Parker Washington’s name may sound like a place on the map, but in Jacksonville he’s quickly becoming a fixture on the field.
The Jaguars receiver is heading into the final year of his rookie deal after a 2025 breakout that pushed his value up fast. Drafted by Jacksonville in the sixth round of the 2023 NFL Draft, Washington has grown into more than just a target in the passing game.
He’s also carved out a real role as a kick and punt returner, and that versatility has made him one of the more useful pieces on the roster. An extension feels all but inevitable as he enters his fourth NFL season.
That rise matters even more now because Washington is set to be part of a receiving group that should keep defenses busy. He’ll line up with Jakobi Meyers and Brian Thomas Jr., giving Trevor Lawrence a trio of options as he tries to guide the Jaguars back to the playoffs.
Washington’s 2025 season was the kind that changes the conversation. He posted career highs in receiving yards, kick return yards and touchdowns.
He finished with 847 receiving yards and five touchdowns, both major marks in his progression, and his receiving total led the team. Thomas was next with 707 yards.
His impact as a return man was just as loud. Washington handled 25 punts and three kickoffs in 2025, and he brought back two punts for touchdowns, including an 87-yard score.
The year before, he had already flashed that ability with a 96-yard punt return touchdown. As a rookie, he had limited chances after missing several weeks with a knee injury, but he still managed 132 receiving yards and two touchdowns in nine games, with one start, while also returning 14 kicks and punts.
In his second season, he put up 390 receiving yards and three touchdowns.
Before he reached the NFL, Washington made his mark at Penn State right away. As a freshman in the pandemic-shortened 2020 season, he started all nine games and finished with 489 receiving yards and six touchdowns, his highest college touchdown total. He followed that with 64 catches for 820 yards and four scores as a sophomore, then closed his college career with 46 receptions for 611 yards and two touchdowns.
Jacksonville’s draft board in 2023 showed some familiarity with Pennsylvania talent. Washington went 185th overall in the sixth round, and earlier in the draft the Jaguars took his Penn State teammate Brenton Strange with the 61st pick in the second round. The team also used a sixth-round pick on Erick Hallett II, who played at Pitt.
Washington also comes from a family with plenty of sports pedigree. His sister Ashton was hired as the first female scout for the Chicago Bears in 2021.
His cousin Joshua Dobbs played at Tennessee, was drafted by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the fourth round of the 2017 NFL Draft, and spent time with nine NFL teams, including the Jaguars in 2019. Another cousin, Tyler Tolbert, is a professional baseball player in the Kansas City Royals organization.
And yes, Parker Washington is also the name of a small town in Washington State. The town has a population of 158 and sits about 150 miles southeast of Seattle in Yakima County.
The first plat for Parker was filed on Jan. 6, 1909.
It was originally settled by William Parker in 1864 and was named for him by the Northern Pacific Railway in 1890. The area is known for warm, dry summers, with no average monthly temperatures above 71.6 degrees, though July and August can still bring days in the upper 90s and sometimes even above 100.
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Trevor Lawrence Enters Camp With Pressure To Finally Make The Leap
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The bigger question is whether that foundation turns into the kind of steady leap Jacksonville has been waiting for. Coens system asks Lawrence to do more, think faster and keep stacking details, and camp will offer the first real chance to see whether he can keep the consistency up while taking the next step with the players around him. [Read more 🡒]
