Off the field, Bill Romanowski was a caring father and devoted husband.
On the field, Romo was unstoppable, terrorizing the NFL for sixteen brutal years.
Some players called him a throwback, some called him mean, some called him dirty. But they all respected him and would much rather have played with him than against him. Coaches loved Romo for the heart and soul he gave to the game. He was rewarded with two Pro Bowl appearances and four Super Bowl rings, but it all came at a heavy price: dozens of concussions that have led to dizzy spells, memory lapses . . . and questionable choices that undermined his integrity. Would he do it all over again? Romo the intimidating linebacker would in a heartbeat. Bill Romanowski, however, would do things differently today.
Whether it was in high school, at Boston College, or with the NFL, Romo vowed to himself that he would outwork and outhustle everyone else. Practice? Loved it; he'd play like it was a game and attack his teammates as if they were opponents. Game day? He'd work himself into a state of invincibility. If you were a tight end, running back, or quarterback with the wrong uniform, you were marked for elimination. Nutrition? He would consult top nutritionists, looking for the best foods, an extraordinary range of supplements, and alternative remedies, anything that would help give him an edge. It would lead to a controversial relationship with BALCO.
Treatment? He would try almost anything that would help with his performance, keep his body healthy, and help it recover from the beatings he took and gave on Sundays. Phentermine, THG, hyperbaric chambers, IVs. He would experiment with substances and methods that the NFL had never heard of, and he'd become an expert who teammates and friends would turn to. Endurance? He never missed a game to injury, and once played an entire season with a partially torn knee ligament. Intimidation? From trash talk to mind games to nasty hits and breaking fingers, Romo would roam the field seeking confrontation -- and usually find it.
Through it all -- through his years with the San Francisco 49ers, the Philadelphia Eagles, the Denver Broncos, and the Oakland Raiders -- Romo was driven by something else: the fear of failure, the fear of losing it all. Who knew what a head coach or an owner would be thinking or what young player was in the wings ready to take his hard-won position. He didn't dare allow someone else to decide his fate, so he did whatever it took to live his dreams and ward off the dragons of self-doubt that pushed him . . . until his body betrayed him and his morality was compromised.
Romo is a jolting, candid, and inspiring rocket ride into the heart of the NFL and a look at what it costs to be an elite athlete today in a world of impossible expectations. Read it -- and try not to wince.
Romo: My Life on the Edge: Living Dreams and Slaying Dragons FROM OUR EDITORS
Bill Romanowski is probably the only NFL player who has been repeatedly compared unfavorably to Saddam Hussein. Widely acknowledged to be the dirtiest player in football, "Romo" has been fined hundreds of thousands of dollars for unsportsmanlike conduct. Yet off the field, this giant hulk instantaneously changes from hit man into family man, gently raising two kids with his beloved wife. Romo is an attempt to reconcile these Jekyll-and-Hyde shifts. Romanowski achieves this Herculean task not by claiming that his 34 concussions affected his behavior but by admitting his use of chemical performance enhancers. His revelations about NFL drug abuse will shock fans and make him more enemies -- if that's possible. Bone-crushing honesty.
FROM THE PUBLISHER
Bill Romanowski has written the football book that needed to be
written and will take readers where they have not gone before.
Romanowksi is just the guy to promise -- and fulfill the promise -- that his
revelations will generate a huge amount of media discussion.
Romanowski, with 16 seasons in pro football, has written an NFL Dr. Jeykll and Mr. Hyde -- a tale about a football player
who wants to maim his opponents but carry on a normal family life away
from the game. "It will be a story of a guy most people think is crazy,
the guy who is out on the field being a warrior and the gladiator, the
guy who would do anything to be the best he could be," he said when beginning the book. Romo talks plenty of smack about his own Dr. Jekyll, the linebacker who spit
in the face of wide receiver J. J. Stokes; punched out his own Raiders
teammate Marcus Williams; broke the jaw of Giants quarterback Kerry
Collins; and was fined hundreds of thousands of dollars by the NFL.
He is the most hated and dirtiest player in the NFL, but that's not
where the juiciest elements come it. Romanowski has been a central
figure in the BALCO case that has attracted national attention to the
increasingly controversial subject of sports supplements, and he has promised to reaveal everything -- coming completely clean -- about BALCO, the designer
steroid THG, and the diet pill phentermine, which is now banned by the
NFL because of Romanowski, who was indicted (and acquitted) on four
felony counts of using the drug.
But in addition to being controversial, Romo intends his book
to be educational, too, including lessons learned from some of the biggest
coaching names in the game. Romo
is a full-throttle inside look at football, no one who has
ever cared about the sport can afford to ignore it.
SYNOPSIS
The one book all football fans have been waiting for: the full-throttle
autobiography of renowned bad boy Bill "Romo" Romanowski.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
This is the oddest football autobiography ever published because the book is 30% football and 70% apothecary. Romanowski, a former all-pro NFL linebacker and a member of four Super Bowl winners, was known in his day for his reckless abandon on the field-and his dirty hits. In the beginning, he describes"a reawakening of my conscience," but then, with demented relish, goes on to talk about his dirty hits on opponents and teammates alike, and his singular determination to get his body in shape so he could play in the NFL. He goes on about the powers of good nutrition, but soon starts naming the drugs and steroids that put him on the field: THG, DMSO cream, prescription strength Motrin, Supac, Naprosyn, ephedrine (which, along with heat stroke, reported helped kill NFL player Korey Stringer in 2001, but has a fan in Romanowski: "Ephedrin has its benefits.... It worked for me") and Phentermine, an appetite suppressant with amphetamine-like effects for which Romanowski would stand trial for illegally obtaining-and be acquitted. What is almost as shocking are the innumerable concussions that Romanowski received during his career and how he suffered significant memory loss-but kept on playing. It seemed inevitable that Romanowski would get caught up in the BALCO steroid trial of Victor Conte Jr., who copped a plea this past summer to conspiracy to distribute anabolic steroids and money laundering. Romanowski testified, with immunity, before Conte's grand jury. Romanowski has a way with words ("My rage was the orgasm of my fear"; "I got his testicles in my hand and twisted them with all my anger"), which 60 Minutes plans to feature in an interview in October. This book is sure to make noise this fall and probably head straight for the bestseller lists. (Oct.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.