Houston Oilers Childress was considered one of the top prospects in the
1985 NFL draft and was in serious consideration for the first-overall selection; the
Buffalo Bills, who held the pick, ultimately chose another defensive end, eventual Hall of Famer
Bruce Smith. Childress slipped to third overall, where he was selected by the
Houston Oilers. He shares the NFL record for fumble recoveries in a single game, having recovered three from the
Washington Redskins on October 30, 1988. After five seasons as the Oilers' defensive end, Childress moved to
defensive tackle in 1990 when
defensive coordinator Jim Eddy switched from a 3-4 defense to a 4-3 scheme, necessitating an extra lineman. Childress was already a
Pro Bowl end and had even filled in at nose guard on occasion. After the move, he would end up as a Pro Bowl selection in Hawaii four more times as a defensive tackle. As a testament to his excellence, four of the eight lowest single-season rushing totals allowed in Oilers history came between 1990 and 1993, with Childress at tackle. Childress was as effective against the pass as he was against the run. He finished his Oiler career ranked second all-time in quarterback sacks and sixth all-time in tackles, joining
Elvin Bethea as the only defensive linemen among the Oilers' top 10 in both categories. Childress led or shared the team sack lead from 1986 to 1989 and finished with the most single-season sacks for a defensive tackle (13) in 1992. For his 11-year career, Childress registered 13 multi-sack games. He was known by his fans as not only as a star, but also as a blue-collar iron man. Until a separated shoulder ended his 1995 season (an injury that would thereafter be the determining factor in his decision to retire), he missed only 3 non-strike games due to injury, playing 154 games along the
defensive line from 1985 to 1994. On February 15, 1996, he was released in a salary-cap move. Childress may be best remembered for coming up with huge plays at crucial moments of games. He had an incredible seven fumble recoveries in 1988, two shy of the NFL single-season record. Three of those came in the Oilers' memorable 41-17 whipping of the
Redskins, broadcast on
ESPN October 30, 1988. Childress was the foundation of a remarkable defensive unit that saw Houston make seven consecutive playoff appearances. During the prime of his career, he was considered by many to be the best defensive tackle in football.
Dallas Cowboys On December 4, 1996, he was signed as a
free agent by the
Dallas Cowboys, to replace a suspended
Leon Lett. He was a reserve player for 3 games behind
Tony Casillas and
Chad Hennings. He wasn't re-signed after the season. ==Philanthropy==