Toronto Argonauts After
Bruce McNall purchased the
Toronto Argonauts with hockey player
Wayne Gretzky and actor
John Candy, the Argonauts made Ismail a groundbreaking offer for a CFL player: $18.2 million over four years. The average value of his full contract, $4.55 million per season, was more than the anticipated
1991 CFL salary cap of $3.0 million per team. The CFL had a salary cap in place since
1991, but the rules contained an exemption for a "marquee player" who would not count against the cap.
Doug Flutie of the
BC Lions was about to be paid $1 million under the exemption, but Ismail's contract was more than anything North American football had ever seen, as his yearly salary was then the largest in
Canadian or
American football history. By comparison, the highest paid NFL player at the time was
Joe Montana earning $3.25 million per year. Ismail joined the Argonauts in time for the 1991 season, and in his first game, returned a kick seventy-three yards on a reverse with
Michael Clemons. Ismail ended his rookie season at the
79th Grey Cup. He recorded an 87-yard touchdown on a kickoff return and was named the
Grey Cup Most Valuable Player as his Argonauts defeated the
Calgary Stampeders 36–21. He came within fifty yards of breaking his teammate Clemons' franchise record for single-season kickoff return yardage, and made the
1991 All-Star team as a wide receiver, finishing runner-up to
Jon Volpe for rookie of the year. In
1992 Ismail broke Clemons' franchise record for single-season kick return yards. Ismail was unhappy in Canada as the Argonauts slumped to a 6–12 record, missing the playoffs. He was also remembered for his participation in a sideline brawl against the Stampeders where he stomped an opposing player's helmeted face. He later apologized on ''
Speaker's Corner.'' With the huge contract around Toronto's neck and McNall facing increasing financial trouble, Ismail left the CFL, and, after the season, signed with the
Los Angeles Raiders.
Los Angeles/Oakland Raiders Ismail was going to be selected as the first overall pick in the
1991 NFL draft by the
Dallas Cowboys, until he decided to sign with the
Toronto Argonauts. The
Los Angeles Raiders selected him in the fourth round (100th overall), to own his rights in case he decided to return to the NFL. In
1993, as a
rookie in the
National Football League, Ismail recorded 353 receiving yards. The
next year, he recorded 513 receiving yards and five touchdowns. In
1995, the Raiders' first season back in Oakland, he recorded 491 yards receiving. On August 25, 1996, after having three disappointing seasons, Ismail was traded to the
Carolina Panthers for a fifth-round pick (#157-Nick Lopez).
Carolina Panthers In
1996 the Panthers, under
head coach Dom Capers, finished 12–4, but Ismail recorded a career-low 214 yards receiving, without a single touchdown. In
1997 he recorded 419 receiving yards and two touchdowns. In
1998, he had a breakout year, registering 69 receptions for 1,024 yards and eight touchdowns, two yards short of doubling his previous career high.
Dallas Cowboys On March 23,
1999, the
Dallas Cowboys signed him as a
free agent after outbidding other teams. After
Michael Irvin suffered a career-ending injury in the fourth game of the season, Ismail became the team's leading wide receiver, recording a career-high 1,097 yards and six touchdowns. In
2000, he missed the last six games after tearing the
ACL in his right knee against the
Philadelphia Eagles, during the tenth game of the season, finishing with only 350 receiving yards. In
2001, he missed two games after spraining the
MCL in the same injured knee against the
San Diego Chargers. On August 31,
2002, he was placed on the
injured reserve list after suffering a herniated disk in his neck, due to a collision with teammate
Dat Nguyen during
training camp. He was released on February 26,
2003, in a salary cap move. He later announced his retirement in March. ==Career statistics==