Tony Romo made the trip to California last Friday to participate in several interviews on Super Bowl radio row.

The Cowboys quarterback was in San Francisco to promote Courtyard's special Super Bowl stadium suite.

SportsDay's David Moore caught up with Romo and got an update on the QB's left collarbone. Moore also wrote about Romo's thoughts on Terrell Owens being eligible for the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Romo's first interview of the day was with FOX Sports' Colin Cowherd. During that 10-minute session, Romo provided a lengthy response to why Cowboys fans should be optimistic about the 2016 season.

Romo, who will turn 36 in April, has said he thinks he has four or five years left to play. But he also understands his window to win a Super Bowl is closing.

"I treat every year as if it's [my] last," Romo told Cowherd. "But you treat that from 25, 26 on. I understand where I'm at in my age. But I think our job is to kind of turn back those hands of time a little bit and prolong it as long as you can."

Here are some other highlights from Romo's interviews with The Herd, Pro Football Talk Live and NFL Network.

On his ability to get the job done late in games: "I've worked very hard. I like to think I'll stack myself up with anybody at the end of games here since I've changed a few things a few years back. That approach has really helped me take that next step to feel very comfortable and confident when I get in those situations."

On how he handles the talk of the Cowboys drafting a QB or signing one in free agency: "We'll say it this way, if someone's good enough to take your job, you're probably not as good as you thought. For me, I've been a backup. I've been behind guys who were good players and I learned a lot from them. I'm going to do the same for whoever comes in. We get a free agent, I'll do the same and help him. If we draft a kid, I'll do the same.

"At the end of the day, I feel very comfortable and confident in [my] skills. I'm obviously chasing a Super Bowl, that's what I'm trying to bring to Dallas. There's only one way to accomplish that and it's to leave it all on the field.

"As far as people around you, you want to help everybody. I don't feel it's in anybody's best interest to just go and put your head in the sand and don't help other people. I don't think that's the way we should be as professional athletes. At the same time, if you're good enough and you believe in your abilities and you really just have the ability, you go out and play and I think all of that stuff takes care of itself."

On what it feels like to break a collarbone: "Your body goes into a little shock. That's how you know you broke something. I've learned it enough times. What happens is, 'Hey can you get up?' Hold on, I'm going through a little shock for a second. You're literally like, 'OK, I broke something.' You almost can't breathe a little bit. It's like your body is going into shock for just a second. In football, that's actually kind of normal. But over time you understand that everybody is going to have that happen once or twice at some point. When I felt it, [the athletic trainers and doctors were like] 'What is it?' I'm like, 'broken collarbone.' They're like, 'Well, let's go check.' I'm like, 'Well, I'm in shock, just give me a second.'"

On his journey from going undrafted to being a franchise QB: "We love to go on and be something but you don't envision where you're going to be 10 years later. I feel like for me it was incremental. Each step kind of felt normal. You battled your butt off to try to make the team and then you tried to be the backup and then you tried to be the starter. And then you want to be good and you want to be in the Pro Bowl and then you want to win a championship. It's just things happen in that kind of progression. [When] you look back and you're like it kind of felt normal. You really didn't do anything that crazy in the process other than just go attack it."

On if he has any regrets about coming back when he did instead of allowing his collarbone more time to heal: "No, because at that time, we didn't have many games left. If I waited any longer, we're not going to have a chance at the playoffs any way. There's really no point. For me, it was like if you're going to come back, you're going to come back then. It obviously re-broke because it wasn't strong enough yet. But you take that risk when you come back. I know the risks. It's a bone, it'll heal. It's not rocket science."

On if he works out harder now to prevent injuries: "Yeah, you have to. When you have a back injury, you have to work out differently. For me, I have a lot of rehab stuff that you have to do. If I would've been smarter when I was young, you would do all this stuff for preventative measures. But you don't know that, you're just playing. You're just attacking it and you're going and, 'Oh it's something, I'll play through it.' Now you just know that part of your work out and your routine is to ensure that something doesn't happen down the road. For me, you're right, I do work out [harder]. But I worked out hard then. It's just now I'm actually able to kind of do that again a little bit now. I haven't been able to work out like that the last couple of years."

On wanting DeMarco Murray to return to the Cowboys: "Well, that would be tampering, so we don't even talk about that," Romo said while laughing.