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Taylor: Without Tony Romo, Cowboys season is officially over
03:08 AM CDT on Tuesday, October 26, 2010

ARLINGTON – At 8:35 p.m. Monday night, Giants’ linebacker Michael Boley burst untouched through the left side of the Cowboys’ offensive line, hit Tony Romo and drove him into the ground.


Jean-Jacques Taylor
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Romo instantly grabbed his left shoulder.

As Boley stood up, Romo lay on the ground writhing. Forty-one minutes later, X-rays revealed that Romo had broken his left collarbone.

Season over.

Romo spent the second half with his arm in a sling, a navy blue jacket around his shoulders and an earpiece in his ear, so he could listen to the play selection when Dallas had the ball.

By the time he's ready to play again, whenever that is, the Cowboys will have been eliminated from the playoff chase, so there won't be any reason for him to return.

The way the game was going, the Cowboys probably weren't going to beat the New York Giants, despite getting three turnovers and a punt return for a touchdown in the first half. Without Romo it was a fait accompli.

New York 41, Dallas 35.

And it could've been worse. Much worse.

The Giants seemed to get bored in the second half and started turning it over after the Cowboys' defense laid it down in the third quarter.

Thank God.

Sometimes, you never know what you had until it's gone. Usually, that's a conversation reserved for relationships that went bad, but in this case we're talking about quarterback play.

Well, you're about to find out that life without Romo taking snaps is awful. And you're going to find out that life with Jon Kitna at quarterback is even worse.

Kitna will be better, as you would suspect, against Jacksonville on Sunday with a week of practicing with the first team and getting all of the practice repetitions. At his best, though, he's just a guy.

Sure, Wade Phillips said the 38-year-old could start for a lot of NFL teams, but he said that in training camp, when everyone is full of optimism. Now that we're in the midst of a horrendous season, does anyone really believe Kitna is going to take the Cowboys where Romo couldn't?

A few weeks from now, if the Cowboys are smart – that's a huge if – you'll find out that life with Stephen McGee at quarterback is maddening. Once the Cowboys lose their eighth game, essentially eliminating them from the playoffs, then McGee should take over.

At worst, at the end of the season, we should know whether McGee is good enough to be Romo's backup next season.

As for Kitna, the game moves a lot faster on Sundays than it has when he's been running the scout team, and his limited mobility will be exposed by the Cowboys' struggling offensive line.

Romo hid a lot of their flaws; Kitna won't.

Each week, my inbox gets filled up with e-mails from folks criticizing Romo for wearing his cap backward on the sideline.

They criticize his love of golf. The way he smiles. His leadership. They say he piles up gaudy stats but doesn't deliver when it counts.

Some of the criticism about his stats and failure to perform in big games is legitimate. Despite all the numbers, he has just one playoff win to go with a pair of NFC East titles.

The other stuff? That's a joke.

The reality is that Romo is among the best quarterbacks in the league.

He's not Tom Brady, Peyton Manning or Drew Brees – at least before this season – but he's certainly on the next level with Aaron Rodgers and Philip Rivers.

You're about to be reminded of that.

Some of you have forgotten about the five seasons the Cowboys spent in the abyss with quarterbacks named Quincy Carter, Anthony Wright , Ryan Leaf , Clint Stoerner, Chad Hutchinson, Vinny Testaverde , Drew Henson and Drew Bledsoe.

Most of them were busters.

Bledsoe's passer rating of 83.7 was the best of the bunch. Testaverde was next with a 73.7 rating.

None of them ever came close to going to the Pro Bowl.

Romo has never had a passer rating of less than 91.7 since becoming a starter in 2006.

More important, with Romo, the Cowboys always had a chance to win whether they actually did it or not.

Without him, they have no chance.

Follow Jacques on Facebook and be his Facebook friend by going here: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Jean-Jacques-Taylor-SportsDayDFWcom/102794773114468

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Cr122

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Romo hid a lot of their flaws; Kitna won't

Exactly, and this team is finished this year because of it.

I know Gronkowski missed on the blitz, but it still doesn't excuse the horrible play on the offensive line.

We just aren't any good there and the same goes for the safety positions and nickel corner play.
 
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I'll say this....back when Brad J. started those games when Romo busted up his thumb, I remember Wrs being open all over the place downfield and BJ just didn't have the arm strength to get it to them. With Kitna we don't have to worry about that but he is just as immobile and behind this line.


DISASTER !!!!!
 
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I hate the word "official" and the way it's used in titles.

Yeah i think we can still learn alot from this team on how we close out the rest of the year if we just fold up and shut down them we need a major personnel overhaul with a whole new coaching staff.
 

LAZARUS_LOGAN

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Exactly, and this team is finished this year because of it.

I know Gronkowski missed on the blitz, but it still doesn't excuse the horrible play on the offensive line.

We just aren't any good there and the same goes for the safety positions and nickel corner play.


Amen. But this is the crap that Jerry put in front of Romo. Big doesn't mean good. But I still maintain, against that defense, we shouldn't have had a rookie as Romo's lone protector in the backfield especially with this Oline.
 

LAZARUS_LOGAN

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Yeah i think we can still learn alot from this team on how we close out the rest of the year if we just fold up and shut down them we need a major personnel overhaul with a whole new coaching staff.


We need that period.
 
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We need that period.

I know that im just saying certain players and coaches can still play for their jobs for next year, this would make whatever coaching prospects out there find out whats really on our roster other then the most notables like Romo, Ware, Bryant, Jenkins, Ratliff, And Jones
 

Bob Sacamano

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They really fucked up the QB situation. Kitna is terrible now after being average, and McGee is a huge project.
 
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