bowl era (minimum of 15 starts).

Romo is 15-5 on the road, a winning percentage of .750. Montana was 61-20 (.753). A win in Denver would put Romo at .762.

The only other quarterback with a road winning percentage better than .667 during the Super Bowl era is Tom Brady, who is 42-14 and has a home game this week.

Overall, Romo is 29-13 (69%) as a starter, including the above-mentioned 15-5 (75%) on the road. Of his 42 regular season starts, he is 13-3 (81%) in nationally-televised night games, including 8-0 on the road.
 

rkell87

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AdamJT13;2984650 said:
Here's a start, some stuff written a couple of weeks ago --

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/writers/kerry_byrne/09/16/aikman/index.html?eref=T1

Just 40 starts into his career, Romo is on pace to challenge or even rewrite the records in some of the most important indicators of quarterbacking success. He's certainly living up to the standards of a franchise that's been consistently blessed for more than 40 years with some of the best field generals in the game. But not even Dallas legends Aikman, Staubach or Dandy Don put up these kinds of numbers.​


Romo is still shy of the minimum 1,500 attempts needed to qualify for official NFL records (he's attempted 1,334 passes). He'll reach that milestone some time in October -- and when he does he'll find himself in very elite statistical company.​


Passer rating


You might not have noticed (that's what we're here for), but Romo's performance on Sunday propelled him past no less a statistical juggernaut than Peyton Manning and into the No. 2 spot on the all-time passer rating leaderboard. Both players entered Week 1 of the 2009 season with career passer ratings of 94.7. Manning remains at 94.7 today. But with Romo's explosive effort against the Bucs, his career mark improved by a full point to 95.7.​


Only Steve Young (96.8) boasts a better career passer rating. But that record is clearly in jeopardy. With two or three more excellent outings, Romo will leap past Young and stand as the most efficient passer in the history of the game. Hard to believe, considering that Romo was an undrafted free agent in 2003 that nobody had heard of as recently as 2006.​


Yards per attempt


As Cold, Hard Football Facts followers know, we put a lot of stock in yards per attempt. It's a very easy-to-understand yet telling indicator of an individual's ability to get the ball downfield and a very telling indicator of team success. Generally speaking, the most successful teams and most successful quarterbacks throughout history have boasted the highest average per attempt.​


Romo finds himself in very exclusive company in this telling indicator, as well.​


Cleveland's Otto Graham is No. 1 on the YPA list (8.63). Not so coincidentally, he was the most successful quarterback in history, leading his Browns to six straight championship games in his six seasons as an NFL quarterback (1950-55), winning three of them. (Graham also led the Browns to four straight championships in the AAFC before the club joined the NFL -- he averaged a stunning 9.51 yards per attempt against that league's inferior competition.)​


Chicago's Sid Luckman is No. 2 on the YPA list (8.42). Not so coincidentally, he was the most successful quarterback of the 1940s, virtually inventing the modern position that we know today while leading the Bears to four NFL titles.​


Then there's Romo at No. 3. Following Sunday's performance, he has averaged 8.18 yards per pass attempt in his career. To put this figure another way, it makes Romo more effective at getting the ball down field than any passer since Graham hung up the black high-tops 54 years ago.​


That's elite company.​


Victories


For better or for worse, quarterbacks are ultimately measured by the bottom line: wins and losses. In this area, too, Romo is in elite company. He's 28-12 (.700) as a starting quarterback. Among contemporary players, only Tom Brady (88-24; .786) and Ben Roethlisberger (52-20; .722) have won more consistently. (It should be noted that San Francisco's Shaun Hill might someday enter the discussion: he's 8-3 in his 11 starts, a mark of .727.)​


Brady and Roethlisberger, of course, are also the only two quarterbacks in the game today with multiple rings in their back pocket. Therein lies the next challenge for Romo, who's 0-2 in his two playoff appearances, and did not play well in either game.​


The record books will soon show that he's among the pest passers in the history of the game. But it will take nothing less than a Super Bowl victory or two to truly earn the right to be mentioned among these all-time greats.​





Some other stats --

-- When the game is within seven points in the fourth quarter, Romo's career passer rating is 113.9. Just for comparison, Peyton Manning's is 89.6, Tom Brady's is 87.0, Drew Brees' is 82.3, Ben Roethlisberger's is 83.2, and Eli Manning's is 92.0.

-- Romo's career passer rating in the second half of games is 105.0. Peyton's is 93.0, Brady's is 91.2, Brees' is 88.6, Roethlisberger's is 85.4, and Eli's is 76.6.

-- Romo's career passer rating in the final two minutes of a half is 104.4. Peyton's is 78.3, Brady's is 83.9, Brees' is 84.4, Roethlisberger's is 72.4, and Eli's is 77.4.

-- Romo's career passer rating on third downs is 92.9. Peyton's is 85.3, Brady's is 83.8, Brees' is 92.6, Roethlisberger's is 84.8, and Eli's is 77.4.

-- Romo's career passer rating on third-and-very long (11 or more yards) is 89.1. Peyton's is 65.4, Brady's is 77.2, Brees' is 83.6, Roethlisberger's is 74.7, and Eli's is 64.6.


thanks adam the ones in bold should really shut him up now i just need to study and memorize!

htownboyzfan;2984671 said:
Adam also posted this the other day about road victories:

If we beat Denver this week, Tony Romo will move past Joe Montana for the best road winning percentage by any starting quarterback during the Super Bowl era (minimum of 15 starts).

Romo is 15-5 on the road, a winning percentage of .750. Montana was 61-20 (.753). A win in Denver would put Romo at .762.

The only other quarterback with a road winning percentage better than .667 during the Super Bowl era is Tom Brady, who is 42-14 and has a home game this week.

Overall, Romo is 29-13 (69%) as a starter, including the above-mentioned 15-5 (75%) on the road. Of his 42 regular season starts, he is 13-3 (81%) in nationally-televised night games, including 8-0 on the road.

thanks yeah i saw this the other day and pointed to it today.

anything else you guys have would be great i promise I'm going to memorize this stuff.

anybody got something on how he fares against top 10 defenses? he was saying something today about how he is a phenom against weak opponents and plays like garbage against good teams(siting giants this year and ravens last year vs. Tampa this year.
 

AdamJT13

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rkell87;2984713 said:
anybody got something on how he fares against top 10 defenses? he was saying something today about how he is a phenom against weak opponents and plays like garbage against good teams(siting giants this year and ravens last year vs. Tampa this year.

Five of Romo's top nine games (measured by passer rating) have come against top-10 defenses, and another came against the No. 11 defense. That's six of his nine best games coming against top-11 defenses.


Against the 2007 Eagles (No. 10 defense), Romo threw for 324 yards, three touchdowns and a 141.7 rating in a 38-17 win.

Against the 2007 Giants (No. 7), Romo threw for 345 yards, four touchdowns and a 128.5 rating in a 45-35 win, and he threw for 247 yards, four touchdowns and a 123.1 rating in 31-20 win.

Against the 2007 Commanders (No. 8), Romo threw for 293 yards, four touchdowns and a 124.1 rating in a 28-23 win.

Against the 2008 Eagles (No. 3), Romo threw for 312 yards, three touchdowns and a 123.2 rating in a 41-37 win.

Against the 2007 Packers (No. 11), Romo threw for 309 yards, four touchdowns and a 123.5 rating in a 37-27 win.

He also had a 113.7 rating in a win over the 2008 Giants (No. 5 defense), which ranks as his 13th-highest rating.
 

THUMPER

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RXP;2984660 said:
Well, you can tell him that once Romo gets to 1,500 passes, he will very likely have the second highest QB rating in NFL history, behind only Steve Young and ahead of Manning, Montana, Unitas, Aikman, etc.

That's pretty damn impressive, even with his occasional, mind bending decisions.

I'm sure Adam will verify my statement above.

UPDATE: already done

Actually, he will be 3rd behind Young and Peyton Manning who passed Romo near the end of last season.

Currently:

Manning 95.1
Romo 94.1

Of course, by the end of the season that could change... I hope! :starspin
 

rcaldw

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Tell him its not baseball. Tell him its winning that matters in the end. Tell him Romo's career cannot be judged yet and we are all stupid for trying. Tell him you expect that when Romo is finished he will answer every question the guy has, and will answer it as a QB to be admired and one we will miss someday.

That is a "fair and balanced" answer. :)
 

rkell87

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AdamJT13;2984747 said:
Five of Romo's top nine games (measured by passer rating) have come against top-10 defenses, and another came against the No. 11 defense. That's six of his nine best games coming against top-11 defenses.


Against the 2007 Eagles (No. 10 defense), Romo threw for 324 yards, three touchdowns and a 141.7 rating in a 38-17 win.

Against the 2007 Giants (No. 7), Romo threw for 345 yards, four touchdowns and a 128.5 rating in a 45-35 win, and he threw for 247 yards, four touchdowns and a 123.1 rating in 31-20 win.

Against the 2007 Commanders (No. 8), Romo threw for 293 yards, four touchdowns and a 124.1 rating in a 28-23 win.

Against the 2008 Eagles (No. 3), Romo threw for 312 yards, three touchdowns and a 123.2 rating in a 41-37 win.

Against the 2007 Packers (No. 11), Romo threw for 309 yards, four touchdowns and a 123.5 rating in a 37-27 win.

He also had a 113.7 rating in a win over the 2008 Giants (No. 5 defense), which ranks as his 13th-highest rating.

great stuff thanks a bunch:bow:

do you just keep up with all this stuff or do you have a special reference guide you refer to or what? seriously awesome stuff.

can i PM you if he brings up something else that i dont know or should i just throw up the bat signal in this thread for you

http://i68.***BLOCKED***/albums/i24/smileychick003/bat_signal.jpg

:D
 

rkell87

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rcaldw;2984798 said:
Tell him its not baseball. Tell him its winning that matters in the end. Tell him Romo's career cannot be judged yet and we are all stupid for trying. Tell him you expect that when Romo is finished he will answer every question the guy has, and will answer it as a QB to be admired and one we will miss someday.

That is a "fair and balanced" answer. :)

tried the winning thing and he said ryan and flacco have playoff wins and romo doesnt. he also believes the 85% grouping of people in a recent espn poll. im with you but im telling you stats is where its at for him. i really cant stand his stance on romo and i just want to have him on the ropes next time he says something.
 

sonnyboy

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AdamJT13;2984650 said:
Here's a start, some stuff written a couple of weeks ago --

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/writers/kerry_byrne/09/16/aikman/index.html?eref=T1

Just 40 starts into his career, Romo is on pace to challenge or even rewrite the records in some of the most important indicators of quarterbacking success. He's certainly living up to the standards of a franchise that's been consistently blessed for more than 40 years with some of the best field generals in the game. But not even Dallas legends Aikman, Staubach or Dandy Don put up these kinds of numbers.​


Romo is still shy of the minimum 1,500 attempts needed to qualify for official NFL records (he's attempted 1,334 passes). He'll reach that milestone some time in October -- and when he does he'll find himself in very elite statistical company.​


Passer rating


You might not have noticed (that's what we're here for), but Romo's performance on Sunday propelled him past no less a statistical juggernaut than Peyton Manning and into the No. 2 spot on the all-time passer rating leaderboard. Both players entered Week 1 of the 2009 season with career passer ratings of 94.7. Manning remains at 94.7 today. But with Romo's explosive effort against the Bucs, his career mark improved by a full point to 95.7.​


Only Steve Young (96.8) boasts a better career passer rating. But that record is clearly in jeopardy. With two or three more excellent outings, Romo will leap past Young and stand as the most efficient passer in the history of the game. Hard to believe, considering that Romo was an undrafted free agent in 2003 that nobody had heard of as recently as 2006.​


Yards per attempt


As Cold, Hard Football Facts followers know, we put a lot of stock in yards per attempt. It's a very easy-to-understand yet telling indicator of an individual's ability to get the ball downfield and a very telling indicator of team success. Generally speaking, the most successful teams and most successful quarterbacks throughout history have boasted the highest average per attempt.​


Romo finds himself in very exclusive company in this telling indicator, as well.​


Cleveland's Otto Graham is No. 1 on the YPA list (8.63). Not so coincidentally, he was the most successful quarterback in history, leading his Browns to six straight championship games in his six seasons as an NFL quarterback (1950-55), winning three of them. (Graham also led the Browns to four straight championships in the AAFC before the club joined the NFL -- he averaged a stunning 9.51 yards per attempt against that league's inferior competition.)​


Chicago's Sid Luckman is No. 2 on the YPA list (8.42). Not so coincidentally, he was the most successful quarterback of the 1940s, virtually inventing the modern position that we know today while leading the Bears to four NFL titles.​


Then there's Romo at No. 3. Following Sunday's performance, he has averaged 8.18 yards per pass attempt in his career. To put this figure another way, it makes Romo more effective at getting the ball down field than any passer since Graham hung up the black high-tops 54 years ago.​


That's elite company.​


Victories


For better or for worse, quarterbacks are ultimately measured by the bottom line: wins and losses. In this area, too, Romo is in elite company. He's 28-12 (.700) as a starting quarterback. Among contemporary players, only Tom Brady (88-24; .786) and Ben Roethlisberger (52-20; .722) have won more consistently. (It should be noted that San Francisco's Shaun Hill might someday enter the discussion: he's 8-3 in his 11 starts, a mark of .727.)​


Brady and Roethlisberger, of course, are also the only two quarterbacks in the game today with multiple rings in their back pocket. Therein lies the next challenge for Romo, who's 0-2 in his two playoff appearances, and did not play well in either game.​


The record books will soon show that he's among the pest passers in the history of the game. But it will take nothing less than a Super Bowl victory or two to truly earn the right to be mentioned among these all-time greats.​





Some other stats --

-- When the game is within seven points in the fourth quarter, Romo's career passer rating is 113.9. Just for comparison, Peyton Manning's is 89.6, Tom Brady's is 87.0, Drew Brees' is 82.3, Ben Roethlisberger's is 83.2, and Eli Manning's is 92.0.

-- Romo's career passer rating in the second half of games is 105.0. Peyton's is 93.0, Brady's is 91.2, Brees' is 88.6, Roethlisberger's is 85.4, and Eli's is 76.6.

-- Romo's career passer rating in the final two minutes of a half is 104.4. Peyton's is 78.3, Brady's is 83.9, Brees' is 84.4, Roethlisberger's is 72.4, and Eli's is 77.4.

-- Romo's career passer rating on third downs is 92.9. Peyton's is 85.3, Brady's is 83.8, Brees' is 92.6, Roethlisberger's is 84.8, and Eli's is 77.4.

-- Romo's career passer rating on third-and-very long (11 or more yards) is 89.1. Peyton's is 65.4, Brady's is 77.2, Brees' is 83.6, Roethlisberger's is 74.7, and Eli's is 64.6.


Blah blah blah............ He sucks in Dec, dates celebs and still wears his hat backwards:rolleyes:
 

rkell87

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sonnyboy;2984828 said:
Blah blah blah............ He sucks in Dec, dates celebs and still wears his hat backwards:rolleyes:

yeah he he will prolly say something about dec.

btw i wish i knew some Commanders fans so i could make fun of them:)
 

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rkell87;2984804 said:
http://i68.***BLOCKED***/albums/i24/smileychick003/bat_signal.jpg


Hey you!! My Idea first!!!

http://img.***BLOCKED***/albums/v210/zrinkill/stevesignal.jpg
 

rkell87

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zrinkill;2984853 said:
Hey you!! My Idea first!!!

http://img.***BLOCKED***/albums/v210/zrinkill/stevesignal.jpg

:lmao2: my bad still fairly new lol.

who is that?
 
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