Chicago Bears With the last pick of the eighth round of the
1986 NFL draft and 221st overall selection, the Bears drafted Douglass. He was the third of four defensive backs selected by the Bears in that draft (
Vestee Jackson 2nd round, Bruce Jones 7th round, and Barton Hundley 10th round). The
1986 Bears signed Douglass in mid-July. In training camp, Douglas was switched from
cornerback to safety and recovered a fumble in the first exhibition game against the
Cowboys. He was described by bears scout
Rod Graves as "built more like a
fullback and could possibly help us inside as a
strong-safety type". The
Chicago Tribune listed him at and , Douglass was one of the final five players cut during training camp by the Bears at the beginning of September, but they re-signed him in late November when they put
Jim McMahon on injured reserve. He did not play much in 1986, but was described as a favorite of coach
Mike Ditka by the
Chicago Sun-Times.
Chicago Tribune writers noted that Ditka got a kick out of his big
earring and fashion sense. The following season, when
Shaun Gayle suffered a season-ending injury for the
1988 Bears, he took over the starting
free safety assignment. In March 1989, he testified against
sports agents Norby Walters of New York and Lloyd Bloom of California in
United States District Court in Chicago in a trial about "inducing college athletes to sign professional contracts in violation of
National Collegiate Athletic Association rules, and of threatening bodily harm". He told the jury that Bloom threatened that "somebody might break my legs" if he attempted to break his contract. In April, the agents were convicted of five counts of
racketeering and
fraud. In August 1989, he was one of thirteen athletes issued a four-game suspension for using
steroids. Following the suspension, the
Bears activated him in October. In September 1994,
New York Jets fullback Richie Anderson dislocated an
index finger punching Douglass in the head, while Douglass was wearing a
football helmet, in reaction to what he believed was a late hit on teammate
Adrian Murrell. Anderson was ejected from the game. In his nine seasons with the Bears, he earned a reputation as an excellent
special teams player.
New York Giants Prior to his time with the Giants, he worked as a male
stripper. Following the
1994 NFL season, Douglass signed with the
New York Giants in April. The two-year contract was estimated at $1.4 million. Douglass was impaired by a
quadriceps injury in
1995 Giants training camp. The injury recurred during the season. He had performed well as the
nickel back as a Giant. However, in October, he fractured his left
fibula and was out for the rest of
1995 NFL season. Douglass appeared to be a likely roster cut during the
1996 Giants training camp final selection of its 53-man roster of players, but he made the final roster cut. In the second game of the
1996 NFL season, he made a fourth-and-one goalline stop against the
Cowboys. Later that season, he scored his only career
touchdown when he intercepted a
Scott Mitchell pass and returned it 32 yards against the
Detroit Lions on October 27. Late in the season he was affected by a
hamstring injury. Douglass re-signed for the
1997 New York Giants season. Douglass was in competition with
Sam Garnes and
Rodney Young for the starting
strong safety position for the
1997 NFL season. However, in training camp he was hampered by a deep
thigh bruise. Despite the injury, he was projected as the starter. The injury caused him to miss an exhibition game. When he returned to practice he was soon also dealing with a sprained elbow. He lost the job to Garnes after missing a lot of exhibition time and allowing the latter to see plenty of action. In addition to the injury, Douglass had had a poor exhibition showing. ==Coaching career==