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Former Brahma shares life story

Football player helps alma mater improve football program

For kids growing up in the streets of Los Angeles, life can be tough. With gang violence and drugs so prevalent, children often grow up in broken families. One of those kids was former Pierce College Brahmas defensive end Elliott Reyes.

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“As a youngster I was a troublemaker,” Reyes said. “Growing up I really did not have brothers and sisters. I never knew my father. All there was, was gang members that were the influence and that just kind of became a lifestyle. From 12 to 18 I was gang banging. That was kind of how I developed my leadership skills as a kid.”

Reyes eventually had enough of the gang scene, after being a part of the Temple Street gang. When he was 18, his childhood friend Gary Gomez was shot and killed by a rival gang member. While standing next to Gomez’s mother at his funeral, Reyes made a life changing decision.

Reyes decided to make changes to his lifestyle and separate himself from gangs for good. Reyes then turn his attention to football and decided that he was going to tryout for Pierce’s football team where he was recruited by head coach Efrain Martinez to play for the Brahmas.

“He was a great leader and he was a great motivator,” Martinez said about Reyes “He lead by example. He was always in the weight room, he was always at the practices. He did the right thing and that’s why people followed him.”

Reyes made an important contribution to Pierce’s defensive line from the start. He joined the team in 2010, that same year

Reyes would help the Brahmas win the American Bowl Division Championship. This was also the first year the Brahmas proved they could not only win championships, but they could also send players on to the next level.

In 2010, 26 student athletes from Pierce received athletic scholarships. Reyes is proud to be part of the first group of student athletes that moved on from Pierce and into other schools through athletics.

“When I look back on my life, I can say I played with Jaelen Strong,” Reyes said.” I competed against division one athletes. It was my generation that got the new tradition of Brahma football going.”

Since 2010, the Brahmas have assisted 87 student athletes in obtaining scholarships to play at four year colleges and universities, including 49 players that have played or now play at Division I schools. Current defensive linemen coach Kort Huettinger, who came to Pierce during the summer of 2011, watched Reyes’ development during his sophomore year and remembers Reyes as being one of the hardest workers on the team.

In the eyes of Huettinger, it was Reyes’ hard work that set the bar high for future teams.

“Elliott brought a lot of work ethic, especially in the weight room,” Huettinger said. “He and a couple of the other guys were big time weight lifters and they pushed the bar high in the weight room. They really made it a competition in there and I think that is really why we have had such a big turnaround. All of a sudden we had guys making weight room a competition. Not just competing on the field but competing in the weight room as well. That and him competing with Gerald Bowman (former safety now at USC) and other guys like Mike Pearson (former fullback who was a walk-on at Texas Tech), it really raised the bar in the weight room. To become Division I athletes, the way to be doing it is in the weight room. Elliott’s leadership on the field was exemplary. He always stepped up, he always did what he was asked. He never asked why, he just got it done and he took care of business on and off the field.”

Reyes, who is now 24, has gone from the streets to being on the verge of graduating from Cal Lutheran University, where he chose to attend to continue his studies following his playing days at Pierce.

During his time off, he volunteers as an assistant coach for the Chatsworth High School football team where he went to high school, and is the team’s defensive line coach as well as strength and conditioning coach. Not only does he coach for the love of the game, but he also does it to encourage his students to stay away from gangs and drugs.

“It’s funny because I’m back at my old stomping grounds where I showed a lot of deviance,” Reyes said. “Now that I’m here as an adult, helping kids is really life fulfilling.”

Reyes had an important part in helping develop the Chatsworth football program in recent months. The Chancellors had been an afterthought in the past few years, but an upset win over University High School in the city section Division II playoffs and making it all the way to the city semifinals changed things.

Reyes thinks that he can help develop the team and make them better than they were before. He not only wants to change the football team, but change the culture as well, which includes upgrading some of Chatsworth’s old facilities such as the football field.

“We’re really changing it up there,” Reyes said. “I’m trying to make Chatsworth the powerhouse it was when Matt Cassel (former Chatsworth QB who played at USC and currently plays for the Minnesota Vikings) was here. I’m really excited to see what we are going to do this season. One of our goals is to try and win the big lineman competition to try to see what we can do. The facilities here are really bad, so I really want to win first place so then we could start getting some donations and support and help those kids be successful. If we start to win, then the administrators at the school will start taking notice. One of my goals when I’m coaching here is to try and get a new football field.”

Chatsworth football head coach Andrew Kim has been delighted with the results since Reyes’ began helping out at practices.

“He has a lot of intensity,” Kim said. “Kids look up to him because he has got it done on his own. He was a great football player. He has great work ethic. He is a monster in the weight room and the techniques that he is showing our defensive line has really brought the hunger into this defense.”

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