Hello friends, Jim Nantz here. These are the words fans typically hear on a CBS opening broadcast, whether golf or basketball, but mainly football. He is the lead groomsman and then steps in five-plus year broadcaster Tony Romo. Handles himself with nothing but class and dignity by his peers, but at the same time, he is at his utmost finest.
Take opening week, for example. Romo is assigned to the Philadelphia Eagles vs. New England Patriots. As most know, this is a single, unwasteful opportunity for Mac Jones to play against a competitive contender and leave behind an instrumental football game and the intact bearing of recent Tom Brady and his Krafted homecoming.
Romo and Nantz’s voice is heard loud and clear after the Eagles early positive lead. In his Barney tune-sound, Romo cannot help but echo the sounds of his ultra-positive voice about the implementation of GM Howie Roseman by owner Jeffrey Lurie.
There were positive strides out of Jalen Hurts, Mac Jones’ Alabama teammate. Still, the Patriots could not suffer longer as some immense contributions were accredited to Kendrick Bournes in the end zone, and as Romo enunciated wow in response to Christian Gonzalez’s first game with New England.
Gonzalez accumulated one monster sack and stacked other numbers to help his team fall short. What came all short was Romo’s of not his golf swing. Tiger Woods stated other than Romo, there is no other celebrity or football veteran to play as good.
Tony hurt himself, saying Micah Parsons was comparable to Lawrence Taylor. He might be a tremendous modern-day version, but we are not in the latter stages for those to soundly critique the sharpness and dedication those two left. Romo is a former Dallas Cowboy, but sometimes we must nip it in the bud and say wow.
The Dallas Cowboys did blow out the New York Jets without Aaron Rodgers and decimate the likelihood that Cedee Lamb and others will be a crop of poor dandelions. Puka Nacua may have played the best yesterday with 15 receptions and 20 targets, but he only averaged a mere 9.8 yards per touch.
So, the Dallas Cowboys can feel enlightened to believe Mike McCarthy is a Super Bowl play-calling head coach for a reason, and he is hitting all the buttons less far with Dak Prescott after lessening his interceptions to 0 and increasing his completion percentage to 71 percent against two concealing secondaries.
The Dallas Cowboys are 2-0, and Parsons and Romo are, too, in their respective fields of environmental work.



