The Starβs newest high school player of the week comes out of Sierra Vista, where Buena quarterback Jovoni Borbon pieced together a simple yet eyebrow-raising performance in the Coltsβ 42-7 over Empire.
Borbon, a 5-foot-10-inch, 185-pound senior, completed 3 of 4 passes for 113 yards and two touchdowns, with all of Borbonβs passes going to the same receiver β Keyon Taylor. Borbon also rushed six times for a team-high 105 yards and two touchdowns.
Borbon, who checked in at No. 19 on the Starβs top 22 players in Southern Arizona countdown, can do it all. He has thrown for 4,552 yards and 36 touchdowns in three-plus seasons. Borbon and the Colts (2-1) will look to win their second straight game on Friday, when they take on Desert View in Tucson.
Borbon joined the Starβs Justin Spears on ESPN Tucson earlier this week about his performance against Empire and his connection to a famous western town in Arizona:
What were your takeaways from your performance in Buenaβs win over Empire?
A: βWith Coach (Joe) Thomas down here in Sierra Vista, we love throwing deep. I told Coach Thomas coming into the game that I wanted to run for two (touchdowns) and throw for two. We got it done up front and our passing game was good. It worked out good throwing the deep ball.β
How is the connection between you and Taylor?
A: βItβs different. Heβs young and he has a lot to learn. He listens and heβs coachable. Anything Iβve told him, he was listening, and heβs trying to improve every single day so I respect him a lot for that. I love throwing to the kid. Heβs fast and catches everything, so itβs been pretty good this season.β
What was your childhood like before playing at Buena?
A: βItβs funny, Iβm actually from Tombstone, Arizona, and Iβve lived in Tombstone my whole life. I went to elementary school in Tombstone with just me, my mom, my sister. We had a little discussion on where Iβm gonna go to high school and what was the best decision for me. We moved to Sierra Vista a couple years ago, and coming to high school here was definitely a change. Going from a school that had 80 kids to a high school that has 2,500 is a little different. Itβs been great. I love the challenge.β
Was it difficult to find things to keep you busy?
A: βItβs definitely different, and a lot of people donβt know where Tombstone is. A lot of people are like, βDo you guys ride horses?β These people think I live in a different country or something and Iβm like, βNo itβs normal down there.β Itβs smaller and I work down there when I can on the weekends when I can. Itβs a real small community and sports arenβt too big. One of the biggest reasons why I went to Buena was because of the competition.β
You mentioned work; what do you do when youβre not playing football or going to school?
A: βMy family owns the Longhorn restaurant down there. Whenever it gets busy during Helldorado Days, Iβll go down and clean tables and take orders. Itβs fun going down there to make some money as a teenager.β
What has working in the restaurant business taught you?
A: βIt hasnβt changed, but itβs shaped who I am. Seeing the different type of people and seeing how theyβre leaders in a different type of way, and then translating that onto the football field. Itβs different and at the same time itβs not. β¦ When it gets busy, itβs the fourth quarter. Everything is going fast and Iβm trying to throw the deep ball, but itβs a little different in the restaurant. You canβt throw the deep ball.β