Chicago Bears (first stint) Schwantz was signed as an
undrafted free agent by the
Chicago Bears after the
1992 NFL draft. He was waived in August and signed to the
practice squad. On December 25, he was promoted to the active roster to play in the season finale against the
Dallas Cowboys, where he made one
special teams tackle. On August 30,
1993, he was released after preseason and signed to the
practice squad. On August 28,
1994, he was traded to the defending
Super Bowl champions the
Dallas Cowboys, in exchange for a sixth round draft choice (#201-Hayward Clay).
Dallas Cowboys In
1994, the
Dallas Cowboys traded for Schwantz because they were thin at the
linebacker position and because he knew their defensive system, having been coached by
Dave Wannstedt, who was the team's
defensive coordinator before moving on to the
Chicago Bears. He was declared inactive for the first 9 games. He finished with 4 defensive tackles, 5
special teams tackles and was a part of the
Super Bowl XXX winning team. In
1995, he continued his development, registering 23
special teams tackles (third on the team), 15 defensive tackles and one pass defensed. In
1996, he set the franchise's single season record with 32 tackles on
special teams (the
NFL started keeping the stat in
1990) and was named All Pro as well as to the
Pro Bowl as a
special teams player. In
1997, he was declared a
restricted free agent at the end of the season and although he was seen as a valuable player, the Cowboys had serious salary cap problems and could only tender him a qualifying offer at his original undrafted signing. On April 14, the
San Francisco 49ers signed him to a four-year offer sheet for $2 million that included a $600,000 signing bonus, that the Cowboys chose not to match and did not receive any compensation.
San Francisco 49ers In
1997, he registered 18
special teams tackles with the
San Francisco 49ers. He was cut on August 25,
1998, after the team decided to keep two younger
linebackers (
Anthony Peterson and
Winfred Tubbs).
Chicago Bears (second stint) On August 29,
1998, he was signed by the
Chicago Bears as a
free agent, to improve the
special teams units. He was released on August 18,
1999. Schwantz played in 78 career games (no starts) and was credited with 39 defensive tackles, amounting to half a tackle per game. ==Mayor of Palatine==