Lloyd did not receive an invitation to the
NFL Scouting Combine, but did play in the
Heritage Bowl. Pittsburgh Steelers' scouts viewed a videotape of Lloyd in the historically black college All-Star Game and were impressed by his ability to play sideline-to-sideline as he exhibited a bit of a mean streak. Steelers' scout,
Tom Donahoe, flew to
Atlanta and drove hours to
Fort Valley State to work out Lloyd and was further impressed. Lloyd was the 28th linebacker drafted in 1987 by then Steelers coach
Chuck Noll. On July 28, 1987, it was reported that Lloyd had suffered a sprained left knee in training camp, which sidelined him for his entire rookie season in
1987 and most of the
1988 season. He was a starter during the
1989 season as an outside
linebacker and he excelled. He became the emotional and fiery leader of the Steelers defense after the retirement of inside linebacker
David Little. Lloyd teamed with cornerback
Rod Woodson, whom he got drafted with, to give the Steelers two of the most dynamic and dominating defensive players in the game.
Later career Lloyd once again missed the entire
1996 season due to another knee injury. He then returned as a starter in the
1997 season but missed several games due to a staph infection. He was named to five
Pro Bowls and three NFL All-Pro teams during this time. Lloyd left the Steelers in
1998 and played for the
Carolina Panthers before retiring. A true leader and student of the game, Lloyd continued to impact the Steelers defense while injured from the sideline by teaching young linebackers
Chad Brown and
Jason Gildon the finer points of Steelers linebacking tradition. In 2020, the Steelers inducted him into their
Hall of Honor. ==NFL career statistics==