Dallas Cowboys After forgoing his senior season of college, the
Dallas Cowboys selected Barber in the fourth round, with the 109th overall selection, of the
2005 NFL draft. A toe infection that required surgery and some preseason fumbles left him at the bottom of the depth chart. An injury to
Julius Jones and the ineffectiveness of
Anthony Thomas allowed Barber to emerge, and he responded with 95 yards rushing against
Seattle and 127 yards against
Arizona. Along with his pass-blocking and
special teams abilities, this solidified his position as the backup running back for the Cowboys. Although he was the backup to
Julius Jones in 2006, Barber found a niche as a third-down rusher and a closer of games, emerging as an excellent red-zone
running back. He led the
NFC with 14 rushing
touchdowns in
2006 and was the first non-
placekicker since
2000 to lead the Cowboys in scoring (96 points). During the 2007 season, Barber's power running back style earned him the nickname
Marion the Barbarian and he was the league leader in breaking tackles, reflecting his personal mantra of "hit or get hit". Barber rushed for 975 yards on 204 carries and 10 rushing touchdowns with a 4.8 yards-per-carry rushing average. He caught 44 passes for 282 yards and two touchdowns. On December 18, 2007, he was named to his first
Pro Bowl despite officially being a backup. Barber received the start in the divisional playoff loss to the
New York Giants. Dallas offered Barber, now as a starter, the highest tender as a
restricted free agent in 2008. On May 20, 2008, he signed a seven-year deal for $45 million with the Cowboys with $16 million guaranteed. Before becoming a starter, there was already a worry as to whether his running style could shortened his career; with the additional work, his career longevity was discussed more often, as his yards per carry started to drop down. During the 2009 season, the emergence of
Tashard Choice and
Felix Jones, and injury problems limited his success. However, he played in 15 games despite a torn
quadriceps muscle. Barber had a disappointing 2010 season as the entire Cowboys team struggled from game one. In 13 games, Barber rushed for 374 yards on 113 carries for a 3.3 yard per carry average, the lowest of his career. His four rushing touchdowns were also the lowest of his career. Barber was released by Dallas on July 28, 2011.
Chicago Bears On July 30, 2011, the
Chicago Bears signed Barber to a two-year, $5 million contract. Barber beat out
Chester Taylor for the Chicago Bears' second string running back position after
Matt Forte. On August 27 in the third pre-season game, Barber hurt his
calf muscle and missed the first three games of the regular season due to the injury. In Week 14 against the
Denver Broncos, replacing an injured Forte, Barber scored a touchdown and had his first 100-yard game since 2009. However, he ran
out of bounds when the Bears needed to run out the clock, allowing the Broncos enough time to overtake the Bears and win the game. In the 2011 season Barber had 422 yards on 114 carries. Following the 2011 season, Barber announced his retirement from the NFL on March 23, 2012. ==NFL career statistics==