There's a point where Dallas Cowboys fandom goes a little bit too far. And we're there.

Thomas Randolph, a Las Vegas man convicted of hiring a hitman to kill his sixth wife -- yes, sixth -- and then killing the hitman, wore an XXXL Tony Romo jersey to court for his sentencing hearing Friday, according to the Las Vegas Review-Journal. He could face a penalty from 20 years in prison to the death penalty.

Review-Journal journalist David Ferrara covered Randolph's sentencing, and shared photos of him in the Romo jersey.

Randolph, 62, told reporters that he's been a Cowboys fan since he was 12.

Thomas Randolph, waiting to be brought to court for death penalty trial, wearing Tony Romo jersey pic.twitter.com/ak2SDEwrUR — David Ferrara (@randompoker) June 30, 2017

Thomas Randolph explains why he wanted to wear @tonyromo jersey ahead of death penalty trial

MORE → https://t.co/QbEJpsmkGb pic.twitter.com/0bYkLGujmI — Las Vegas RJ (@reviewjournal) June 30, 2017

Romo, I mean Randolph, is in court pic.twitter.com/YfZZ9OzbsG — David Ferrara (@randompoker) June 30, 2017

He kept the tag on because otherwise the jersey would depreciate, obviously pic.twitter.com/TyiEo4OgfS — David Ferrara (@randompoker) June 30, 2017

Son is wearing a Dallas Cowboys tie "as an act of solidarity" — David Ferrara (@randompoker) June 30, 2017

"The Cowboy shirt is for me. It's given me comfort." — David Ferrara (@randompoker) June 30, 2017

Jury has three sentencing options for each of two counts of first-degree murder: 20-50 yrs, 20-life, death pic.twitter.com/lSQrw701kJ — David Ferrara (@randompoker) June 30, 2017

Back in court, cinching up that 44 waist for closing arguments. pic.twitter.com/sAKVb0f8IV — David Ferrara (@randompoker) June 30, 2017

This wasn't Randolph's first time on trial in the death of one of his wives. According to the Review-Journal, he was acquitted in a 1986 murder case but pleaded to tampering with a witness for conspiring with a cellmate to kill the prosecution's star witness.