Times Colonist

With Romo in TV booth, Cowboys are Prescott’s team now

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OXNARD, California — Dak Prescott climbed the stairs to the VIP tent that once served as Tony Romo’s perch for interviews at training camp, facing a phalanx of cameras similar to the one his predecesso­r and the longtime Dallas starter used to see.

It’s Prescott’s job now, and the second-year star quarterbac­k has the attention to prove it.

“Last year I came in and I was just trying to figure everything out,” Prescott said on the opening morning of camp in California.

“Everything I do [now] they’re watching. Not just you guys but my teammates, the coaches as well. But that’s fun to me. That’s something that I embrace.”

An afterthoug­ht this time a year ago as a fourthroun­d pick and third-teamer behind Romo and Kellen Moore, Prescott’s outlook first changed when Moore broke an ankle in a training camp practice. Then Romo went down with a back injury in the third preseason game.

Prescott answered with one of the best rookie seasons in NFL history, leading the Cowboys to the top seed in the NFC at 13-3 before a divisional playoff loss to Green Bay.

Romo was relegated to the backup job when he was healthy again, and is now preparing for his debut in the TV booth as the lead analyst for CBS after Dallas released him. The Cowboys went 1-11 without an injured Romo in a last-place 4-12 season the year before Prescott arrived.

“A lot more comfortabl­e than I ever thought I would be this time last year or beyond not having Romo,” said owner and general manager Jerry Jones, who gave Romo the first $100 million US contract in franchise history four years ago. “So that has everything to do with the year that Dak had and more importantl­y the way Dak is approachin­g this year.”

Last year, Prescott bristled at the idea of “vanilla defences” when he was coming off two strong preseason showings — the week before Romo got hurt. This year, he figures to hear the term “sophomore slump.” He’ll shrug at that, too.

Prescott won NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year honours over backfield mate and NFL rushing leader Ezekiel Elliott because he led the Cowboys to a franchise-record 11 straight wins.

The former Mississipp­i State standout, the first drafted quarterbac­k in seven years for Dallas, tied Ben Roethlisbe­rger’s rookie record of 13 wins and set rookie marks in passer rating (104.9) and fewest intercepti­ons (four, to go with 23 touchdowns).

 ?? GUS RUELAS, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Cowboys quarterbac­k Dak Prescott during a drill at training camp in Oxnard, California, on Tuesday.
GUS RUELAS, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cowboys quarterbac­k Dak Prescott during a drill at training camp in Oxnard, California, on Tuesday.

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