Junior After graduating high school in 1998, he deferred admission to
Princeton University to play junior hockey with the
Chicago Freeze in the
North American Hockey League during the 1998–99 season. Playing in junior gave him a chance to improve his play and get a bit bigger. During his 54 games with the Freeze in junior, Parros nearly averaged a point per game.
College Parros played four years at
Princeton University, where he totaled 52 points and 119 PIM in 111 games. He was named team captain for his senior season in 2002–03. While at Princeton, Parros majored in economics and wrote his senior thesis on the
West Coast longshoremen's labor dispute. In 2010, he was chosen as the fourth-smartest athlete in sports by the
Sporting News.
Professional Parros was drafted by the Los Angeles Kings in the eighth round (222nd) of the
1999 NHL entry draft. After graduating from Princeton, he joined the
Manchester Monarchs, the Kings'
AHL affiliate. Parros remained with the team through the 2004–05 season. His best season was 2004–05, when Parros had 22 points (14 goals, 8 assists) and 247 penalty minutes. He was second on the team in penalty minutes that season. He also appeared in three games with the
Reading Royals, the Kings'
ECHL affiliate, where Parros took boxing lessons to become a better fighter. When Parros made his NHL debut with the Kings on October 5, 2005, he became the seventh Princeton Tiger to play in the NHL. He scored his first NHL goal on October 20 against the
Dallas Stars at the
American Airlines Center in
Dallas, Texas. He recorded a goal, an assist and a major fighting penalty in the same game, an achievement known as a "
Gordie Howe hat trick." He missed a total of 21 games over two different stretches between November and January of that season. However, he finished the 2005–06 season with two goals, three assists, and 138 PIM in 55 games. He played in the most games for a Kings' rookie during that season, as well as leading all Kings' players in major penalties. On October 2, 2006, he was waived by the Kings and picked up by the
Colorado Avalanche. He would play in only two games for the Avalanche. Just a month later, on November 13, 2006, Parros was traded to the
Anaheim Ducks for a 2nd round
draft pick and an option to swap 3rd round picks. During the
2006–07 season, he scored just one goal against the Chicago Blackhawks. He led the Ducks with 18 fighting majors during the regular season. Parros was a member of the Anaheim Ducks team that won the
Stanley Cup in 2007. On June 12, 2007, coming off of the Stanley Cup win, George Parros and the Ducks agreed to a two-year contract. The contract was worth 1.1 million dollars for two years. Parros had 183 penalty minutes during the
2007–08 season, at the conclusion of which the Ducks would be eliminated in the first round of their Stanley Cup defense by the
Dallas Stars. His penalty minutes would drop to 135 the following season despite playing in an additional five games, while contributing five goals and five assists. After the better part of 6 seasons with the Ducks, Parros left as a free agent and signed a two-year contract with the
Florida Panthers on July 1, 2012. On July 5, 2013, after one season with the Panthers, Parros was traded to the Montreal Canadiens for Philippe Lefebvre and a 7th round draft pick in 2014. In the season opener against the
Toronto Maple Leafs on October 1, 2013, Parros engaged in a fight with
Colton Orr in the third period. Parros lost his balance and fell headfirst to the ice, knocking him out. Orr expressed immediate concern, waving for training staff to make their way to Parros as he lay on the ice motionless. Parros was concussed, and taken off on a stretcher. He missed the next twelve games as a result of his injuries. This incident touched off renewed debate regarding player safety and
fighting's place in the National Hockey League. After returning to play, Parros sustained a second concussion on December 14, 2013, following a fight with
Eric Boulton during a game against the
New York Islanders. Parros next played on January 11, 2014, in a game against the
Chicago Blackhawks. However, he saw limited action during the season, either because of injury or because of being a healthy scratch, and appeared in only 22 games in total. The Canadiens did not offer Parros another contract at the end of the season and on July 1, 2014, he became an unrestricted free agent. On December 5, 2014 he announced his retirement from playing hockey. ==Post-playing career==