CHARACTER COUNTS NOMINATIONS

Trevor G. Browne QB Alex Rivera uses drive to find athletic and academic success

Nov 23, 2021, 5:02 AM

(Photo courtesy of Olivia Rivera)...

(Photo courtesy of Olivia Rivera)

(Photo courtesy of Olivia Rivera)

Balancing passion and discipline, 17-year-old Trevor G. Browne High School senior Alex Rivera has remained on the path he created for himself.

Football and academics have dominated Rivera’s high school life, and he has accomplished a lot on both fronts.

In the senior’s final season on the high school field, he led Trevor G. Browne to its first winning record since 2009.

He earned 2021 6A Desert Southwest All-Region First Team honors as his team’s starting quarterback and was nominated for the Ed Doherty Award, a high school football player of the year achievement.

Off the field, Rivera has managed to keep his grades up with a 4.44 GPA, which is 16th in his senior class, according to his mother, Olivia.

“He’s just really driven. He keeps that work ethic up with school, even though he knows he’s got football,” Olivia said.

Rivera’s successes have not come without overcoming adversity.

Having to navigate the COVID-19 pandemic as a high school athlete brought complications, which led to a transfer from Cesar Chavez High School to Browne.

“COVID, it really did cut down the season to three games from the original 10 games and … and then just I wasn’t given the opportunity I believe I should’ve had as far as playing quarterback,” Rivera said. “Not only did I transfer out, but there’s about 20-25 other kids that transferred out after those three games.”

He transferred to Trevor G. Browne for its academics and to join a rising football program helmed by a young coach, Francisco Rangel.

He did not step into the starting role, though. He had to earn it.

“I had to earn the coaches’ respects, show up every day, show up on time, show that leadership,” Rivera said. “The best thing about it, too, is creating relationships early, meeting new people. At first, it’s new and different … Now, going back months later, it’s like a brotherhood.”

Previous season-ending injuries in back-to-back years during middle school threatened the quarterback’s football future. He suffered a broken collarbone and then a hairline fracture of his sternum bone.

Rivera admits to questioning if he should remain in the sport since he kept getting injured, but he never lost interest in it.

When he was ready to play again, he led his Pop Warner team in eighth grade to the national championship tournament at Disney World.

Rivera adheres to the “trust the process” philosophy, which he uses to stay focused “on the road” regardless of hardships. That’s helped him not just with sports but studies.

Schoolwork is still a major priority for Rivera.

Trevor G. Browne has an advisory period, a fourth period as Rivera described it, to get homework done. Rivera uses that time and his study hall to make sure he’s on top of everything before practice starts.

He admitted it can be challenging to balance school and football, but his results show his commitment.

“We work around different things, different methods to make sure that he stays successful, both in school and he’s getting the proper rest for football,” Rivera’s father, Alex, said. “He’s just really driven, has a lot of discipline and we’re really excited that he’s got that kind of drive.”

While the football season is over, Rivera is not done competing. He will continue to do so at DECA events, which prepare students in marketing, finance, hospitality and management, according to its website.

His marketing teacher at Trevor G. Browne recommended the program to Rivera when he transferred schools, and it has taught him a lot of business skills for the future.

Comments

Comment guidelines: No name-calling, personal attacks, profanity, or insults. Please keep the conversation civil and help us moderate comments by reporting abuse.
comments powered by Disqus

Character Counts Nominations

Aani Nagaiah, front row far right, is the winner among 10 finalists for the 2024 Character Counts s...

Character Counts

Arcadia senior wins 2024 Character Counts Scholarship

Arcadia's Aani Nagaiah on Wednesday night was presented as the winner of the 2024 Character Counts scholarship courtesy of Parker & Sons.

2 months ago

...

Vincent DeAngelis

Arcadia’s Aani Nagaiah inspires people through music, sports and research

Aani Nagaiah is a senior at Arcadia High School who volunteers, plays three different sports and is even a nonprofit owner.

3 months ago

Naomi Malone...

Character Counts

UMKC track commit Naomi Malone has a plan to help others

University of Missouri-Kansas City sprinter commit Naomi Malone has a clear picture of her future, even if the present might be a tad busy.

4 months ago

Gilbert Classical Academy (GCA Spartans/Facebook)...

Character Counts

Gilbert Classical Academy senior thrives on keys, track and volunteer work

Regan Birk has had an impact in his community through many different facets before he looks ahead to the transition to college next summer.

4 months ago

Casa Grande Union High School...

Character Counts

Casa Grande sophomore making most of his time on and off basketball court

Casa Grande Union High School sophomore Phinneas Linehan aspires to make it on the basketball court with law school on his radar.

5 months ago

Heritage Academy Maricopa (HAMaricopa/Athletics)...

Damon Allred

Heritage Academy’s Abby Dirks works hard to be a good example for all

Abby Dirks knows what it means to be a leader on and off the court. She understands the big picture and her place in it.

5 months ago

Trevor G. Browne QB Alex Rivera uses drive to find athletic and academic success