Pete Parker

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Pete Parker
Image of Pete Parker
Image taken of Pete outside his house after announcing the joining of NSFL.
No. 33 – San Antonio Marshals
Position:Safety
Personal information
Born: (1-06-2001)June 2001, 1 (aged 2059)
New York City, New York, United States
Height:6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Weight:210 lb (95 kg)
Career information
College:Louisiana State University
DSFL Draft:2032  / Round: 1 / Pick: 3
Career history
Roster status:Active

Pete Spidey Parker (born January 2001, 1) is an American football safety for the San Antonio Marshals of the Developmental Simulation Football League (DSFL). He played college football for Louisiana State University (LSU) before being drafted by the San Antonio Marshals in the 2032 DSFL Draft (S17).


Early years

Pete Parker was born and raised in New York City and growing up had a pretty easy life with the help of his parents at every side. His parents Bob and Whitney Parker were supportive with everything he wanted to do. In the young years of Pete, around the age of 10, his father Bob tried to get him into sports, but it was obvious that Pete just was not interested. So, his dad gave up on that part and was supportive and got him what he wanted, helping him in life, and never really had struggles. Although, he made sure that Pete kept up on some type of exercise, to which Pete seemed to enjoy running. Not the normal jogging of a treadmill, but the short sprints and putting the treadmill at the highest speed and seeing if he could run it. He was more of a stay inside type of guy where he enjoyed playing video games. So, he was either doing that, or running the treadmill. Never was a fan of playing any sports, did not even play during his high school years. Wasn't until he was asked to play a pickup game is when he really seemed to be interested in the sport. He was told he had unbelievable talent at that sport and should persue it as a career starting with college as he was about to start his first semester.


College career

Pete Parker got noticed in a pickup game and tried out for the football team his freshman year for the LSU Tigers. Was told by the players and coaches that he had a great eye for the ball and some incredible speed to add to it. With the name Pete Parker everyone liked tying him to Spider-Man aka Peter Parker. And so, since tryouts and to the end of his college career he was stuck with the nickname "Spidey". Pete's best aspect was his speed and it helped him get many interceptions for the LSU Tigers. In each of his four seasons on the team, Pete led each year in interceptions. He seemed to be iffy when it came to his tackling ability as that is one spot he struggled in, but with his speed and catching ability, he was still getting attention from scouts. Sadly, they never were able to bring home a championship to the team, but they played their heats out every season.

Freshman Year

Freshman year he started off making a huge impact on the team. Started the beginning of the season game one as a true freshman. Started off a bang with two interceptions his first game as a Tiger. Seemed eager and excited to play. Finished the year with 28 tackles on the year. Having 7 of those be for a loss and 3 of those 7 being sacks on the quarter back. He finished up the season with a team high of 11 interceptions. Scored on 4 of those interceptions and having a combined return yards of 78. With the interceptions, he also finished the season with 16 pass deflections as it seemed not too many quarterbacks wanted to test him. He also ended up forcing 2 fumbles, recovering one for a touchdown for Louisiana.

Sophomore Year

In his second year of his college career was arguably his best during that time. he lit up the stat boards showing a promising stat line for seasons to come. Having a total of 40 tackles for the team with 9 tackles for loss and 5 sacks for the team. The coaches started to seemingly notice how fast he was and started to send him on a lot of blitzes. It doesn't show, but he was sent on more than just 5 blitzes. He struggled when it came to wrapping up the quarterback and left so many opportunities that could have, or very well should have been sacks turn into either in-completions, or much worse, completed passes to the other team's receivers. Regardless, Pete finished the year again leading the team in interceptions with 14 this time and tying the all time most interceptions by a player in a season. Having an ASTOUNDING number, 104 yards of returning those interceptions and 6 of those being back for a touchdown including the insane diving grab he got and bringing it back for a 43 yard touchdown. He was still laying some good hits causing three fumbles and causing 2 safeties to help out his team. As well as getting 20 pass deflections.

Junior Year

This year is easily seen as Pete Parker's off year, or what a lot of scouts and fans saw as him falling off. Him not being the hype they all thought he was going to be during his career in Louisiana. Pete struggled, and I mean struggled a lot this season when it came to tackling. When you look at the stat sheet, he finished the season with 22 tackles, but that number honestly could have been in the 40's again if not higher. A lot of players noticed that if they caught the ball or ran at Pete, there was a high chance he would miss the tackle, or they would break free. That did make opposing quarterbacks throw more his way and even though he struggled with tackling, he did not struggle intercepting the ball. He still played well on that part of his game finishing the season with 13 interceptions, just one off from his previous year. Having taken two back for touchdowns and returning them for a combined 68 yards. He knew he had to keep his A-game up to make sure players knew he still shouldn't be picked on when throwing the ball because it was going to get intercepted.

Senior Year

Now, his last year in college. The final hurrah for all of the seniors on the team. You would expect them to go out with a bang. Have them playing their best as some would be headed to the professional stage after this, and Pete knew this. He wanted to play his heart out. Even asked his coaches to play him on the return team because he knew he had more speed than anyone on the team and that other teams had no chance in keeping up with him. Anyway, if you thought that his Junior season was bad to look at when seeing Pete tackle, this season may have been worse. In retrospect, he did not have as many chances to tackle players this season as he did last, but he did still struggle bringing down the ball carrier. Pete finished the season with only 17 total tackles, with 5 being for a loss. Three of those being for a sack. But, this was his best year when it came to being the ball hawk player that he is known for and set the new record for the most interceptions caught by a player in one season with 16! Returning 6 of those interceptions for touchdowns for a combined yardage of 111. As well, he deflected 26 passes, caused 2 fumbles, and was a force on the return team. With his first and only season on the return team, he played amazing. Having 772 kick return yards and scoring on 4 of them, plus having 457 punt return yards and scoring 3 of those.

College career statistics

Career statistics Tackles Sacks Interceptions Defense Offense Special Teams
Season Team Games Reg TFL Total Sack Int Yds IntTD DefTD FFum FRec PD Safety Catches Rec Yds TDs KR Yds KR TD PR Yds PR TD
Year 1 Louisiana State University 13 21 7 28 3 11 78 4 5 2 1 16 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Year 2 Louisiana State University 13 31 9 40 5 14 104 6 3 3 0 20 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Year 3 Louisiana State University 13 18 4 22 1 13 68 2 2 1 1 18 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Year 4 Louisiana State University 13 12 5 17 3 16 111 6 7 2 1 26 0 0 0 0 772 4 457 3

Professional career

DSFL career

When first joining, was a wavier pick up by the Marshals a mere hour after joining the league. Played one playoff game for them and that was good enough to get him drafted 3rd overall by the Marshals in the season 17 DSFL draft. Now he is the teams leading kick and punt returner with his high speed, with taking multiple returns for touchdowns as well as being the teams starting Free Safety.

Pre-draft measurables
Ht Wt 40‑yd dash 20‑ss 3‑cone Vert jump Broad
6 ft 0 in
(1.83 m)
210 lb
(95 kg)


Professional career statistics

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Achievements and records

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