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Romo Sparks Dallas' Win

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Published: November 30, 2007

IRVING, Texas - Standing on the sideline, scowling and gingerly holding his bandaged right arm, all Brett Favre could do was watch Tony Romo impersonate him.

The kid was good. Too good for Favre and the Green Bay Packers.

The Wisconsin native who spent all week denying Favre was his childhood hero sure played a lot like a young No. 4 on Thursday night - full of moxie and joy, but needing a bit of a high-wire act to send the Dallas Cowboys past the Packers 37-27 and into the lead for homefield advantage throughout the NFC playoffs.

Romo threw four touchdown passes to send the Cowboys (11-1) to their sixth straight win. The Packers (10-2) ended a six-game winning streak and are essentially two games behind Dallas in the chase for the conference's top spot with four games left.

The bigger concern for Green Bay is Favre's health.

Favre injured his right (throwing) elbow in the second quarter and didn't return, perhaps jeopardizing his run of 249 consecutive starts, a record that's about six seasons longer than the next-best by a quarterback. He has 10 days to heal before the Packers play again, Dec. 9 at home against Oakland. The injury could be similar to a banged-up nerve in his right elbow that knocked him out of a game last November.

Backup Aaron Rodgers, who spent the week pretending he was Romo in Green Bay practices, provided the kind of rally in which Favre usually specializes. He threw the first touchdown pass of his three-year career, but wasn't able to lead a Favre-esque rally.

The excitement of facing Favre brought out the best in Romo as he led the Cowboys to scores on their first five drives, capping the last three with touchdown passes. But once Rodgers came in, Romo lost his mojo, and so did Dallas.

A 27-10 lead frittered to 27-24, in part because of a failed fourth-down conversion when the Cowboys could have tried a field goal to stretch their lead to 30-17. Dallas really looked like it might blow it when Terrell Owens juggled a pass in the end zone and wound up flipping it over his head to Packers cornerback Al Harris for an interception.

Green Bay's bid for a tying field goal or go-ahead touchdown ended quickly, and Romo drove right back for a lead-stretching score - to Patrick Crayton, not Owens.

Trailing 34-24, Rodgers was able to get only a field goal to get the Packers within a touchdown.

Green Bay needed a stop from the defense, but with lineman Kabeer Gbaja-Biamila and cornerback Charles Woodson inactive with injuries, the unit wasn't up to the task. A clock-draining drive resulted in Nick Folk's third field goal and a 10-point lead with 1:03 remaining in regulation - and with Favre nowhere in sight.

He had run back to the locker room with 2:23 left.

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