In
1964, he tried out with the
Houston Oilers of the
American Football League, but was not signed as it was discovered that he had not graduated from Jackson State. In 1965, he signed with the semi-professional football team
Charleston Rockets of the
Continental Football League. In 1966, he received All-Star honors. On July 31,
1968, he was traded to the
Los Angeles Rams in exchange for a fifth round draft choice (#125-
Chuck Kyle). He appeared in 7 games as a backup after spending the first half of the season on the
taxi squad. In
1969, he was promoted to the starting lineup after
defensive tackle Roger Brown suffered an injury, teaming with the
Fearsome Foursome line of
Deacon Jones,
Merlin Olsen,
Roger Brown and
Lamar Lundy. He had an 80-yard interception return for a touchdown that year. On January 25,
1976, he was traded from the Chargers to the Bengals for
wide receiver Charlie Joiner. Bacon then had an NFL-high sacks prior to the league officially recognizing individual sacks. He made the
Pro Bowl and was a second-team
All-Pro selection. On June 26
1978, he was traded along with
defensive back Lemar Parrish to the
Washington Redskins in exchange for a first-round draft pick (#12-
Charles Alexander). In
1979, he set a team record with 13.5 sacks. In
1980, he tallied 11 sacks. He finished his career in the
USFL with the
Washington Federals in
1983, starting 16 of 18 games, while posting 62 tackles, 6 1/2 sacks and one fumble recovery, on a 3–15 club. On September 6, 1983, he was left unprotected and was selected in the 17th round of the expansion draft by the
Jacksonville Bulls of the
United States Football League. ==Personal life==