In order to fully analyze a player's ability you have to read between the
stat lines and look at the bigger picture down to their own performance. An
obvious MVP candidate so far would be Kurt Warner, who not only leagues the lead
in passing yards and touchdown passes, but has brought his team to 7-4 and
leading the division. But if you read between the lines, the Cardinals tell a
different story. Kurt Warner throws to arguably the best receiving tandem in the
league with Anquan Boldin and Larry Fitzgerald, both of which are top five in
the league in receiving yards per game.
It might go both ways; however, does Kurt Warner make the receivers Larry
Fitzgerald and Anquan Boldin who they are? Does he make them the top receivers
in the game? Kurt Warner isn't doing it by himself. Boldin, although missing
games, leads the league in yards after the catch even as a receiver. Only five
of the top eleven yards after the catch receivers are wide receivers.
Why does that matter? Yards after the catch is a stat that is mostly
dominated by running backs catching balls in the flats or with dump-off throws.
Just how good is Boldin at yards after the catch? Boldin not only leads the
league in yards after the catch, but he has missed two games in which the gap
could potentially have separated. Not only does Kurt Warner have the leading
receiver with yards after the catch, but also Larry Fitzgerald ranks eighth for
receivers in the category.
Tony Romo, on the other hand, not only has the stats, but has showed his
value as well. At this point in the season, Romo is averaging 278 yards per
game, 40 yards less per game than Warner, but Warner attempts 7 more passes a
game. As a result, with the same amount of attempts, Romo would average more
yards a game.
Touchdown wise, Kurt Warner has thrown 21 touchdowns to Romo's 18 touchdowns.
However, Romo has played three less games, and averages 2.25 touchdowns a game
to Warner's 1.9 touchdowns a game.
The main focus of the award is value. After watching Romo leave the lineup
with injury, Brad Johnson, super bowl champion quarterback, led the team to a
1-2 record. The only win came with a defensive hold to 9 points.
Even with the addition of Roy Williams, Brad Johnson threw only two touchdown
passes in three games, and threw for five interceptions. Brad Johnson threw only
two less interceptions than Tony Romo did in five less games. During Johnson's
tenure at quarterback, the team scored a total of 41 points over three games,
the same amount of points the team scored against the Eagles in one game with
Romo at quarterback. As Romo returned to the lineup, the team has gone 2-0 with
an important win over the division rival Washington Redskins.
A common rebuttal for Tony Romo's excellent play was his array of weapons.
Romo's weapons and the addition of Roy Williams went silent under Brad Johnson.
Terrell Owens, who previously had a 36 yard per game average under Brad Johnson,
exploded against the San Francisco 49ers for over 200 yards receiving due to the
great play and deep ball of Tony Romo.
Through the revival of the Dallas Cowboys since the return of Tony Romo,
coupled with his statistical output, Romo demonstrates his value and
significance to the team. As the Cowboys went from a super bowl contender with
Romo, to one of the worst teams when he left with injury, and back to playoff
shape as he returned to the team, Romo shows his ability and value to the Dallas
Cowboys. Thus he should be the leader for MVP