Reggie Rivers

{{Short description|American broadcaster and motivational speaker}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=July 2024}}

{{Infobox NFL biography

| name = Reggie Rivers

| number = 38

| position = Running back

| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1968|2|22|mf=y}}

| birth_place = Dayton, Ohio, U.S.

| height_ft = 6

| height_in = 1

| weight_lb = 206

| high_school = Randolph
(Universal City, Texas)

| college = Texas St.

| undraftedyear = 1991

| pastteams =

| statlabel1 = Rushing yards

| statvalue1 = 428

| statlabel2 = Rushing average

| statvalue2 = 3.1

| statlabel3 = Rushing touchdowns

| statvalue3 = 6

| pfr = RiveRe00

}}

Reggie Rivers (born February 22, 1968, in Dayton, Ohio) is a professional broadcaster, motivational speaker, and former professional football player.{{cite web |url=http://www.brooksinternational.com/sports/Reggie__Rivers_770.htm |title=Reggie Rivers |publisher=Brooks International}}

Sports career

Rivers grew up in a U.S. Air Force family and lived in Ohio, England, Florida and Greece before his family moved to the San Antonio, Texas, area. Rivers attended high school at Randolph High School in Randolph AFB, Texas, just outside of San Antonio. In his senior year he rushed for 1,200 yards and earned a scholarship to Southwest Texas State University (now called Texas State University).[https://www.summitdaily.com/news/reggie-rivers-presents-the-tightrope-mentality-at-summit-library/ Summit Daily News]

Rivers was successful at Texas State, and was named to their "Hall of Honor" hall of fame in 2003.[https://txstatebobcats.com/honors/hall-of-honor/reggie-rivers/49 Texas State Hall of Honor]. He majored in Journalism at Texas State and worked for the San Antonio Light.

From 1991 to 1996, Rivers played running back for the Denver Broncos of the National Football League. His most successful season was 1992, where he finished with 731 yards from scrimmage. It was also his most productive rushing year, with 282 yards on 74 carries. Rivers played in every Broncos game during that span, scoring 8 touchdowns. In 1993, Rivers was named the Denver Broncos' special teams Player of the Year. While still a player, Rivers began working for KOA radio; he also wrote a sports column in the Rocky Mountain News.{{cite web |url=http://cbs4denver.com/bios/local_bio_173125534.html |title=Reggie Rivers, Sports Reporter |publisher=KCNC-TV |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060712165114/http://cbs4denver.com/bios/local_bio_173125534.html |archivedate=2006-07-12}}

After football

After retiring from football, Rivers moved to broadcasting full-time, hosting his own talk show on KHOW from 1997 to 2002. Rivers' KHOW show focused more on topical issues than sports, as did his Rocky Mountain News column during the same period (later, Rivers switched to The Denver Post). Since 2006, Rivers has served as KCNC-TV's weekend sports anchor.{{cite web |url=http://denver.cbslocal.com/tag/reggie-rivers/ |title=Reggie Rivers |publisher=KCNC-TV}} He currently lives in Denver, Colorado.

Works

Rivers has also written five books:

The Vance: The Beginning & The End (1994) - an as-told-to autobiography of former Broncos wide receiver Vance Johnson.

Power Shift (2000) - a novel about a sports reporter and a player who hate each other.

4th & Fixed (2004) - a novel about a crime family fixing NFL games.

My Wife's Boyfriend and Our Feud with the Highlands Ranch Homeowners Association (2006)- a comedic novel about a marriage falling apart in the suburbs.

The Colony: A Political Tale (2009) - an allegory about foreign policy told through two colonies of ants.

References