Sirr Parker

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Sirr Parker
Date of birth: October 31, 1977 (1977-10-31) (age 30)
Place of birth: Los Angeles, California
Career information
Position(s): WR, RB, DB
College: Texas A&M
Organizations
 As player:
1999
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005-06
San Diego Chargers
Carolina Panthers
Cincinnati Bengals
British Columbia Lions
Calgary Stampeders
Dallas Desperados
Austin Wranglers
Inglewood Blackhawks

Sirr Eluan Parker is a former running back for Texas A&M University who went on to play professionally in the National Football League, the Canadian Football League, and the Arena Football League.

Contents

[edit] Youth and high school

Sirr Parker, raised in tough South Central Los Angeles, was abandoned by his mother and raised by his grandmother. As a child, Parker and his infant brother Donyea lived with their grandmother while their mother struggled with alcoholism and drug abuse. After the death of his grandmother, he became a surrogate father to his brother while attending Locke High School. Parker not only raised his brother, but also became the Los Angeles Times player of the year and a second-team All-American pick by USA Today by leading the Los Angeles area in rushing (1,129 yards) and scoring (19 touchdowns) as a senior at Locke despite playing for a team that went 0-9 that season. He was also the homecoming king and an honor roll student with a 3.9 grade point average.

[edit] College

Parker was a star running back at Texas A&M, where he was known for his blazing speed and playmaking ability. He ran a sub 4.3 40-yard dash and held the school vertical jump record of 40.5 inches (later broken by Terrence Murphy).

Although injuries cut down on his playing time, he finished his college career in style by leading the Aggies to the 1998 Big 12 Conference championship his senior year. He helped A&M rally to defeat #4 ranked Kansas State in the championship game, scoring a touchdown and two-point conversion late in regulation to tie the score. He scored the winning touchdown on a now famous 32-yard slant from Branndon Stewart on third-and-17 in the second overtime, sealing a 36-33 victory and earning the Aggies and invitation to the Sugar Bowl. On the year, he rushed for 226 yards and a touchdown on 69 carries while catching eight passes for 106 yards and two touchdowns, and returning nine kicks for 200 yards. His best overall season was his junior year, when he rushed for 800 yards and a team leading 10 touchdowns on 149 carries (for an impressive 5.4 yards per carry) on his way to becoming a Doak Walker Award nominee. He also caught 18 passes for 194 yards and returned five kickoffs, including a 78-yard touchdown return… As a sophomore, he led the Aggies in rushing with 704 yards and two touchdowns on 149 carries while taking the only kickoff he returned 100 yards for a touchdown. As a true freshman, he finished third on the team with 312 yards on 71 carries while catching four passes for 77 yards. Overall as an Aggie, Parker rushed for 2,042 yards and scored 20 touchdowns.

[edit] Professional career

[edit] NFL

Although Parker was not chosen in the 1999 NFL Draft, he signed as an undrafted free agent by the San Diego Chargers. Although the Chargers released Parker in August of 1999, he was signed by the Carolina Panthers. Still unable to join the active roster because of a lingering hip injury that he sustained at Texas A&M, and a hamstring injury that emerged in Carolina, Parker was placed on the inactive list before being waived once again.

Prior to the 2000 season, Parker picked up by the Cincinnati Bengals. Because of both his speed and the team's lack of depth in the secondary, the Bengals switched Parker to cornerback, a position he hadn't played since high school. He spent most of the season on the practice squad. Although he was activated for the last three games of the season (seeing playing time in the final two), he did not record any offensive or defensive statistics. Upon his arrival at Cincinnati's mini-camp in May, Parker was released from the team for a very minor violation of team off-season rules regarding place of residence.

[edit] CFL

Parker was signed by the British Columbia Lions prior to the 2001 season, but was released before the start of the season. He signed as a free agent with the Calgary Stampeders the following year, but did not make their opening roster, and was once again released.

[edit] AFL

Parker was signed as a free agent by the Dallas Desperados to play receiver and defensive back in December of 2002. He was inactive for the first nine games of the season before being placed on injured reserve in April of 2003. He was activated with one game remaining in the season, but did not play in the season finale or in the playoffs. In January of 2004, the Austin Wranglers traded for Parker, but he did not see playing time for the team.

[edit] Semi-pro

Parker played the 2005 and 2006 seasons for the Inglewood Blackhawks, a professional developmental football (minor league) team in the La Belle Community Football League. In 2006 Parker was named League Offensive MVP and Team MVP when he had 95 receptions and 16 receiving touchdowns, both league records. His 1,943 total yards gained that season is second all-time in league history.

[edit] They Call Me Sirr

In 2001 Showtime released They Call Me Sirr, a TV movie about Parker's life starring Kente Scott as Sirr Parker and Michael Clarke Duncan as his high school coach.

[edit] External links