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(Ebook) Tony Romo by Clifford W. Mills ISBN 9781604137545, 1604137541 Digital Version 2025

The document provides information about the ebook 'Tony Romo' by Clifford W. Mills, including its ISBN and download options. It features a high rating of 4.8 out of 5 from 14 reviews and is part of a collection of sports biographies. The content includes details about Romo's early life, career beginnings, and significant moments in his journey as a professional quarterback.

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FOOTBALL SUPERSTARS

Tony Romo

FS Romo P3_reprint.indd 1 9/26/11 4:22 PM


FOOTBALL SUPERSTARS

Tiki Barber Joe Montana


Tom Brady Walter Payton
Reggie Bush Adrian Peterson
John Elway Jerry Rice
Brett Favre Ben Roethlisberger
Eli Manning Tony Romo
Peyton Manning Barry Sanders
Dan Marino LaDainian Tomlinson
Donovan McNabb Brian Urlacher

FS Romo P3_reprint.indd 2 9/26/11 4:22 PM


FOOTBALL SUPERSTARS

Tony
Romo
Clifford W. Mills

FS Romo P3_reprint.indd 3 9/26/11 4:22 PM


TONY ROMO

Copyright © 2011 by Infobase Learning

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or
by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any
information storage or retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher.
For information, contact:

Chelsea House
An imprint of Infobase Learning
132 West 31st Street
New York, NY 10001

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data


Mills, Cliff, 1947–
Tony Romo / Clifford W. Mills.
p. cm. — (Football superstars)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-60413-754-5 (hardcover)
ISBN 978-1-4381-3876-3 (ebook)
1. Romo, Tony, 1980–—Juvenile literature. 2. Football players—United States—
Biography—Juvenile literature. 3. Quarterbacks (Football—United States—Biography—
Juvenile literature. I. Title. II. Series.

GV939.R646M45 2010
796.332092—dc22
[B]
2010019328

Chelsea House books are available at special discounts when purchased in bulk quantities
for businesses, associations, institutions, or sales promotions. Please call our Special Sales
Department in New York at (212) 967-8800 or (800) 322-8755.

You can find Chelsea House on the World Wide Web at http://www.infobaselearning.com

Text design by Erik Lindstrom


Cover design by Ben Peterson and Keith Trego
Composition by EJB Publishing Services
Cover printed by Bang Printing, Brainerd, Minn.
Book printed and bound by Bang Printing, Brainerd, Minn.
Date printed: September 2011
Printed in the United States of America

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

This book is printed on acid-free paper.

All links and Web addresses were checked and verified to be correct at the time
of publication. Because of the dynamic nature of the Web, some addresses and links
may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid.
CONTENTS

1 Going into the Panther’s Den 7

2 A Big Athlete in a Small Town 19

3 College Days 31

4 Becoming a Pro Quarterback 43

5 Riding the Ultimate Roller-Coaster 57

6 Thrown into Riches and Fame 76

7 An Elite Quarterback 91

Statistics 105
Chronology 107
Timeline 108
Glossary 111
Bibliography 117
Further Reading 120
Picture Credits 122
Index 123
About the Author 130

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FS Romo P3_reprint.indd 6 9/26/11 4:22 PM
1

Going into the


Panther’s Den
S ix huge bronze panthers guard the three entrances to the
Carolina Panthers’ football stadium. Each is painted black
with fierce green eyes set into a snarling face with enormous
bared teeth. The big cats crouch as if ready to pounce, their
large claws gripping 10-foot-high (3-meter-high) pedestals.
They seem to closely watch the fans and players who enter the
park, now named Bank of America Stadium, at the edge of
downtown Charlotte, North Carolina. The panthers are meant
to intimidate, like the famous stone lions guarding Chinese
imperial palaces, and they do.
On the evening of October 29, 2006, the Dallas Cowboys
football team entered the stadium. These guardians of the gates
were the least of the Cowboys’ worries. They had a quarterback
who was starting his first regular season game in the National

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8 TONY ROMO

Football League (NFL). His name was Tony Romo. No big-time


college football program had wanted him. He had not been
drafted by any professional football team and had been sitting
on the Cowboys bench for more than three years as a second-
and third-string quarterback. The week before, he had thrown
three interceptions as a replacement in the second half against
the New York Giants.
The team the Cowboys were about to play, the Carolina
Panthers, had defensive linemen who struck fear in the hearts
and minds of even the most experienced quarterbacks. They
were led by defensive end Julius Peppers, a living legend in the
NFL. He is six foot seven inches (201 centimeters) and nearly
300 pounds (136 kilograms), quick and athletic enough to
have played basketball for the University of North Carolina.
Peppers was the highest paid player in the NFL in 2008, and if
an NFL coach could clone only one defensive player, he would
probably clone Peppers. One defensive tackle was Kris Jenkins,
a 350-pound (159-kg) Pro Bowler who had been called the
best defensive lineman in the NFL by the Cowboys’ coach,
Bill Parcells. Jenkins bench-presses more than 500 pounds
(227 kg), so throwing 220-pound (100-kg) quarterbacks to the
ground is child’s play for him.
Even die-hard fans like Rafael Vela, creator of the “Blue
and Silver” Web site, thought that the Cowboys would lose
this important game against the powerful and well-coached
Panthers. Quarterbacks starting their first games in the NFL
against top defenses don’t usually win.

A FAMILY IN THE SPOTLIGHT


A few days before, on October 25, 2006, Parcells announced that
Tony Romo would start as quarterback, replacing Drew Bledsoe.
Writer Mac Engel reports in Tony Romo: America’s Next Quar-
terback that half the team thought the move was a good idea,
and half didn’t. Parcells said at a news conference, “I don’t expect
perfection, but hopefully he’ll give us a little something.”

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Going into the Panther’s Den 9

Romo’s parents, Ramiro and Joan Romo, immediately had


their lives invaded by reporters from most major media out-
lets—television, radio, print, and the Internet. An unknown
quarterback starting for the Cowboys was news, and suddenly
everyone wanted to know everything about him.
The Romos live in the small town of Burlington, Wisconsin
(with a population of roughly 10,000 people), halfway between
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and Chicago, Illinois. The town was
already proud of its most famous citizen: The movie theater
had a picture of Tony Romo in the lobby, and “Fred’s World’s
Best Burger” had a Tony Romo table with his picture under
glass. A few Cowboys fans had been created in the heart of
Green Bay Packer territory.
When Dallas Morning News reporter Brad Townsend and
many others showed up at the Romos’ three-bedroom home—
the same house Romo grew up in—Joan Romo served them
Danish pastry and showed them childhood photos of her
son. She joked, “If I’d had him first, I’d have no other children.
He wore me out.” The family had not been wealthy. Joan told
Townsend, “We had all the needs but probably not all the wants.”
She told reporters that her son had always been sports-
minded: He devoured books on NFL legends, including quar-
terback John Unitas and coach Vince Lombardi. Joan recalled
catching Tony’s practice passes with a pillow until Ramiro came
home from work. Ramiro still has a crooked pinky from catch-
ing them.
Meanwhile, Ramiro also gave interviews. He confessed
that he had doubts. He remembered that Tony had lost his first
game as a starter in college, at Eastern Illinois University. He
said that, at every step of his son’s football career, he thought
that Tony might have reached the final level. “Every time he’s
proven me wrong. I’m not going to doubt him anymore.”
Their son had accumulated athletic awards over the years,
but few of them were on display. Instead, the shelves were
filled with family photos. Tony’s awards were mostly stored in

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10 TONY ROMO

When Tony Romo became quarterback for the Dallas Cowboys, he inspired fans in
Wisconsin to turn away from the Green Bay Packers and to the Texas team. Above, a hus-
band cheers for the Packers while his wife, a Romo fan, boos them in Romo’s hometown
of Burlington, Wisconsin.

Rubbermaid containers in the basement. Ramiro and Joan had


always tried to keep athletics in perspective and treat each of
their children equally. Daughters Danielle and Jossalyn were
also at the center of their lives. And they hoped that, even if
Tony’s life was now changed by his becoming the starting quar-
terback for “America’s Team” (as the Cowboys are often called),
Tony himself would not change.
In the small East Texas town of Crockett, other members
of Romo’s family were waiting for Sunday. His grandparents
Ramiro Sr. and Felicita Romo were too nervous to be with oth-
ers on game day. “I thought of how far we’ve come, not only as
a family, but as a people,” Ramiro Sr. told San Antonio Express-
News reporter David Flores in Spanish. “I remembered the hard
times in Mexico and how I struggled when I first got here.”

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Going into the Panther’s Den 11

Felicita told Flores, “Tony always has been very close to us. He’s
always been very attentive, loving.” She left a message from
Scripture on Romo’s answering machine just before the game.

TURNING ON THE BRIGHT LIGHTS:


NBC SUNDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL
The whole football world would be watching Romo’s first start.
Sunday Night Football had been taken over by the National
Broadcasting Company (NBC) a few months before, and rat-
ings were already higher than those for the more famous ABC
Monday Night Football. More than 17 million viewers would
be tuning in.
Broadcasting superstars Al Michaels and John Madden
showed a taped interview with Romo before the game. They
asked about his recent breakup with a longtime girlfriend,
Crystal Kaspar. Their long-distance relationship—she lived in
Florida and he in Texas—had not worked out. (In the years to
come, the whole world would know much more about his new
girlfriends.) He was then asked to do an impersonation of Brett
Favre, the Green Bay Packer quarterback that Romo grew up
watching. Romo smiled and imitated the throwing motion and
facial expressions of one of his heroes, prompting Michaels to
say after the taped interview that Romo was a breath of fresh air.
The broadcasters noted that quarterback for the Cowboys
was one of the most celebrated and visible positions in sports,
along with center fielder for the New York Yankees and center
for the Boston Celtics. Only the Yankees were worth more as
a brand name than the Cowboys. The pressure on the young
quarterback kept increasing.
The singer Pink came on the air just before the kickoff
and sang “I’ve Been Waiting All Day for Sunday Night.” Tony
Romo had been waiting all his life for this Sunday night. More
than 71,000 people rose to their feet, and thousands of flashing
cameras lit the kickoff.

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12 TONY ROMO

LET THE GAME BEGIN


The first quarter was a disaster for the Cowboys. Romo com-
pleted two short passes, but then was violently sacked by the
overpowering Kris Jenkins. Panther running back DeShaun
Foster scored a touchdown on a one-yard run after a long
drive. Then one of Romo’s passes was intercepted by cor-
nerback Chris Gamble on a play in which no receiver was
open. The smart play would have been to throw the ball out
of bounds. Journalist Mark Maske in War Without Death
writes that, when Romo reached the sideline, Parcells barked,
“You’re not going to last long doing that!” Tight end Jason
Witten tried to reassure Romo, who replied, “Everything’s
under control.” Witten would later say that Romo never
loses his cool. But Romo had now thrown four interceptions
in less than three quarters. It was a shaky start in a job that
demanded instant results.
The Panthers’ Steve Smith scored a touchdown on the next
play after the interception. For only the second time in his long
coaching career, a Parcells team was behind 14-0 in the first
quarter.
Parcells often compared football to boxing. He knew that
some teams and quarterbacks would, like some boxers, col-
lapse after being hit early and hard. Winners were people who
fought back after taking a hard punch, people who didn’t let
their mistakes keep them down. The coach knew he would
find out a great deal about his young quarterback in the next
few minutes.
Romo fought back. He responded by driving his team 47
yards in nine plays, throwing a perfect touchdown pass to
Witten. His receiver was covered well by a defender, but Romo
threw the pass to Witten’s left shoulder, where only the tall tight
end could catch it. Soon after his defense got the ball back to
him, Romo directed a six-minute drive that covered 14 plays
and 68 yards, resulting in a field goal. The score was 14-10 at
halftime—the Cowboys had climbed back into the fight.

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Going into the Panther’s Den 13

A SECOND HALF TO REMEMBER


Late in the third quarter, Dallas was pinned deep in its own
territory. The Cowboys had 18 yards to go for a first down.
Romo rifled a pass to receiver Terry Glenn, who had found
a seam (an area where pass coverage is weaker) on the left
side. The 22-yard pass was complete for a first down, and the
Cowboys were out of trouble. Later in the drive, on a third
down with 12 yards to go for a first down, Romo sidestepped
a vicious pass rush from Peppers and Jenkins to complete a
16-yard pass to Witten in the middle of the field. A Dallas field
goal made it 14-13.
Romo was showing that he had four key qualities that
define successful NFL quarterbacks: vision of the entire field, a
quick release of the pass, accurate throws, and mobility. He was
finding the right receiver after looking at several alternatives in
a matter of split seconds. He was throwing quick and accurate
passes. And he was moving just enough behind his offensive
line that he avoided being tackled by the onrushing defensive
linemen and linebackers. His mobility was so good that he
actually ran for two first downs in the game. He was like a
boxer slipping punches, making his opponent miss. How much
these qualities are taught and how much they are natural is a
matter of debate. The important new fact was that Romo had
all four in game conditions. He was not a “practice wonder,”
someone who does well in practice but freezes in a game.
As often happens in football, the offense inspired the
defense and special teams. The Panthers quarterback, Jake
Delhomme, was an experienced and proven team leader. It was
he, however, and not Romo who began to make key mistakes.
Fumbles and interceptions led to three Cowboy touchdowns by
running backs Julius Jones and Marion Barber. The Cowboys
scored 25 points in the fourth quarter, and won the game 35-
14. By the end, many Panther fans had left, and virtually all of
the Cowboy fans were on their feet cheering wildly. Romo had
completed 24 of 36 passes for 270 yards, a performance that

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14 TONY ROMO

earned him the “Rock Star of the Game” award from Madden
and Michaels. A star was indeed born that night.

MORE BRIGHT LIGHTS


Romo came to the postgame news conference wearing a faded
and sleeveless T-shirt with the name “Burlington” on it. He has
said that he will wear that shirt under his silver-and-blue No. 9
Cowboy uniform until it falls apart.
One of the first things Romo did was thank the man he
replaced, Drew Bledsoe: “Drew actually came up to me before

HOW HARD IS IT TO BE
AN NFL QUARTERBACK?
Writer George Plimpton once wrote in his book Paper Lion that
pro quarterbacks are braver and smarter than most people
realize. Plimpton should know. He was a good but not excep-
tional athlete who talked the NFL’s Detroit Lions into letting
him play quarterback in a practice game. He trained and pre-
pared with the team for weeks. Finally, the day to play came.
On his first play, he moved too slowly and his own teammate
knocked him down. He lost his balance on the second play
because the action was happening so quickly. On the third play,
he finally threw a pass, well over the head of the receiver. Fans
thought a professional clown had been brought in to amuse
them. Plimpton was trying his hardest. He was humiliated.
Quarterbacks multitask with a vengeance. They turn ideas
into actions. A quarterback receives a play in the form of a
word-and-number code from his coaches through his helmet
headset and then gives the play to the team in a huddle. He
then chooses the snap count—the word that triggers the
offense to go into action.

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Going into the Panther’s Den 15

the game [and] said he was rooting for me. . . . I wouldn’t be


here if it weren’t for Drew.” He went on, “I can’t put into words
the feeling of getting it [the win] done. . . . I was anxious just
like Bill [Parcells] to see what we were going to do out there
tonight.”
He knew that he was part of a team. In a sport like base-
ball, a player doesn’t need his teammates as much as in foot-
ball, where no one succeeds without key plays from fellow
team members. Players go through so much physical, mental,
and emotional effort during a game that they bond, much as

When he leads the team to the line of scrimmage (the line


on the field where the play begins), he starts to “read” or inter-
pret the defense: How many defenders are “in the box”? These
are usually defensive linemen and linebackers, often three or
four of each, nearest to him across the line. He also needs to see
whether other defensive players, the cornerbacks and safeties,
are lining up near his receivers or farther away. He will assess
whether the called play puts his team at an advantage or a
disadvantage. Are five defensive backs waiting to cover four
receivers? That disadvantage is crucial, and the play may need
to be changed at the line—an “audible.”
Once the ball is snapped, everything becomes a blur. No
one player can keep track of all that is happening. Confusion
spreads. But one person has to know more than the others—
the quarterback. He has to keep reading the defense until the
ball leaves his hand as a pass or a handoff to a runner. And then
the process starts all over again, as many as 60 times a game.
Only a person with extraordinary gifts and training survives.

FS Romo P3_reprint.indd 15 9/26/11 4:22 PM


16 TONY ROMO

Tony Romo’s first game as quarterback for the Dallas Cowboys started off as a disaster as
the Carolina Panthers managed to intercept one of his passes. Romo, however, remained
calm and staged a comeback in the second half, leading his team to a 35-14 victory.

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Going into the Panther’s Den 17

soldiers or firefighters or police officers do. They know they


win or lose because of each other.
Football is often a series of one-on-one contests and wres-
tling matches that get little attention. That night, offensive
lineman Marc Colombo fought Julius Peppers to a draw, and
Peppers had not sacked Romo. Witten, Romo’s best friend and
roommate when the team traveled, had made difficult catches
in the middle of the field while being hounded by a defender
ready to flatten him. Terrell Owens, a very controversial and
outspoken receiver, had caught nine passes and made tacklers
miss after several catches.
Coach Parcells knew he had seen something special. He
said, “We haven’t been having a lot of fun around here. They’re
having fun right now. That’s the thing I enjoy the most. When
I see the faces of the players.” No one was having more fun
than Romo.
Cowboys’ owner Jerry Jones was impressed. “We expected—
I expected—to pay some price for that being his first start. He
just played beyond my expectations throughout the game.”
Mark Maske wrote in War Without Death that “the Cowboys,
for the first time in years, just might have found a quarterback
capable of being The Guy for them for a long, long time.”

FEELING IT THE DAY AFTER


Bryan Nielsen was the sports editor for the paper in Charles-
ton, Illinois, the home of Romo’s college, Eastern Illinois Uni-
versity. He called Romo the next day but had no expectations
that the quarterback could make time for a small newspaper
now that he was the talk of the football world. He need not
have worried. Romo returned his call, saying, “I have a spe-
cial place in my heart for Charleston, and that’s never going
to change.”
Romo described his sudden fame to Nielsen. “You don’t
realize sometimes how easy it is to go to the mall without

FS Romo P3_reprint.indd 17 9/26/11 4:22 PM


18 TONY ROMO

people knowing who you are. It goes with the territory, but
I’m more of a small-town guy.” He went on to say that he had
received many calls and text messages as a result of being on
national television. He knew, however, that instant fame meant
instant criticism. “You know as well as I do that you can go
from the penthouse to the outhouse in a hurry.” Over the next
few years, Romo would know both places. But his nature and
upbringing had prepared him for the storm-tossed hero’s jour-
ney he had now begun.

FS Romo P3_reprint.indd 18 9/26/11 4:22 PM


2

A Big Athlete
in a Small Town
T ony Romo is proud of his Hispanic heritage. Romo’s grand-
father, Ramiro Sr., was born in 1933 in the mining town of
Múzquiz in the State of Coahuila. The town is in northeastern
Mexico and is surrounded by spectacular mountain views.
When he was 11 years old, his family traveled the short dis-
tance to San Antonio, Texas, to begin life in America. When
his mother died several years later, Ramiro Sr. was devastated.
His brother persuaded him to move north to help get away
from the pain of that loss. He arrived in Racine, Wisconsin, in
November 1951.
Racine is a port city on the western shore of Lake Michigan,
south of Milwaukee and north of Chicago. It is an industrial
center with many kinds of jobs, and Ramiro Sr. began to look
for work in factories and gas stations. He found the northern

19

FS Romo P3_reprint.indd 19 9/26/11 4:22 PM


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