Williams was selected in the first round (23rd pick overall) of the
1989 NFL draft by the
Houston Oilers. He was an offensive tackle for the Oilers for seven seasons from to . He played in twenty-nine of thirty-two games during his
rookie and second seasons, and became a full-time starter in the first game of his third season. Williams played his final two NFL seasons for the New York Jets in and . He retired from professional football after the season. For all of his on-the-field accomplishments, Williams' NFL career is often remembered for an off-the-field episode during the season known as "babygate." During his fifth season with the Oilers, his wife Debi went into
labor with their first child on the Saturday before an Oilers away game against the
New England Patriots, and did not give birth until it was too late for Williams to either fly on the team's plane or get a commercial flight to catch up with the team. The Oilers fined Williams and deducted $111,111 from his pay for the missed game, and Oilers owner
Bud Adams publicly criticized him for having misplaced priorities. A public firestorm ensued, with the Oilers receiving a large share of fan and media criticism, and an informal precedent was set that future teams in similar circumstances would handle such matters differently. During his nine-season NFL career, Williams played in 128 regular season games, and started in 106 of them. == See also ==