Dallas Cowboys The
Dallas Cowboys surprised observers by selecting Walsh with the second overall pick in the
NFL supplemental draft, even though they had selected
Troy Aikman number one overall in the
1989 NFL draft and had to surrender by rule an equivalent pick in the
1990 NFL draft, which turned out to be the number one overall selection. Walsh started five games as a rookie while Aikman recovered from a broken finger. He recorded Dallas' only win of the season, a 13–3 victory over the rival
Washington Redskins. Against the
Kansas City Chiefs, he completed 23 of 36 passes for 294 yards and one touchdown. He recorded 1,371 yards and 5 touchdowns, while working with an inexperienced supporting cast. Head coach
Jimmy Johnson who was his coach in Miami, reportedly favored him as the starter, but Walsh could not move out of Aikman's shadow and was traded to the
New Orleans Saints three games into the
1990 season in exchange for first-, second-, and third-round draft picks. With the third draft choice the Cowboys selected (#70-
Erik Williams), the other two picks (#14-
Leonard Russell and #52-
Patrick Rowe) were traded to the
New England Patriots as a package to move up to the number one overall draft choice to select
Russell Maryland.
New Orleans Saints On September 25, 1990, the
Dallas Cowboys traded Walsh to the
New Orleans Saints for the Saints' first- and third-round picks in the
1991 NFL draft and a second-round pick (that could become a first-round pick based on performance) in the
1992 NFL draft. The Saints acquired Walsh, because quarterback
Bobby Hebert was in the middle of a contract hold out that lasted all season long, and
John Fourcade got off to a poor start. He generated high expectations after winning his first game against the
Cleveland Browns, while throwing 3
touchdown passes. Walsh passed for 1,970 yards and 12 touchdowns, leading the franchise to its second ever playoff appearance, after finishing the season 8–8 and knocking the Cowboys out of the final playoff spot. The next year, he lost his job after Hebert returned to the team, and would start only 8 games in the following three seasons, while bouncing between the backup and third-string roles behind Hebert (
1991-
1992) and
Wade Wilson (
1993). He was waived on April 24,
1994.
Chicago Bears On April 26,
1994, the
Chicago Bears signed Walsh as an unrestricted free agent, reuniting with former Cowboys and Hurricanes defensive coordinator
Dave Wannstedt. After the third game of the season he replaced an injured
Erik Kramer, posting an 8–3 regular season record as a starter and a 35–18 win against the
Minnesota Vikings in the wild card round of the playoffs. The next year, Kramer regained the starting job and Walsh would only play in one game.
St. Louis Rams On April 10,
1996, he was signed by the
St. Louis Rams as a
free agent. He started the first three games before being passed on the depth chart by rookie
Tony Banks. He completed 33 of 77 passes for 344 yards and had 5 interceptions.
Tampa Bay Buccaneers On April 16,
1997, he signed with the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers to backup
Trent Dilfer. He appeared in 17 games during 2 seasons.
Indianapolis Colts On August 11,
1999, he was signed by the
Indianapolis Colts to back up second-year pro
Peyton Manning. He was released on February 2,
2000. He finished his career with 713 completions in 1,317 attempts (54.1%), 7,875 passing yards, 40 touchdowns and 50 interceptions, for a
passer rating of 66.4. ==Coaching career==