Today's question: Who will be the division MVP?

Todd Archer, Dallas Cowboys: DeMarco Murray led the NFL with 1,845 yards rushing and was named the NFL's Offensive Player of the Year last season, but Tony Romo was still the Cowboys' Most Valuable Player in 2014. And he will be the MVP of the NFC East, too. In his past two seasons he has thrown 65 touchdown passes and been intercepted 19 times. It seems as if everybody continues to wait for the cringeworthy moments while ignoring just how strong Romo is late in games. The Cowboys promise to continue to be a run-first team even without Murray. If they can continue to be successful, they won't need Romo to shoulder the entire burden. It worked last season. It will work this season. Romo has found that balance of when to take chances and when to throw the ball away. If he can stay healthy, he's the best quarterback in the division.

Dan Graziano, New York Giants: I have to go with Tony Romo. He plays the MVP position and is in the best spot from which to deliver an MVP performance. He has the elite wide receiver, the veteran tight end, the elite offensive line. He delivered in huge spots last season over and over again, answering the most significant lingering questions. The Cowboys will lean on the run game again if they can, but when they did that last year it only helped Romo thrive. Romo has completed 66.6 percent of his passes over the past two seasons. He is in his statistical prime, and his team is determined to put him in the best position to win a title as soon as possible. Taking out the rest of the NFC East again should be the least of his concerns on that front.

Phil Sheridan, Philadelphia Eagles: After saying Tony Romo is on the hottest seat in the NFC East, I'll make it up to him by selecting him as the MVP of the division. The Eagles will be thrilled if Sam Bradford has a breakout year, or if DeMarco Murray leads them to the division title. Eli Manning and Odell Beckham Jr. will certainly be contenders. If Washington puts it together this season, then RG III could be the guy. But if Dallas wins the division again -- after losing Murray in free agency -- it will be because the quarterback delivers in a big way. Romo did it last year, so it's reasonable to believe he can do it again.

John Keim, Washington Redskins: As of now, it's hard to go against Tony Romo. Odell Beckham could have a big season, and so could DeMarco Murray in Philadelphia (though it will be tough to duplicate his 2014 success). But Romo continues to get better; he's playing behind a terrific line and with one of the NFL's top receivers in Dez Bryant. As long as Romo stays healthy -- as long as the back holds out -- he'll be the man. Romo has been fantastic in recent seasons: In the past four years, he's thrown a combined 124 touchdown passes to 48 interceptions. And he's coming off arguably his best season (34 touchdowns, nine interceptions). As long as that line remains intact, Romo will be the guy to beat in this race.