EIU's Romo Wins Walter Payton Award


The Sports Network
EIU's Tony Romo
Eastern Illinois quarterback Tony Romo was named the 16th winner of the Walter Payton Award tonight at the Division I-AA College Football Awards held in Chattanooga, TN on the eve of the I-AA national championship game.

The senior passed for 2,950 yards and 33 touchdowns in 2002, completing 237 of 363 passes (65.3 percent) in leading Eastern Illinois to an 8-3 record, Ohio Valley Conference co-title, and I-AA playoff berth. Romo headed one of the most prolific offenses in the nation during the 2002 season, as the Panthers averaged 37.7 points per game despite the presence of two I-A opponents and no sub-I-AA competition on its '02 slate. The Burlington, WI native finished his career with 84 touchdown passes, shattering the previous school mark of 75 held by current New York Giants offensive coordinator Sean Payton.

Said Eastern Illinois coach Bob Spoo: "Walter Payton exemplified what dedication and commitment can accomplish. Tony is a classic example of what can be achieved by following Payton's qualities. Tony earned the respect of his teammates by his work ethic. No matter how much individual success he achieved, he still was one of the hardest working players right up to his final collegiate game. That work ethic and leadership resulted in his teammates expecting to succeed. Tony is a quality young man who led his team to victories."

Romo began his 2002 campaign by passing for 319 yards and four touchdowns against I-A Hawaii, and followed that performance by completing 23 of 35 passes against Big 12 power Kansas State. In OVC play, Romo retained his form, completing 28 of 38 for 373 yards and four touchdowns in a win over Tennessee Tech, and came back the next week with 359 yards and two touchdowns against Eastern Kentucky. In the latter game, Romo made perhaps the biggest rush of his career, bolting for an eight-yard touchdown as time expired to give EIU a 25-24 win. The 6-3, 224-pounder wouldn't slow down after that, throwing for a combined 919 yards and 11 touchdowns against league foes Southeast Missouri, Tennessee State, and Murray State. For his efforts, Romo was named OVC Offensive Player of the Year, becoming the first player in league history to win three straight such honors.

Romo is the seventh quarterback back to win the Payton Award, and the first since Montana's Dave Dickenson in 1995. The senior became the first player from the Ohio Valley Conference to win the Payton, and only the second from the league to win a major I-AA Award. Murray State's Houston Nutt, now the head coach at Arkansas, won the Eddie Robinson Award in 1995.

Romo received 24 first-place votes and 268 points from the panel of 109 I-AA sports information directors and selected media. Following Romo in the voting were Villanova quarterback Brett Gordon, who earned 18 first-place votes and 245 total points, and Grambling State's Bruce Eugene, who had 21 first-place votes and 234 total points.

The Walter Payton Award was established in 1987 by The Sports Network.

2002 WALTER PAYTON AWARD VOTING
NAME (SCHOOL) 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th Total
Tony Romo (Eastern Illinois) 24 15 18 12 10 268
Brett Gordon (Villanova) 18 18 17 10 12 245
Bruce Eugene (Grambling State) 21 16 7 17 10 234
John Edwards (Montana) 12 11 13 13 8 177
Willie Ponder (Southeast Missouri) 1 7 7 14 12 94
Chas Gessner (Brown) 5 6 6 7 9 90
Carl Morris (Harvard) 6 4 5 7 6.5 81.5
Chaz Williams (Georgia Southern) 3 8 6 5 5 80
Allen Suber (Bethune-Cookman) 7 4 4 2 4 71
Kirwin Watson (Fordham) 3 5 6 2 10 67
P.J. Mays (Youngstown State) 2 5 2 5 6 52
Billy Napier (Furman) 2 4 5 2 2 47
Stephan Lewis (New Hampshire) 1 4 4 4 4 45
Dave Corley (William & Mary) 1 1 4 3 5 32
Ryan Johnson (Montana State) 2 0 3 1 2 23
Ryan Fuqua (Portland State) 0 1 2 3 2.5 18.5
*Jay Bailey (Austin Peay) 1 0 0 0 0 5
*Doug Baughman (Idaho State) 0 0 0 1 0 2

*write-in vote


NOTE: Voting was conducted by a panel of 109 I-AA media members and media relations professionals. A first-place vote is worth five points, a second-place vote is worth four points, a third-place vote is worth three points, a fourth-place vote is worth two points, and a fifth-place vote is worth one point. Voters received a ballot with stats and information for each of the 16 finalists for all three awards. Votes were due by Monday, December 2, 2002, following the final week of the regular season. Postseason play has no effect on the outcome of the awards.