After completing his studies in his home country, Peacock played as a professional for three years in the German Bundesliga for the Gießen 46ers, Eisbären Bremerhaven and the Fraport Skyliners from Frankfurt am Main. After a second herniated disc, it was suggested from a medical point of view that he should end his professional sports career. In the 2012/13 season he was about to return to the Kirchheim Knights and signed a contract with the club, jersey soccer store especially as he said he still had salary payments from his previous club. For the following season 2012/13, Peacock was then committed by the Fraport Skyliners from Frankfurt, who only reached 14th place in the final table after only 14 wins in 34 games. ↑ Since the riders in places 3 through 6 were not eligible for points, Jack Harvey (finishing 7th) received the points for third place. In the summer of 2014, he joined Club Africain, where he finished third at the FIBA Africa Basketball Club Championship in December 2014. For the following season 2011/12 he moved together with his Giessen teammate Anthony Smith to league rivals Eisbären from Bremerhaven, who missed it at the end of the season, however, for the third time in a row to reach the play-offs for the German championship.
JL Basket won the play-offs at the end of the season for the second, remaining promotion place, but initially refrained from promotion before finishing first place the following season and achieving direct promotion. Peacock had already left Cholet early at the turn of the year and switched to the second Turkish division for Melikşah Üniversitesi SK from Kayseri, who, however, were eliminated in the first play-off round for promotion to the top flight and finally a year later not only that game operations, but also the private university that gave it its name. However, as the team's fourth-best scorer with an average of 9.1 points, he was considered one of the best substitutes in the ACC. After qualifying for the national finals once during Peacock's season in 2007 in a first-round loss to the Runnin' Rebels of UNLV in his freshman year, the Yellow Jackets came into Peacock's senior year 2010 after a finals loss to the Duke University Blue Devils ACC Tournament runners-up again in the NCAA Finals.
Peacock transferred from Norland High School in his hometown to the Georgia Institute of Technology in 2006, where he played for the high school team Yellow Jackets in the NCAA's Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). Due to injuries, he only played sporadically in his career as a professional in the basketball Bundesliga and in 2011 he moved to the home of his ancestors in Tunisia, where he became champion twice with Étoile Sportive du Sahel. After Chennoufi had already decided in 2010 to continue his international career for Tunisia, he moved to the home country of his ancestors in 2011 to Étoile Sportive du Sahel from Sousse. ↑ Eric Guilleminault: 2010 NBA Las Vegas Summer League Game Schedule & Rosters. ↑ Contract with Paul Larysz not renewed. However, that contract fell through after he was denied clearance to transfer clubs and returned to Tunisia. The timing of the press release made it appear as if the defeat was the reason for the announced separation, but Wörle made it clear that it had been agreed before the season not to extend the contract.
A contract in the season squad of an NBA club was not enough. There he was 2012 and 2013 Tunisian champion and cup winner with the club and reached the 2013 FIBA Africa Basketball Club Championship final, which was lost. Here, however, the defending champion only reached ninth place and failed to qualify for the 2014 World Cup finals. During the 2013 Mediterranean Games in Mersin, he won the bronze medal with the Tunisian national team. After not being included in the final squad of the Tunisian national team at the 2010 World Cup and the 2012 Olympic Games, he took part in the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations with the Tunisian men's selection. In September 2012 he was about to move to FC Istres, but this did not materialize. The only thing that is certain is that some of the 700 Indian construction workers who died during the World Cup construction work between 2010 and 2012 could probably still be alive if Qatar invested less money in European clubs, foreign managers or golden gifts and instead invested more in better and safer working conditions had. The club justified the termination with the fact that the player recently failed to fulfill his duties.