Marysville Appeal-Democrat

UC Irvine’s Rivers will get his shot

- By Jeff Miller The Los Angeles Times (TNS)

LOS ANGELES – The poster was hanging there waiting for him, waiting like a slap across the face.

By his recollecti­on, it read, “Austin Rivers: 30 points per game, Jeremiah Rivers: 32 points per game, Spencer Rivers: 0 points per game.”

He noticed it while trotting onto the floor for the season opener of his sophomore year at Winter Park High in Florida.

This was before Spencer Rivers had even played a game, a point at which everyone’s average is, technicall­y, zero.

“It was kind of crazy,” he says now, smiling. “But it didn’t affect me because I was dealing with that stuff in middle school.”

This sort of public ridicule can happen when the name arched across the back of your jersey lays there like an anchor.

Spencer’s father is Doc Rivers, longtime NBA guard and current coach of the Los Angeles Clippers. One of his brothers, Jeremiah, played at Georgetown and Indiana. His other brother, Austin, is a Houston Rocket. His sister, Callie, was a standout volleyball player at Florida.

And now, to conclude a college career that has featured an entire year lost to injury, limited playing time and fleeting moments, Spencer is heading to the NCAA tournament, as a reserve guard for UC Irvine.

“I’m really happy for him as a staff member but more importantl­y as a friend,” says Alex Young, a former teammate and now Irvine’s video coordinato­r. “I’m really excited for everything that has happened for him. He deserves this.”

Rivers rarely has played more for the Anteaters than he has the last few weeks. Thanks in part to an injury to Eyassu Worku, Rivers averaged nearly 20 minutes over the final five regular-season games.

In the opener of the Big West tournament, Rivers played 25 minutes, his high for the year.

Finally, for someone who coach Russell Turner

says has brought so much to the Irvine program, Rivers’ contributi­ons have been as easy to read as a box score.

“Coming from his family there’s an authority behind his voice,” Turner says. “That allows him to lead in the locker room. He’s learned how to be incredibly positive because of that voice.”

Rivers can be heard during timeout huddles, spreading encouragem­ent. And from the back of the bus, where he routinely sings aloud from beneath headphones.

Young called him “the life of the team,” a descriptio­n that’s particular­ly true when Rivers launches into one of his impersonat­ions of Turner or an Irvine assistant coach.

“He has like a Jamie Foxx ability when it comes to that stuff,” teammate Max Hazzard says. “He kills the coaching staff. That’s probably our highlight.”

Growing up as the baby in a basketball family, Rivers recalls hours spent on the backyard half-court, the one that included flood lights so the boys could play into the night and a giant net so the ball wouldn’t bounce into the next-door lake.

 ?? The Los Angeles Times/tns ?? UC Irvine guard, Spencer Rivers, goes up for a shot during a game this season for the Anteaters.
The Los Angeles Times/tns UC Irvine guard, Spencer Rivers, goes up for a shot during a game this season for the Anteaters.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States