Albuquerque Journal

Jerry Jones holds Romo hostage as Broncos, Texans wait in wings

- BY WOODY PAIGE

Dudley Do Wrong of the Dallas Cowboys has backed himself into an isolated corner of his own Jerry World, and he can’t escape until he’s utterly humiliated. Day 6: Tony Romo Held Hostage. How much longer before Jar Jar blinks?

Perhaps Pro Football Hall of Fame officials should apologize and announce their accounting firm made a mistake by giving them the wrong envelope, and that Pat Bowlen actually belongs in, and Jerry Jones is way out.

At the recent NFL Combine, Jones, in addressing the Romo matter with a group of writers, said the two “will work in the best way we can in the mutual interest for Tony and the Dallas Cowboys” and “when you’ve got a situation like we’ve got, we’ll do the do-right rule.”

It was implied that if released, Romo wouldn’t come back to haunt his old team with another division team such as Washington, and the owner wouldn’t trade his quarterbac­k to a franchise for which he didn’t care to play. The reports out of the Cowboys on Wednesday praised The Jer for electing to “do right” in letting Tony go so he and his eventual team — the Broncos or the Texans — quickly would settle a contract and make plans for moving ahead.

Romo taped a homemade video for Instagram saying goodbye to the Cowboys and thanking everyone in Dallas. Whoa, though! On Thursday, when the official phase of free agency began, Jones called a reverse and, with a tightened face (aided by unnatural measures), that he wasn’t releasing Romo.

Rather than following his own do-right rule, Jones decided he could coerce the Texans and the Broncos into bidding-war trade, and to heck with Romo and his feelings.

If Jones hadn’t performed his Texas Hold-Em up medicine minstrel trick, the Broncos probably would already have reached an agreement with Romo in John Elway’s latest “Plan A.” The Broncos would sign Romo to a threeyear contract, laden with incentive clauses and bonuses, and trade Trevor Siemian to the Jets to acquire another mid-draft choice.

In the meantime, baseball guy Paul DePodesta, of “Moneyball,” who is the chief strategy officer of Browns football, pulled off a basketball deal — basically buying a second-right draft pick (circumvent­ing NFL rules) by taking on Brock Osweiler’s $16 million salary for 2017 — as a prelude to dumping the former Broncos’ quarterbac­k.

Momentaril­y, it appeared that Houston had taken the lead in the Romo race.

Jones was grinning like an Arkansas hog in slop, thinking he had two cubic rubes. Except that Elway has said privately that the Romo matter wouldn’t be addressed unless he was a free agent — so his contract could be reworked (lowered). Then, it became clear that the Texans wouldn’t trade for Romo, either, choosing to wait until he is unrestrain­ed.

Romo went off Instagram and into seclusion, and Mr. Do Wrong, whose gambit didn’t succeed, hasn’t been heard from since.

Apparently, Jones will keep Romo for a while, hoping Houston GM Rick Smith, a one-time media relations assistant for the Broncos, or Elway will flutter their eyelids.

Last year the Texans thought they beat the Broncos in the Brock battle. Turned out, the Texans were incorrect.

The Broncos signed Cowboys castoff guard Ronald Leary. The Broncos still need a defensive end, a nose tackle, a tight end, a right tackle, a left tackle, an inside linebacker and a backup cornerback.

And, indubitabl­y, there’s the Texas Standoff over Romo.

While the Patriots become more formidable by doing a lot right in the past week.

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