Pete Liske

Peter A. "Pete" Liske, (born May 24, 1942) is a former American football quarterback and later a university athletics administrator.

High school and college football careers
Liske played his high school football at Plainfield High School in Plainfield, New Jersey, graduating in the class of 1959. He was good enough to go on to the powerhouse Penn State Nittany Lions, and was later (on October 6, 2000) elected to the Plainfield High School Hall of Fame (as was Vic Washington, another football player, who coincidentally played against Liske in the CFL's 56th Grey Cup.)

He played for Penn State from 1961 to 1963, quarterbacking winning teams each year. In 1961 he saw limited action (17 for 32 and 216 yards) but was a starter in the other years. In 1962 he completed 91 of 162 passes for 1,037 yards and 12 touchdowns (with four interceptions.) In 1963 he completed 87 of 161 passes for 1,117 yards and ten touchdowns (with five picks.)

NFL and CFL
Liske was drafted by both American Professional Football leagues. The NFL Philadelphia Eagles picked him in the tenth round, 130th overall, and the American Football League New York Titans picked him in the 15th round, 115 overall. He chose the AFL, and played with the newly named New York Jets.

He saw limited playing time in 1964 with New York, playing in only four games (only 18 passes). His career took a turn up north, with the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League. Canadian teams of this time were still a very viable career option, as they paid comparable money and offered more playing time. Liske played 11 games with Toronto in 1965.

From 1966 to 1968, he moved to the Calgary Stampeders, where he enjoyed his greatest success as a professional. In 1967, he threw for 4,479 yards, a whopping figure for that era, and 40 touchdowns, the latter breaking Tobin Rote's league record of 38 in 1960 for Toronto. He was named an all-star and won the CFL's Most Outstanding Player Award. In 1968, after a season comprising 4,333 yards passing and 31 touchdowns (though with 28 interceptions), he led his team to the 56th Grey Cup, losing a close and exciting game to the Ottawa Rough Riders. Liske's passing records would eventually be eclipsed by Doug Flutie's in a more wide-open era.

Liske chose to return to the AFL in 1969, joining the Denver Broncos and playing seven games with them. In 1970, now in the NFL, he played 11 games with Denver. He moved on to the Philadelphia Eagles for the 1971 and 1972 seasons, playing 14 games in each season. Unfortunately, he did not enjoy the success he had in the CFL, as none of his teams had a winning season. His combined total American professional record was: 50 games over five seasons, with 396 of 778 passes completed, for 5170 yards and 30 touchdowns with 46 interceptions.

Canada beckoned once again, and in 1973 he rejoined the Stampeders. He remained in Calgary until part way through the 1974 season, when he joined the British Columbia Lions. In Calgary for a second time around, he did not enjoy the same success, throwing more interceptions than touchdowns in 1973 and 1974. In 1975, his last season, still with the Lions, he completed 152 of 280 passes for 2310 yards and 13 touchdowns with 9 picks.

Later life and honors
In 2002 Liske's number 14 was added to the Calgary Stampeders' Wall of Fame.

He was a back judge in the NFL from 1983 through 1988, wearing number 21.

Liske would later go on to become an assistant athletic director at the University of Washington in Seattle. He became the Athletic Director at the University of Idaho in Moscow in 1992 and at the University of Toledo in 1996. In 2001 he was appointed Director of major gifts for Intercollegiate Athletics, with special emphasis on developing funding for the improvement of athletic facilities at his alma mater, Penn State, where he received his bachelor's and master's degrees.