USA TODAY International Edition

Jones wants the best for Romo

- Jarrett Bell @ JarrettBel­l USA TODAY Sports

PHOENIX Tony Romo was nowhere to be seen at the resort where NFL owners gathered this week for a low- intensity round of league meetings.

But the quarterbac­k- in- limbo sure had a heavy presence as conduit for buzz. You’d think Romo would have moved on from the Dallas Cowboys by now. That it hasn’t happened yet just fuels more intrigue. What’s the holdup? “I have his interest at the top of my list,” owner Jerry Jones told USA TODAY Sports. “How this thing evolves over the next few weeks or months will be dictated by what Tony wants to do.”

Jones gave legitimacy to what has been widely speculated — that Romo, who will be 37 next month, hasn’t made a final decision about whether he even wants to continue his career. Romo barely played over the last two seasons because of three major injuries and lost his job to rookie Dak Prescott last year.

Knowing Romo and his competitiv­e DNA to a degree, I’d think he doesn’t want to go out like this. The chance to win a title, which means landing with the right team — hello, Houston Texans or Denver Broncos — and proving that he still can be a difference- maker has to be a strong lure. Then again, no one can speak for what’s inside his heart and the condition of his body like Romo himself. He has been publicly mum, while reports indicate Fox and CBS want to add him to their broadcast rosters.

“As we stand here talking about these circumstan­ces, he has some of the best options you could have,” Jones said, having stepped out of a meeting for a break. “But I think he can still win at a championsh­ip level.”

I asked Jones about the mixed reports that surfaced before the start of free agency and whether he and Romo had agreed on the quarterbac­k being released. “It’s definition,” Jones said. In other words, when Jones thinks “release,” he apparently mean release or trade.

“There’s ambiguity with this,” he added.

“Ambiguity” has long been one of Jones’ favorite terms, so it’s fitting that it applies now as the fate of the erstwhile face of the franchise dangles in the wind.

Meanwhile, the Cowboys are hoping to get something for Romo — my guess is that the value for an aging passer with an injury history might be a conditiona­l pick in the latter half of the draft, which could improve in value if he’s healthy enough to play and further increase if his new team wins in January.

Texans owner Bob McNair, who got burned in last year’s Brock Osweiler gamble, has a sense of the Romo dynamics in play with Jones. “He saw the trade we made,” McNair said, alluding to the startling deal that sent Osweiler, his $ 16 million salary for 2017 and a second- round pick to the Cleveland Browns in a salary dump. “( Jones) wants to make a trade. I understand that. But he’s between a rock and a hard place with that.”

There have been no trade discussion­s between the Cowboys and Texans involving Romo, a person with knowledge of the situation told USA TODAY Sports, requesting anonymity because of the sensitivit­y of the situation.

We’ll see who blinks first. Jones reiterated that he doesn’t have a timeline for this, even while carrying Romo’s $ 24.7 million salary cap figure. Yet he also has said he wants to do right by Romo and do right by the Cowboys, which takes us back to the ambiguous intersecti­on of release, trade or retire.

One thing is for certain: Jones’ “do- right rule” wouldn’t frown on Romo playing for the Texans, even if it presents the awkward scenario of one of the most popular players in Cowboys history landing with their intrastate rivals. In Houston, Romo’s doings would be big news in Dallas — perhaps even stealing attention from the Cowboys. Jones scoffed at the notion. “That would not be a problem for me,” he said.

McNair put the prospect of Dallas being stung by a Romo revival inside a bigger picture. “If he ends up anywhere and Dak doesn’t play well, it won’t look good,” he said. “I don’t know that ( Jones is) worried about that.”

If Romo ultimately lands in Houston with the task of grasping a new playbook, Texans coach Bill O’Brien likely would find a mental match capable of operating his complex offense — which Osweiler clearly struggled to do. Romo, with 14 seasons under his belt, is like a coach on field.

Assuming a lot of things transpire to make that a reality.

 ?? ERICH SCHLEGEL, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, left, says of Tony Romo: “He has some of the best options you could have.”
ERICH SCHLEGEL, USA TODAY SPORTS Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, left, says of Tony Romo: “He has some of the best options you could have.”

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