Dallas Cowboys Gruttadauria was signed as an
undrafted free agent by the
Dallas Cowboys in 1995, after not being selected in the
NFL draft because he was considered to be too small to play at the professional level. On August 22, he was released along with the entire practice squad when the team signed
Deion Sanders and the Cowboys didn't have enough salary cap room to keep the players.
St. Louis Rams In 1996, Gruttadauria was signed as a
free agent by the
St. Louis Rams after being out of football for a year, and was named the starting center for the last 3 games of the season. Though he entered each year with the Rams as the starter, injuries and knee surgeries limited his starts. Gruttadauria was injured through most of the 1998 season but returned strong in 1999, starting all 16 games for the
Super Bowl-winning team. That year in the
playoffs, with
Kurt Warner at
quarterback, St. Louis led the NFL with 526 points (32.9 points/game) and finished with a 13-3 won-lost mark, best in the
NFC West division. In the divisional round, the Rams beat the
Minnesota Vikings, amassing 374 net passing yards thanks to excellent pass protection, despite 2 sacks for 17 yards lost. Gruttadauria with guards
Tom Nütten and
Adam Timmerman as well as tackles
Orlando Pace and
Fred Miller continued to protect Warner effectively in the NFC championship game, squeezing past the excellent defense of the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers 11-6. Though pitted against
Warren Sapp and
Brad Culpepper at defensive tackle, Gruttadauria and the rest of the line did not allow a sack and gained 258 net passing yards. In
Super Bowl XXXIV, the Rams won another squeaker against the
Tennessee Titans 23-16, with 407 net passing yards (1 sack for 7 yards lost) and a mere 29 rushing yards. Some of the success of that team was due to the strategy of the center occasionally snapping the ball very quickly back to Warner, catching the opposing defensive line off-guard.
Arizona Cardinals On February 19, 2000, Gruttadauria signed as a
free agent with the
Arizona Cardinals. The next year, he was awarded the
Ed Block Courage Award. Because of injuries, he played only half the year in 2000 and 2002, his final year in 2001, though he played 15 games. He was released on April 2, 2003. ==References==