Austin American-Statesman

Dallas finds relief after Romo scare

QB’s back OK despite leaving game early; Elliott, Prescott shine.

- By Tim Booth

Three plays were all it took for Dallas to get yet another injury scare surroundin­g Tony Romo.

The quarterbac­k lasted just 90 seconds into the Cowboys’ 27-17 preseason loss to the Seattle Seahawks on Thursday night before leaving with what appeared at first to be a potentiall­y significan­t injury, but ended up being minor.

Romo was tackled from behind by Seattle’s Cliff Avril on the third play from scrimmage as Romo scrambled from the pocket.

He immediatel­y grabbed at his back, crumpled on the field while trainers sprinted from the Dallas sideline and images of Romo’s injury problems from previous years flashed to mind.

Turned out it was all just a scare. Romo walked off the field without assistance, threw passes on the sideline and lobbied for a return to the game. Dallas coach

Jason Garrett opted to play it safe and Romo donned a baseball hat as a spectator the rest of the night.

“That was a perfect-timed situation. I was going into the slide and he obviously caught me from behind,” Romo said.

“In a weird way I feel good about the fact that was probably as tough of a hit I took on the back as I’ve had in the last five years. In that regard I feel very lucky that it could hold up and keep going.”

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones immediatel­y felt the anxiety, but said there should be no issue with Romo being ready for Week 1 of the season. Romo said his back felt fine other than typical soreness.

“I just think everyone had a scare,” Jones said. “And he was not hurt. He said he wasn’t hurt. He wanted to go back in. He could have gone back in and played but I praise Jason. It was his decision.”

Avril said he checked with some Dallas players to make sure Romo was OK.

“I thought he was going to try to throw it so I tried to swipe down and get his arm but I guess the force just, whatever, messed his back up . ... I’m never in the business of trying to hurt anybody,” Avril said.

What Romo saw from the sideline was an impressive initial flash from rookie run- ning back Ezekiel Elliott and a solid performanc­e by backup QB Dak Prescott against one of the top defenses in the NFL.

Elliott rushed for 48 yards on seven carries, includ- ing a 13-yard run where he knocked Seattle safety Kam Chancellor backward.

Prescott was solid playing against most of Seattle’s starting defense, finishing 17 of 23 for 116 yards, including a 17-yard TD pass that Jason Witten snatched away from K.J. Wright.

“I think I adjusted really well,” Elliott said. “It makes my job easier when I play behind that great offensive line. I can only think of one run where someone tackled me that wasn’t on the second level.”

Prescott is 39 of 50 for 454 yards, five touchdowns and no intercepti­ons in his three preseason games.

“I was ready to go at any point,” Prescott said.

Russell Wilson and Seattle’s No. 1 offense played into the second half, scoring on four of its final five possession­s including a pair of TD tosses by Wilson.

Wilson finished 16 of 21 for 192 yards, while Christine Michael averaged 8.3 yards per carry as Seattle got its running game going in the second half.

“Christine looked great ... hitting it and making really decisive cuts and stuff,” coach Pete Carroll said.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Tony Romo walks off after being tackled and grabbing his back early in Thursday’s game. Coach Jason Garrett held Romo out the rest of the way.
GETTY IMAGES Tony Romo walks off after being tackled and grabbing his back early in Thursday’s game. Coach Jason Garrett held Romo out the rest of the way.

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