Todd Peterson Explained

Todd Peterson
Number:2
Position:Placekicker
Birth Date:4 February 1970
Birth Place:Washington D.C., U.S.
Height Ft:5
Height In:11
Weight Lbs:180
High School:Valdosta (GA)
College:Georgia
Draftyear:1993
Draftround:7
Draftpick:177
Pastteams:
Statlabel1:Field goals made
Statvalue1:235
Statlabel2:Field goals attempted
Statvalue2:296
Statlabel3:Field goal %
Statvalue3:79.4
Statlabel4:Longest field goal
Statvalue4:54

Joseph Todd Peterson (born February 4, 1970) is a former American football placekicker. He was drafted by the New York Giants from the University of Georgia with the ninth pick of the seventh round (177th overall) in the 1993 NFL draft. Peterson last played with the Atlanta Falcons in 2005. His contract with the Falcons expired on March 11, 2006 and he retired after that season. He and his wife, Susan, are co-owners of Cabell's Designs LLC, with Cabell Sweeney. Cabell's is a design and licensing group focusing on collegiately licensed products in the giftware industry.

College

Peterson spent two years at the U.S. Naval Academy before transferring to the University of Georgia where during Peterson's senior year, he led the SEC in field goal percentage, and was named the University's first GTE Academic All-American in more than a decade since Terry Hoage. Peterson was also inducted into the University of Georgia's highest order, Sphinx in 1993.

Professional career

Peterson was drafted with the 9th pick in the 7th round of the 1993 NFL draft, but didn't debut until 1994 with the Arizona Cardinals, where he only appeared in 2 games that season, before going to the Seattle Seahawks.[1] Peterson went through his prime years as a Seahawk, from 1995-1999 until he got picked up by the Kansas City Chiefs, where he spent two years, when he then became a member of the Pittsburgh Steelers for the 2002 season. He then went to the San Francisco 49ers, where he spent two years. After the 2004 season, the Atlanta Falcons picked up Peterson, where he spent one season before his contract expired and he subsequently retired. Peterson was honored as the NFL Man of the Year, 1996, in Seattle and served three terms totaling six years on the NFLPA's Board during his career.

NFL career statistics

YearTeamGPField GoalExtra PointTotal Points
ARI2 2 4 50.0 0−0 1−1 1−1 0−2 0−0 35 4 4 100.0 10
SEA16 23 28 82.1 1−1 5−5 9−10 8−10 0−2 49 40 40 100.0 109
SEA16 28 34 82.4 0−0 11−13 7−7 8−11 2−3 49 27 27 100.0 111
SEA16 22 28 78.6 0−0 9−9 7−10 5−7 1−2 52 37 37 100.0 103
SEA16 19 24 79.2 3−3 4−4 4−5 5−5 3−7 51 41 41 100.0 98
SEA16 34 40 85.0 1−1 10−10 8−11 14−16 1−2 51 32 32 100.0 134
KC11 15 20 75.0 1−1 5−5 7−9 2−5 0−0 42 25 25 100.0 70
KC16 27 35 77.1 0−0 9−11 9−10 8−12 1−2 51 27 28 96.4 108
PIT10 12 21 57.1 1−1 2−3 6−10 3−7 0−0 46 25 26 96.1 61
SF8 12 15 80.0 0−0 5−7 3−3 4−4 0−1 48 22 23 95.7 58
SF16 18 22 81.8 1−1 3−3 7−8 5−6 2−4 51 23 23 100.0 77
ATL16 23 25 92.0 0−0 9−10 11−11 3−4 0−0 43 35 35 100.0 104
Career 159 235 296 79.4 5−5 76−84 79−95 65−89 10−23 54 338 341 99.1 1,043

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1993 NFL Draft Listing . 2023-03-31 . Pro-Football-Reference.com . en.