The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Tony Romo remains with CBS after agreeing to long-term contract

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Tony Romo will remain with CBS as its top NFL analyst after agreeing to a record extension.

CBS Sports spokeswoma­n Jen Sabatelle said the network and Romo have agreed to a long-term contract. The New York Post reported Romo’s new deal is worth $17 million a year. If the former Dallas Cowboys star were still playing, that would make him the 17th highest-paid quarterbac­k next season.

CBS’ deal with the NFL expires after the 2022 season, but Romo’s contract goes beyond that. CBS is expected to retain its rights when the next round of negotiatio­ns start, which could happen this year once a new collective bargaining agreement with players is finalized.

Romo was hired by CBS in 2017 when he retired after 14 seasons and signed a three-year deal that averaged $3 million per season. He quickly made an impact after being paired with Jim Nantz. Romo was widely hailed as the best analyst to debut since John Madden. Romo’s new contract eclipses the $8 million per year that Madden received with Fox. Adjusting for inflation, the current value of Madden’s contract is $14 million.

CBS was favored to retain Romo. It had the right to match his asking price during its exclusive negotiatin­g window. Romo never played in a Super Bowl but will get to call his second one in three seasons next year.

ESPN was expected to make an aggressive bid for him to move to the “Monday Night Football” booth but never got the chance.

ESPN is likely to retool its booth again after lukewarm reviews for Joe Tessitore and Booger McFarland.

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