There’s no bigger question surrounding the Buffalo Bills’ 2017 offseason than the status of quarterback Tyrod Taylor. The team has to decide whether to exercise the remaining four years of his five-year, $90 million contract and guarantee in $27.5 million in cash in 2017, or decline the option and look elsewhere.

There’s been countless reports and rumblings that the team has no intentions of paying Taylor that money and will likely find a new quarterback via the NFL draft or through free agency.

However, oddsmakers have begun taking bets on where Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo will play next season and the Bills have the fourth-highest odds, trailing the Denver Broncos, Houston Texans and Chicago Bears.

DENVER BRONCOS: +250 HOUSTON TEXANS: +400 CHICAGO BEARS: +500 BUFFALO BILLS: +600 NEW YORK JETS: +600 DALLAS COWBOYS: +800 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS: +800 ARIZONA CARDINALS: +1000 MIAMI DOLPHINS: +1200

Romo lost his starting job to rookie fourth-round draft pick Dak Prescott after sustaining an injury, and Prescott’s fantastic play led to the 14-year veteran sitting on the bench.

At 36-years old, Romo would be nothing more than a stopgap option for Buffalo, but it’s hard to rule out a desperation play after missing the playoffs for their 17th consecutive season.

Romo has battled injury throughout the last two seasons, playing just five games between 2015-16, completing 68.8-percent of his passes for 915 yards, throwing six touchdowns and seven interceptions. However, in 2014, his last as a full-time starter, Romo completed 69.7-percent of his passes for 3,705 yards (8.52 yards-per-attempt), throwing 34 touchdowns and just nine interceptions.

If Dallas were to trade Romo, they would take on $19.6 million in dead money charges, but the team acquiring him would get him on a non-guaranteed three-year deal with a 2017 salary cap hit of $14 million – one substantially lower than most of the NFL’s starting quarterbacks. His cap number in 2018 would be $19.5 million and $20.5 million in 2019.

The fact that the contract would come without guarantees makes it an interesting option to consider, but it’s hard to see Buffalo looking to trade valuable assets for an aging quarterback, given the fact that they’re already seemingly trying to diminish the current value of Tyrod Taylor’s deal.