KC Joyner: Why Tony Romo is a top five QB

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  • ThomasTomasz
    • Nov 2024

    KC Joyner: Why Tony Romo is a top five QB

     
    When a quarterback makes the jump to claim a spot among the top five players at that position, the move is usually accompanied by a high-profile achievement like winning a Super Bowl or breaking a statistical record.

    That hasn't been the case for Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo. He has only one career playoff win to his credit, hasn't topped the 40-touchdown or 4,500-passing-yard marks and has never been named to an All-Pro team.

    The lack of these achievements has held back the general perception of where Romo rates in the NFL passing hierarchy, but the truth of the matter is the evidence shows that he is now one of the top five quarterbacks in the league.

    Superior route-depth metrics

    It starts with his 2011 route-depth metrics:

    Tony Romo's 2011 stats
    Depth Level Cmp Att Cmp Yds TD Int Pen Att Pen Yds Total Att Total Yds YPA
    Short (1-10 yds) 260 340 2,188 12 3 4 8 344 2,196 6.4
    Medium (11-19 yds) 58 93 930 8 5 3 43 96 973 10.1
    Deep (20-29 yds) 19 35 635 6 1 1 25 36 660 18.3
    Bomb (30+ yds) 9 19 441 5 0 1 -10 20 431 21.6
    Other (tipped passes, throwaways, etc.) 0 35 -10 0 1 2 7 37 -3 -0.1
    Vertical (11+ yds) 86 147 2,006 19 6 5 58 152 2,064 13.6
    Stretch vertical (20+ yds) 28 54 1,076 11 1 2 15 56 1,091 19.5
    Overall total 346 522 4,184 31 10 11 73 533 4,257 8.0

    Romo was tied for fifth in overall yards per attempt (YPA) among quarterbacks with 500 or more passing attempts. He also ranked second in the league in deep YPA, third in bomb YPA, third in vertical YPA and second in stretch vertical YPA.

    It's not a total surprise that Romo is such a great thrower down the field, but it's one of those indicators where he's in the upper echelon, and it's an area NFL quarterbacks are measured on by evaluators. And it looks even better next to another key stat ...

    Low bad decision rate (BDR)

    The route-depth metrics highlight Romo's overall productivity, but what makes those achievements even more impressive is that he was able to post them while concurrently racking up a very low bad decision rate (BDR).

    BDR is a metric that gauges how often a quarterback makes a mental error that leads either to a turnover or a near turnover, like a dropped interception or fumble that is recovered by the offense.

    The nine-year track record of this metric shows that a 2 percent or lower BDR is an above-average mark for a dink-and-dunk passer, while gunslinger quarterbacks can take pride in a BDR under 3 percent.

    Romo has earned a reputation as a gunslinger, in part because of games like last year's Week 4 contest against the Detroit Lions, in which his many errors were instrumental in helping the Lions come back from a 27-3 third-quarter deficit to win the game 34-30.

    As poor as that performance was, Romo still posted a 1.8 percent BDR for the season. That total ranked fifth-best among qualifying quarterbacks (minimum 175 attempts) and is doubly notable because it's quite rare for a risk-taking quarterback to post a BDR under 2 percent.

    High Total QBR

    Last season, Romo ranked fourth in the league in ESPN's Total QBR metric with a 70.1 rating, behind only Aaron Rodgers, Drew Brees and Tom Brady. This system is incredibly difficult to excel in because it accounts for a wide variety of factors and is thus relatively immune to the statistical vagaries that can sometimes throw off other metric measurements.

    A long history of top-level statistical performance

    Romo isn't just a one-year metric wonder. According to pro-football-reference.com, Romo is tied for fifth in NFL history in career yards per pass attempt. He also ranks tied for second in career adjusted yards per pass attempt, second in career adjusted net yards per pass attempt, sixth in career completion percentage and is the leader in net career yards per pass attempt. Romo ranks seventh in the league in quarterback wins since 2006, despite missing 13 games in that time, and had four fourth-quarter winning drives wins last season -- giving him 14 for his career.

    Ability to raise the level of play of those around him

    All of those numbers are building blocks for Romo's top-5 case, but the largest one may be how he displayed an elite ability to raise the level of play of those around him last season.

    To illustrate this, note that Romo threw 171 passes to Dez Bryant and Miles Austin. Those two racked up 1,520 yards on those targets, a total that equates to an 8.9 YPA.

    Now contrast that to the numbers posted by the backup wide receivers Jesse Holley, Kevin Ogletree and Laurent Robinson. They compiled 1,220 yards on a combined 114 targets, totals that equate to a 10.7 YPA, or a mark nearly 2 yards higher than the YPA posted by Bryant and Austin. Few passers are able to achieve double-digit YPA productivity out of no-name backups, and these figures show Romo has proved he is capable of doing that.

    Changing of the elite guard at the quarterback position

    It's safe to say that Brady, Brees and Rodgers are the consensus top three quarterbacks (take your pick in which order).

    After that, the rankings start to get cloudy. Eli Manning 's second Super Bowl win probably vaults him to a No. 4, but that happens with the condition that the younger Manning has struggled mightily with interceptions throughout his career. And every other potentially elite quarterback has some kind of question mark as well.

    Last year, Philip Rivers had his worst season since 2007 and Ben Roethlisberger had his worst season since 2008. Matt Ryan still has big-time downfield passing woes, despite having two great wideouts (he ranked tied for 21st in vertical YPA and tied for 28th in stretch vertical YPA last season). The Baltimore Ravens win a lot of games with Joe Flacco under center, but it's often in spite of, rather than because of, the team's passing performance level. Michael Vick can't stay healthy, Jay Cutler still has horrible decision-making skills (he ranked next-to-last in BDR in 2011) and Peyton Manning has a brilliant track record that could put him at or near the top of any ranking at the position, but he has yet to prove conclusively that he is back to his pre-injury physical state.

    No signs of letting up

    The Cowboys' offense has the tools to be one of the best in the NFL in 2012. In addition to the aforementioned elite wideouts, Dallas possesses one of the best vertical tight ends in Jason Witten (ranked second in the league in vertical YPA among tight ends with 20 or more vertical targets).

    That across-the-board passing prowess is nearly equaled by a Cowboys running game that ranked eighth in the league in the good blocking yards per attempt (GBYPA) category. (GBYPA measures rushing productivity on plays with good blocking.)

    Combine those offensive elements with the makings of what could be a vastly improved defense and it means Dallas head coach Jason Garrett should be able to be even more aggressive in his play calling, a prospect that should cast fear into the hearts of every defensive coordinator in the NFL.

    Given the factors listed above, Romo is not only a top-5 NFL quarterback now, but he should continue to be one this season and into the future.


    :woah:
  • EmpireWF
    Giants in the Super Bowl
    • Mar 2009
    • 24082

    #2


    If you need over 1000 words to explain why a guy is a top 5 QB in the NFL....you're wrong.


    Comment

    • jms493
      Junior Member
      • Feb 2009
      • 11248

      #3
      Fantasy football...no doubt.

      4th quarter vs the Giants or Eagles for a playoff spot..............no way jose!

      Comment

      • Berowsk
        Fuck Bitches, Get Wawa.
        • Oct 2008
        • 8860

        #4
        Lol wasn't he in the 90s for the top 100 voted by the players on NFL Network?
        sigpic

        Comment

        • LiquidLarry2GhostWF
          Highwayman
          • Feb 2009
          • 15429

          #5
          All I need is 12 words to say why Tony Romo is NOT a Top 7 QB.

          Tom Brady
          Peyton Manning
          Aaron Rodgers
          Drew Brees
          Ben Roethlisberger
          Eli Manning

          He's hanging out on that next tier with Rivers, Flacco, Stafford, Schaub, Ryan...of which, I'd take a few of those players, too, over Romo.

          Comment

          • Rudi
            #CyCueto
            • Nov 2008
            • 9905

            #6
            Tony Romo, Top 5...

            Comment

            • Tailback U
              No substitute 4 strength.
              • Nov 2008
              • 10282

              #7
              I hate to use this expression but Tony Romo is what we thought he was. He's not one of those guys that is going to win multiple Super Bowls, but all he needs to do right now is play smart enough to get the Cowboys to the big game.

              I get that people like to constantly write about Romo and criticize him because he's on the Dallas Cowboys but it's been beaten to death at this point, I don't get why people don't understand that there is only one Peyton Manning and only one Tom Brady.

              Comment

              • Woy
                RIP West
                • Dec 2008
                • 16372

                #8
                Originally posted by Berowsk
                Lol wasn't he in the 90s for the top 100 voted by the players on NFL Network?
                That list sucks. It has John Kuhn of all people as a top 100 player.



                ^ Shouts to MvP for the sick sig. GFX TEAM BACK

                .

                Comment

                • Senser81
                  VSN Poster of the Year
                  • Feb 2009
                  • 12804

                  #9
                  I've always thought Romo was underrated, because people always seem to give credit to the surrounding "talent", and he only gets blamed when things go wrong. I think he is an accurate passer, but not really a playmaker. When he tries to make something happen, he tends to screw things up. That said, I would guess that if he were on a team like Green Bay or New Orleans, he could replace those QBs and not miss a beat.

                  Comment

                  • FirstTimer
                    Freeman Error

                    • Feb 2009
                    • 18729

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Senser81
                    I've always thought Romo was underrated, because people always seem to give credit to the surrounding "talent", and he only gets blamed when things go wrong. I think he is an accurate passer, but not really a playmaker. When he tries to make something happen, he tends to screw things up. That said, I would guess that if he were on a team like Green Bay or New Orleans, he could replace those QBs and not miss a beat.
                    .............Disagree.

                    Comment

                    • Senser81
                      VSN Poster of the Year
                      • Feb 2009
                      • 12804

                      #11
                      Originally posted by FirstTimer
                      .............Disagree.
                      I'm Ron Burgandy?

                      Comment

                      • FirstTimer
                        Freeman Error

                        • Feb 2009
                        • 18729

                        #12
                        Originally posted by Senser81
                        I'm Ron Burgandy?
                        While I don't think Romo is a POS or anything I don't think he's nearly as good as Rodgers or Brees. I've never come away from watching Tony Romo being "wowed". I have with Brees and Rodgers. I think both those GB and NO offenses take a pretty easily seen step back with Romo under center. They'd still be good offense's with Romo but not elite as they are now.

                        Comment

                        • Senser81
                          VSN Poster of the Year
                          • Feb 2009
                          • 12804

                          #13
                          Originally posted by FirstTimer
                          While I don't think Romo is a POS or anything I don't think he's nearly as good as Rodgers or Brees. I've never come away from watching Tony Romo being "wowed". I have with Brees and Rodgers. I think both those GB and NO offenses take a pretty easily seen step back with Romo under center. They'd still be good offense's with Romo but not elite as they are now.
                          I think Romo would do well in the GB/NO style of offense. Now, you could say that anyone would do well in those offenses, but I would disagree. Romo is very accurate. I don't think Roethlisberger or Eli Manning would do well in that style of offense. And of the 2nd tier QBs who were listed with Romo, only Rivers would excel. Guys like Ryan or Flacco shouldn't even be mentioned with Romo, IMO.

                          Romo doesn't have Rogers' athleticism, and he doesn't have Brees' consistency or decision-making (in spite of Romo's 1.8 BDR rating...whatever that means), but I think he would be considered "elite" if he were on GB/NO.

                          Comment

                          • FirstTimer
                            Freeman Error

                            • Feb 2009
                            • 18729

                            #14
                            Originally posted by Senser81
                            I think Romo would do well in the GB/NO style of offense.
                            I don't disagree with that.

                            He'd do well no doubt...but I think the drop off from Rodgers/Brees to Romo would be noticeable and the offense may "miss a step" or two.


                            Originally posted by Senser81
                            but I think he would be considered "elite" if he were on GB/NO.
                            I'm not sure he would but....

                            Comment

                            • Senser81
                              VSN Poster of the Year
                              • Feb 2009
                              • 12804

                              #15
                              Originally posted by FirstTimer
                              I'm not sure he would but....
                              I'm not really sure what you mean with the above comment...but since EmpireWF thanked your post, I will assume its wrong.

                              Comment

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