Tony Romo has been accurately predicting plays since he left the field and went to CBS’ booth starting in the 2017 NFL season.

Transitioning to broadcasting almost immediately after retirement, Romo has repeatedly proved over the last two years that he is able to read defenses just as fast as the quarterbacks on the field and can anticipate a specific play seconds before the snap.

Most recently, he stunned viewers watching the AFC championship game almost two weeks ago. In the New England Patriots’ 37-31 overtime win against the Kansas City Chiefs, he correctly predicted the Patriots’ movements multiple times, and NFL fans were amazed. And with CBS broadcasting the 2019 Super Bowl matchup between New England and the Los Angeles Rams, Romo will have one more opportunity this season to prove he’s basically psychic.

And because of that, The Wall Street Journal took an impressively deep dive into Romo’s broadcasts this season. It reviewed all 2,599 plays from every game the former Dallas Cowboys quarterback called this season and counted the number of times he made a specific prediction, as opposed to a general observation.

Romo has made 72 play predictions so far this season and was correct 68 percent of the time, according to the WSJ’s calculations. And that means statistically, he’s better at predicting NFL plays from the booth than completing passes because his career completion percentage is 65.3.

More from The Wall Street Journal explaining how Romo became such a strong broadcaster instantly:

It’s more physics than metaphysics, Romo says. He looks at the field and understands the tendencies of the players and coordinators. He combines his knowledge of those teams with his knowledge as a player who not long ago would be the guy calling the play in the huddle. Maybe the offense is lined up in a particular formation. Or it’s the defense gearing up for something unusual. From all those variables he makes a calculation. “In some ways, it’s like math,” Romo says. “People think Tony’s a fortune teller, but this isn’t guesswork and this isn’t psychic ability,” said Jim Nantz, his partner in the booth. “He’s not getting some sort of message from the gods. He’s seeing what Brady saw.”

Looking ahead to the Super Bowl, it seems like Romo is set up to impress viewers once again. According to the WSJ’s analysis, 16 of Romo’s predictions during broadcasts this season were in five Patriots games with Tom Brady on the field, and his accuracy was even higher in those instances at 69 percent.

(Thanks to The Wall Street Journal for putting in the work for these incredible stats.)