Although he was a great college player, Lewis was selected by the
Dallas Cowboys in the sixth round (159th overall) of the
1968 NFL/AFL draft, because teams thought that he was too small to play in the
NFL. As a rookie at
training camp, the team tried him at
center, before moving him to
outside linebacker. In
1969, he spent what would have been his second season doing
military service. In
1973 after serving as a backup for four seasons, Lewis took over the
weakside linebacker position, when
Chuck Howley retired, and held this position for nine straight years. His best game was in the
1975 NFC Championship Game, when he intercepted two passes in a 37–7 victory against the
Los Angeles Rams, helping the Cowboys become the first
wild-card team to make it to the
Super Bowl. To this day, he holds the Cowboys playoff record with 27 games played. During his NFL career, Lewis played in 12 NFC divisional-round contests, one NFC wild-card contest, and nine
NFC Championship Games. He made five
Super Bowl appearances while winning
Super Bowl VI, and
Super Bowl XII. During the
1980 season, he became along with
Larry Cole, the first three-decade players in franchise history. Lewis played for 13 years and started 135 consecutive games (third in team history), until his retirement after the
1981 season. He was voted the "Most Popular Player" by the Cowboys fans and given the
Bart Starr Meritorious Award in
1981. He is one of only eight
NFL players to have played in five
Super Bowls: (
V,
VI,
X,
XII, and
XIII). During the
1982 season, Lewis famously reasoned that "
Texas Stadium has a hole in its roof so God can watch His favorite team play". Although he was never selected to a
Pro Bowl or
All-Pro squad, he served as defensive co-
captain in
1977 and
1978. In
1984, he was named to the Cowboys Silver Anniversary Team. ==Death==