Imperial Valley Press

Romo to play PGA Tour event in Dominican Republic

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PEBBLE BEACH (AP) — Former Dallas Cowboys quarterbac­k Tony Romo is making his PGA Tour debut next month in the Dominican Republic.

As a player, not a broadcaste­r.

Romo, now the lead NFL Romo analyst for

CBS Sports, has received a sponsor’s exemption to play in the Puntacana Resort & Club Championsh­ip on March 22-25. The first-year event is held opposite the Dell Technologi­es Match Play, a World Golf Championsh­ips event that attracts the top 64 in the world.

“You never know how good you are until you go play and perform,” Romo said Wednesday. “Obviously, the odds going against these guys are not great. I think we all know that. But I think that’s what makes it really fun and enjoyable. I also think that the challenge that’s presented is what a competitor really wants.”

He joins a short list of athletes who have tried to compete against those who play for a living.

Mark Rypien, the former Washington Redskins quarterbac­k, played the Kemper Open in 1992. He shot rounds of 80-91 and missed the cut by 27 shots.

Ken Harrelson, an AllStar outfielder for the Boston Red Sox in 1968, qualified for the 1972 British Open at Muirfield and missed the cut by one shot. John Brodie qualified for the U.S. Open while playing for the San Francisco 49ers and later won on the PGA Tour Champions circuit. Most recently, Golden State Warriors guard Steph Curry played a Web. com Tour event outside San Francisco. He shot 74-74 and missed the cut by 11 shots.

Tournament­s are allotted unrestrict­ed exemptions — Michelle Wie received them when she was a teenager — and there invariably are complaints from other players who might feel as though he is taking a spot from someone who has a better chance. “I know a lot of these guys, so I’ll just tell them, ‘Get out there. Let’s play a couple rounds and see what happens.’ I’ll joke with them a little bit,” Romo said. “But I think if you play good, they will respect you. If you don’t play good, then you really aren’t going to be respected very well. If you hit a 5-iron ... and you can put it to a back right pin and fade it in there, they’re going to respect you. And if you can’t, then you’ll probably get some blow back.

“So I understand that,” he said. “That’s why you’ve got to go out there and play well.”

Romo has tried to qualify for the U.S. Open three times, most recently failing to advance from the first stage a year ago. He reached the final stage in 2010 and was tied for 10th after the first 18 holes. But he started the next round with a quadruple bogey and was 7 over when play was stopped for the second time because of weather.

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