Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - August 23, 2015, Winnipeg, Manitoba C M Y K PAGE 7
winnipegfreepress. com FOOTBALL WINNIPEG FREE PRESS, SUNDAY, AUGUST 23, 2015 B7
O XNARD, Calif. — Tony Romo crouches to give his little
son Hawkins instructions on running a pass route
while Jason Witten carries one of his kids nearby, surrounded
by autograph seekers.
This is the training camp tradition after practice these
days for one of the best quarterback- tight end combinations
in NFL history, and the steady force in the Dallas offence
for nearly a decade.
Their desire to win a Super Bowl hasn’t changed since
Romo and Witten came into the league together 12 years
ago, or from when Romo became a starter three years later.
But their appreciation for how difficult it is to win a title has
grown, along with the friendship that formed through the
disappointments in trying.
“ When you are competitors like we are and you’ve gone
through the highs and lows like we have, you grow,” said
Witten, who needs 57 catches to become the NFL’s second
tight end with 1,000 for his career, trailing only Tony
Gonzalez. “ And then off the field, just the friendship and
brotherhood. You get married. You have children. All in that
course of when you first met.”
The perception of the commitment for each of these teammates
differed for years, reputations sewn a year apart
starting with Witten famously running 30 yards without a
helmet after a catch in 2007. When the next season ended
in a blowout loss at Philadelphia that kept Dallas out of the
playoffs, Romo infamously said his life would be pretty
good if that was the worst thing that happened to him.
Only recently have views on Romo been changing, partly
because he battled through three back injuries in just a
year and a half to have the most efficient season of his
career in 2014.
Then the Cowboys came close to winning multiple playoff
games for the first time since Troy Aikman led the last of
three Super Bowl- winning runs after the 1995 season. A loss
at Green Bay in the divisional round turned in the fourth
quarter when Romo’s deep throw to Dez Bryant on fourthand-
two was overturned on review after being ruled a catch
near the goal line.
“ When you’re in the NFL and you’re young, it’s all about
yourself,” said Romo, the franchise leader in yards passing
( 33,270) and touchdowns ( 242) — ahead of Hall of Famers
Aikman and Super Bowl winner Roger Staubach. “ And as
you get older and you create the relationships that you have,
through a Jason Witten and other people, you want to share
those moments. Playoff games. Super Bowl.”
Romo also frequently faced questions about his leadership
in the locker- room, but those have mostly subsided. When
nobody — Witten included — could get Bryant to calm down
on the sideline after a fight with cornerback Tyler Patmon
early in camp this year, Romo slowly approached the scene.
And Bryant quietly walked away with him.
“ He’s real. There’s nothing fake,” Bryant said. “ If I’m doing
something wrong, Tony’s not afraid to let me know.”
While Bryant is Romo’s most dangerous target these
days, Witten will go down as his most consistent. They lead
the NFL in connections between quarterback and tight end
with 632 since 1991, according to STATS. That’s as far back
as STATS tracks the numbers. They are second in yards,
behind San Diego’s Philip Rivers and Antonio Gates.
Romo dominates the season charts for Dallas quarterbacks,
and Witten has the NFL season record for catches by
a tight end ( 110 in 2012). The former Tennessee player likely
will be at least 300 catches ahead of Michael Irvin on the
Cowboys’ career list when he retires, and Romo and Witten
could end up with as many completions together as Hall of
Famer Irvin had in his 12- year career ( 750).
“ As much as they’ve played together there is always something
new: ‘ The guy covered me differently on this particular
route; he played with this kind of leverage,’” coach Jason
Garrett said. “ So the fact that they know each other so well,
communicate so well, I think they can take full advantage
of those situations.”
Romo and Witten don’t figure to match Irvin’s three Super
Bowls with Aikman and NFL rushing leader Emmitt Smith.
They’re only worried about the first one. If it happens, their
embrace could last a few seconds — at least.
“ If it’s just you, it just seems a little bit like, ‘ All right. It’s
fine.’ But to have people with you, that makes it special, I
think,” Romo said. “ And being with a bunch of people you
care about, it makes it really enjoyable to go through the
process and through the whole journey.”
Together, Romo and Witten have lost four season finales
with a post- season berth on the line, and their playoff
opener after the 2007 season when they were the top seed
in the NFC. Their first playoff game after Romo became
the starter in 2006 was his famous flub of the snap that
prevented a potential go- ahead field goal in a 21- 20 loss at
Seattle.
“ I think the greatest thing I can ever say about Tony is
through the tough times and all that was being said, his
focus was simply on becoming the best quarterback that he
could become,” Witten said. “ He always had a rare ability
to kind of be above it and focus on what really mattered. I
respect that. It’s not easily done.”
And it’s not easy for two players to spend 13 years together
in the NFL. Never mind that it will probably be at least
15 years, with both under contract at least through 2017.
“ We want to win just as bad as for the team as for those
guys,” sixth- year safety Barry Church said. “ They’ve been
through it all. I know they want to win bad as hell.”
That’s one thing that hasn’t changed.
— The Associated Press
By Schuyler Dixon
Cowboys’ Romo, Witten
one of top QB- TE combos of all time
1- 2
punch
TONY ROMO and Jason Witten of the Cowboys have
more completions than any quarterback- tight end combination
in the NFL since 1991, as far back as STATS
can go. Here’s a look at some of the top QB- TE combos
in league history:
Romo . and Witten: Beyond the 632 completions, they
are second with 7,139 yards. They aren’t quite as prolific
when it comes to touchdowns, going back to 1940. Their
35 TDs are tied for 11th with Lynn Dickey- Paul Coffman
( Green Bay, 1979- 85) and Matt Ryan- Tony Gonzalez
( Atlanta, 2009- 13).
. Philip Rivers and Antonio Gates, San Diego: They are
the most prolific under all three categories combined.
Rivers and Gates lead with 7,525 yards and have a
19- touchdown edge with 72 on the all- time list that goes
back to 1940. They are second to Romo and Witten with
593 completions.
. Tom Brady and Rob Gronkowski, New England: They
don’t yet crack the top five in completions and yards, but
are already second to Rivers and Gates with 53 touchdowns
in just five seasons. If both stay healthy, they’ll be
high on the other lists as well. They won their first Super
Bowl together last season.
. John Elway and Shannon Sharpe, Denver: The pair of
Hall of Famers is third in yards ( 5,941), fourth in completions
( 452) and tied for seventh in TDs ( 41) despite playing
just eight seasons together. They won consecutive
Super Bowls in Elway’s final two seasons.
. Ben Roethlisberger and Heath Miller, Pittsburgh: They
are third in completions ( 486), fourth in yards ( 5,438)
and ninth in touchdowns ( 39) going back to 2005.
Like Elway and Sharpe, they’ve won two Super Bowls
together.
. Ken Stabler and Dave Casper, Oakland and Houston:
They are 10th on the all- time touchdowns list with 38,
most of them coming with the Raiders from 1974- 79.
They won the Super Bowl with Oakland after the 1976
season. Casper is in the Hall of Fame. Stabler, who died
of colon cancer July 8 at age 69, is a senior finalist for
the class of 2016.
. Dan Fouts and Kellen Winslow, San Diego: Another
Hall of Fame pair along with Elway and Sharpe, and tied
with them for seventh with 41 touchdowns. But Fouts
and Winslow never made it to the Super Bowl in four
straight playoff trips from 1979- 82.
. Peyton Manning and Dallas Clark, Indianapolis: These
two would have been high on all the lists if Manning had
stayed with the Colts rather than moving on to Denver.
They won a Super Bowl and are fifth all- time with 44
touchdowns, but not in the top five in yards and completions.
The TD total is one behind Drew Bledsoe- Ben
Coates ( New England, 1993- 2000) and one ahead of Hall
of Famer Sonny Jurgensen and Jerry Smith ( Washington,
1965- 74).
— The Associated Press
Some of
the top
passing
duos
in the
NFL’s past
GUS RUELAS / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES BRANDON WADE / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
Quarterback Tony Romo ( left) and tight end Jason Witten ( right) have teamed for 632 completions, 7,139 yards and 35 touchdowns.
DAVID J. PHILLIP / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
Tony Romo and Jason Witten also hang out together off the field.
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