Tony Romo has been one of the more talked about new broadcasters in recent memory as the CBS Sports analyst impressed football fans in his debut season by correctly predicting many plays ahead of time.

Now he may be in for a huge pay day that would reportedly make him the highest-paid sports broadcaster in history. Michael McCarthy of Front Office Sports reported that the multi-year deal could pay Romo between $10 million and $14 million annually, according to sources, and that Romo could take over as analyst on Monday Night Football, or possibly another NFL TV package.

If this plan goes through, Romo could replace Booger McFarland as the analyst on “Monday Night Football.” Romo could also potentially quarterback ESPN’s NFL game coverage if parent Disney acquires a Sunday afternoon game package from rival FOX Sports, CBS Sports, and NBC Sports during the next round of NFL TV negotiations in 2020-2021.

No deal has been signed yet, and one source said any negotiation for a new contract for Romo might not wrap up until a month or two after Super Bowl 54. CBS also has a right to match any offers for Romo, according to sources.

McCarthy also laid out comparable salaries. He reported that the 39-year-old former Dallas Cowboy quarterback is currently making about $4 million annually on the final year of his three-year rookie broadcasting deal at CBS. Troy Aikman, Fox’s top NFL game analyst, makes around $7.5 million per year.

Before he left to coach the Oakland Raiders, Jon Gruden earned over $6 million a year from ESPN to call Monday Night Football. During the early 1990s, John Madden made $8 million a year.