Glen Scrivener was drafted in the first round by the
Saskatchewan Roughriders with the third overall pick in the
1990 CFL draft. He was traded to the
BC Lions in 1992, and played for the 1994 Lions club that won the
82nd Grey Cup. He had a chance for a second Grey Cup in 1996, during his first stint with the
Edmonton Eskimos, but the team fell to Toronto in the
84th Grey Cup game. In 1998, Scrivener was the recipient of the
Tom Pate Memorial Award, awarded to the athlete who best represents Pate's legacy of commitment both to team and community. Scrivener, then playing for the
Winnipeg Blue Bombers, became the first member of the club to receive the award. Among Scrivener's off-field contributions through the years has been participation in Allstars Baseball, a group of professional athletes and occasionally other celebrities who play benefit softball games for charities such as the
Special Olympics and
Variety Club. Scrivener was one of the sources
The Winnipeg Free Press quoted for a November 23, 2008, article on the rigours of professional football. The piece by Randy Turner, dubbed "The Killing Field: Pro football offers fame and glory, but the price is terrible," was prompted by the death at age 46 of former Blue Bombers offensive lineman
Nick Benjamin. Scrivener noted he had undergone 18 orthopedic surgeries. Said Scrivener: "There are mornings when I get out of bed (and feel pain) and I'll say, 'Yeah, I remember that. That was
B.C. Place. I remember getting hit by (former Lions offensive lineman)
Jamie Taras when he shortened my neck. Or you've got
turf toe on one foot so you can only wear certain types of shoes now. No more cowboy boots. There's constant reminders of when you used to play. Some of them are really positive, when people come up and say, 'Hey, I used to be a season-ticket holder and sat behind the bench. I thought I recognized you.' That's a good thing. But I can't remember the last time I ran because I wanted to." ==Retirement==