Jordan was selected by the
Pittsburgh Steelers in the fifth round, with the 121st overall pick, of the
1988 NFL draft. He played in 15 games, starting two, for the Steelers during his rookie year in 1988, recording four fumble recoveries and one interception for 28 yards and one touchdown. He was released by the Steelers before their first game of the 1989 season and was signed shortly thereafter by the Raiders. After three days with the Raiders he was released for he "did not know their system." Jordan signed with the Raiders again on February 2, 1990, but was later released on September 3, 1990. He signed with the Raiders once again on January 2, 1991, during the playoffs. Prior to re-signing, he kept in shape by skating with former members of the
San Jose Sharks, as he had played pickup hockey until the 10th grade after basketball practice. In January 1995, Jordan was signed by San Francisco as a special teams player and backup linebacker to replace
Anthony Peterson on injured reserve. When speaking of the decision, vice president for football administration John McVay said "he's been here before so it's not like he's a stranger to these players." He played his first game of the season in
Super Bowl XXIX against the Chargers on their special team. Jordan became a free agent after the 1994 season and re-signed with the 49ers on May 6, 1995. He was released on August 27, 1995. ==Personal life==