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Why everyone is wrong about Dallas Cowboys’ Tony Romo Part II: Hall of Fame
By Blake Gibbs
http://cover32.com/cowboys/2015/08/...allas-cowboys-tony-romo-part-ii-hall-of-fame/
In Part I, we looked at Tony Romo’s 2014 season, and why it was highly underrated. In Part II, we are going to look at his career as a whole and where he stands.
Probably the biggest misconception in football is that you can judge a quarterback’s ability on his number of Super Bowl rings. Ironically, this isn’t the case with any of the other positions in football. There are tons of non-quarterbacks who are considered legends, yet never won the big one. Why do we hold the quarterbacks to a different standard? In a way, we sort of treat them like pitchers in baseball. We look at their records, their performances in big games and their stats.
However, we still give pitchers a break if their teams weren’t good enough to carry them to a World Series title. We take a look at their ERA’s, their strikeouts, the number of no-hitters they threw and then come to our conclusion on whether or not they are one of the greats. For some reason, when it comes to debating how good an NFL quarterback is, most people always point to the number of Super Bowls he has won.
This way of thinking is incredibly skewed, and really holds no water when it comes to determining how good a quarterback is. I would challenge you to find two Super Bowl winning quarterbacks who didn’t also have at least an average to above average defense as well. Teams don’t win rings if they don’t have some type of balance.
Two years ago, Tony Romo battled Peyton Manning in one of the most epic regular season games in NFL history. Romo went 25-36 for 506 yards with 5 touchdowns and one interception, but the Cowboys lost 51-48. The one interception came in the 4th quarter with plenty of time still left on the clock. However, his defense couldn’t get him the ball back in time, and Dallas lost. Everyone tore Romo apart saying that he “can’t win big games”, that “he always folds when it counts” and other nonsense...
Read more at http://cover32.com/cowboys/2015/08/...omo-part-ii-hall-of-fame/#EJ1CAP0GpLwz4fGy.99
By Blake Gibbs
http://cover32.com/cowboys/2015/08/...allas-cowboys-tony-romo-part-ii-hall-of-fame/
In Part I, we looked at Tony Romo’s 2014 season, and why it was highly underrated. In Part II, we are going to look at his career as a whole and where he stands.
Probably the biggest misconception in football is that you can judge a quarterback’s ability on his number of Super Bowl rings. Ironically, this isn’t the case with any of the other positions in football. There are tons of non-quarterbacks who are considered legends, yet never won the big one. Why do we hold the quarterbacks to a different standard? In a way, we sort of treat them like pitchers in baseball. We look at their records, their performances in big games and their stats.
However, we still give pitchers a break if their teams weren’t good enough to carry them to a World Series title. We take a look at their ERA’s, their strikeouts, the number of no-hitters they threw and then come to our conclusion on whether or not they are one of the greats. For some reason, when it comes to debating how good an NFL quarterback is, most people always point to the number of Super Bowls he has won.
This way of thinking is incredibly skewed, and really holds no water when it comes to determining how good a quarterback is. I would challenge you to find two Super Bowl winning quarterbacks who didn’t also have at least an average to above average defense as well. Teams don’t win rings if they don’t have some type of balance.
Two years ago, Tony Romo battled Peyton Manning in one of the most epic regular season games in NFL history. Romo went 25-36 for 506 yards with 5 touchdowns and one interception, but the Cowboys lost 51-48. The one interception came in the 4th quarter with plenty of time still left on the clock. However, his defense couldn’t get him the ball back in time, and Dallas lost. Everyone tore Romo apart saying that he “can’t win big games”, that “he always folds when it counts” and other nonsense...
Read more at http://cover32.com/cowboys/2015/08/...omo-part-ii-hall-of-fame/#EJ1CAP0GpLwz4fGy.99