Green Bay Packers Daluiso was signed as an
undrafted free agent by the
Green Bay Packers after the
1991 NFL draft. He handled all of the kicking during the preseason while
placekicker Chris Jacke was involved in a contract holdout. He made 7 of 8 field goals and all 12 of his extra point attempts. On August 26, he was traded to the
Atlanta Falcons.
Atlanta Falcons In 1991, he appeared in 2 games, making 2 of 3 field goals and 2 extra points. On September 9, he was waived after the team agreed to terms with
kicker Norm Johnson.
Buffalo Bills On September 11, 1991, he was claimed off waivers by the
Buffalo Bills. He appeared in 14 regular season games and 3 playoff games, including
Super Bowl XXVI. He was used as a kickoff specialist to complement incumbent
Scott Norwood and did not attempt a field goal or extra point. He had 26 touchbacks on 78 kickoffs (33.3%).
Dallas Cowboys On February 18, 1992, he was signed as a
Plan B free agent by the
Dallas Cowboys, to replace
Ken Willis. He lost the competition to rookie
Lin Elliott. He was released on August 31.
Denver Broncos On September 1, 1992, he was claimed off waivers by the
Denver Broncos. He appeared in 16 regular season games. He was used as a kickoff specialist to complement incumbent
placekicker David Treadwell and only attempted one field goal, which he missed. He was released on August 21, 1993.
New York Giants On September 1, 1993, he signed as a
free agent with the
New York Giants, reuniting with head coach
Dan Reeves, who was also his head coach with the
Denver Broncos. He appeared in 15 regular season games, again primarily used as a kickoff specialist to complement
David Treadwell, his former teammate with the Broncos. He was also used three times to kick longer distance field goals due to his leg strength, converting once; the kick he made proved to be the difference in the Giants' victory over the Phoenix Cardinals late in the season. After starting the 1994 season as the Giants' kickoff specialist, Daluiso eventually supplanted a struggling Treadwell as the starting kicker in Week 14. He converted all eleven of his field goals and five extra points, with a long of 52 yards, and would keep the starting kicker position going forward. In 1999, he appeared in 6 games, before being placed on the
injured reserve list with an ACL tear in his non-kicking left leg, that he suffered tackling
Dallas Cowboys cornerback
Kevin Mathis on a kickoff return. He was replaced with
Cary Blanchard. In 2000, he was the team's recipient of the
Ed Block Courage Award and played in
Super Bowl XXXV. He was not re-signed after the season, leaving as the franchise's all-time most accurate kicker and second-leading scorer.
Oakland Raiders On January 5, 2002, he was signed as an injury replacement for
Sebastian Janikowski. He appeared in the season finale against the
New York Jets, making 3 of 4 field goal attempts and 1 of 2 on extra point attempts in a 24–22 loss. He was released on January 8, 2002. ==Personal life==