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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Romo to rescue

QB leads Cowboys past Redskins

Washington linebacker London Fletcher attempts to stop Dallas running back Marion Barber in the first quarter. (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
By Joseph White Associated Press

LANDOVER, Md. — Tony Romo had to learn how to throw with four fingers instead of five, and how to celebrate with his left hand instead of his right.

He was successful on both counts Sunday night, returning just in time to help rescue the Dallas Cowboys’ season. His 25-yard pass to rookie Martellus Bennett with 10 1/2 minutes to play was the go-ahead touchdown in a 14-10 victory over the Washington Redskins, a must-win-come-true for a team that had been reeling without its offensive leader.

“Are we back to the old Cowboys?” receiver Terrell Owens said. “Who knows? But this is definitely a step in the right direction.”

Wearing a splint under the heavy bandage on his right hand to protect the broken pinkie that cost him three games, Romo overcame a pair of first-half interceptions to complete 19 of 27 passes for 198 yards. To compensate for the injury, he has spent weeks mastering a new throwing technique — which failed him on his one major mistake, a throw behind Owens that was intercepted deep in Redskins territory in the first half.

So when Bennett showed remarkable concentration to snag the big touchdown catch over safety Chris Horton while on the run at the goal line, Romo bounced up and down like a kid — and had to remember to do his high-fives with his left hand.

“I felt like the most awkward individual, when I’m like ‘Yeah!’ ” said Romo, raising his right hand and then lowering it quickly. When he did, the hand hit a reporter’s tape recorder. Fortunately, no harm was done.

“See?” Romo said with a laugh. “There it is.”

The victory gave the Cowboys a season split against their NFC East rival and improved their record to 6-4, tied with the Redskins and a half-game ahead of the Philadelphia Eagles. The threesome can virtually give up on catching the division-leading New York Giants (9-1), putting them into what promises to be a tight battle for wild-card berths.

Now it’s the Redskins’ turn to do some soul-searching. They’ve been held to one touchdown over their past two games and have lost back-to-back contests for the first time this season.

“This is the time in the season where those teams that actually are going upward start making that climb, if you will,” Washington coach Jim Zorn said. “And we’re not making — you know, we haven’t made the climb.”

If anything, cornerback Terence Newman’s return was more impressive than Romo’s. Back after missing five games with a sports hernia, he had a second-half interception deep in Cowboys territory and shut down Santana Moss, holding the Redskins’ best receiver to 29 yards on five catches. Newman batted away a pass to Moss on fourth-and-4 at the Dallas 37 with 6:40 remaining, ending Washington’s final drive.

“He was challenged, and I knew he was the type of guy who was going to meet a challenge,” Dallas coach Wade Phillips said.