Major Harris
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| Major Harris | |
|---|---|
| Date of birth | February 15, 1968 (age 39) |
| Place of birth | |
| Height | 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) |
| Weight | 205 lb (93 kg) |
| Position(s) | QB |
| College | West Virginia |
| NFL Draft | 1990 / Round 12 / Pick 317 |
| Career Highlights | |
| Awards | 1989 ECAC POY 1988 ECAC POY |
| Honors | 1989 All-American |
| Team(s) | |
| 1990 1991-1992, 1994 2003 |
British Columbia Lions Columbus/Cleveland Thunderbolts Charleston Swamp Foxes |
Major Harris (b. February 15, 1968–) was a college quarterback for West Virginia University during the 1980s.
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Major started his career as a senior in Brashear High School in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Major's breaking point was when he threw a game winning 79 yard touchdown pass to Tony Horne on the last play of the game against Indiana High School.
Major was interested in attending the University of Pittsburgh, but the coach, Mike Gottfried, was only interested with him at defensive back. Harris took another offer at West Virginia, where coach Don Nehlen was trying to rebuild the quarterback position. Nehlen set up a football camp for two-hand touch football and stated, "The kids couldn't touch him."
Nehlen signed Florida prep quarterback Browning Nagle along with Harris and redshirted them for the season. Harris and Nagle battled it out in spring practice and Harris eventually won the job, so Nagle transferred to University of Louisville.
Harris struggled at first, but when the fifth game came around at East Carolina University Harris stood out and ended West Virginia's season with a bid to the Sun Bowl against Oklahoma State University. West Virginia lost, but Harris rushed for over 100 yards.
The following season, he was nearly perfect in directing West Virginia to the school’s first-ever undefeated, untied regular season and a matchup against No. 1-ranked Notre Dame in the Fiesta Bowl for the national championship.
Early in the game, Major Harris was hit and separated his shoulder. Harris stayed in the game, but didn't throw the ball that much, instead scrambled. At halftime, Harris fixed his shoulder, but he still could not throw deep. West Virginia never threatened Notre Dame's lead, and the Fighting Irish won 34-21.
In getting the Mountaineers there, Harris baffled opponents all season with his daring, unpredictable, wide-open style. That was never more evident than in West Virginia’s 51-30 dismantling of long-time nemesis Penn State. Harris outgained the entire Penn State team, 301-292, and produced the school’s most exciting run ever in the first quarter of that game.
That run and several more like it helped him finish fifth in the Heisman Trophy race that year and earn ECAC player of the year honors.
As a junior in 1989, Harris was equally spectacular despite not having as strong a supporting cast. He passed for 2,058 yards and rushed for 936 yards to finish third in the 1989 Heisman Trophy balloting. He earned first team Kodak All-America honors and was a second team AP and Football News All-American. Like 1988, Harris was again voted ECAC player of the year. That year, Harris led the Mountaineers to a Gator Bowl game, but they lost to Clemson 27-7.
Harris has been considered the greatest quarterback to play at West Virginia. He established a WVU record with 7,334 total yards and became one of just two quarterbacks in Division I history to pass for more than 5,000 yards and rush for more than 2,000 yards. His 2,161 rushing yards rank eighth on the school all-time rushing list.
Against Penn State in 1988, as the play clock wound down, Harris forgot the play he had called in the huddle. As soon as the ball was snapped, the entire West Virginia team went in one direction and Harris went the other. He faked out the entire Penn State team leaving no less than seven tacklers grabbing air on the way to the most gorgeous touchdown run in school history -- a mere 26-yards forever embedded in the memories of West Virginia football fans. West Virginia won the game 51-30.
Harris' coach, Don Nehlen, said of the run, "I had called 37 and he ran 36. Everybody else on our offense went one way, and Major went the other-he literally ran throught the Penn State defense for a touchdown of about 30 yards. After he scored, Major came to the sideling and apologized. He said, "My fault, Coach." People still ask me about that play all of the time...If there was a contest for most exciting player, Major would win it hands down."
After the completion of his junior year, Harris was convinced to leave school early and was drafted in the 12th round by the Los Angeles Raiders, though he would never play a down in the NFL. Instead Harris played one season in the Canadian Football League with the British Columbia Lions before spending parts of the next five years in the Arena Football League, where his 429 rushing yards in 1991 stood as a single-season league record until Michael Bishop ran for 459 yards in 2005.
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Categories: 1968 births | Living people | Sportspeople from Pittsburgh | American football quarterbacks | West Virginia Mountaineers football players | American players of Canadian football | Canadian Football League quarterbacks | British Columbia Lions players | Arena Football League players | Canadian football stubs