Jalen Harris, Desert Ridge HS, has been named to The Arizona Republic's All-Arizona Football team December 6, 2016.

If you experienced dΓ©jΓ  vu during the Arizona Wildcats’ game against Houston last week, you weren’t alone.

Imagine what Cha-Ron Harris was feeling.

Her son, freshman Jalen Harris, wore a new number against the Cougars – the same No. 49 that his father, Sean, donned as a Wildcat.

Cha-Ron, who played basketball for Arizona in the mid-1990s, reacted giddily to the news. Sean, a star linebacker for the Desert Swarm-era Wildcats, framed it as a challenge for his oldest son.

β€œHe was happy for me,” Jalen Harris said. β€œBut he was like, β€˜You’ll never be as good as me.’ That always makes me want to be better than him. He said, β€˜The best guy already wore that number.’”

Jalen Harris laughed as he told that story. He explained earlier this summer that Sean always has pushed him and younger brother Jason, a big-time two-sport prospect at Gilbert Higley High, to be the best versions of themselves.

β€œHe always told us we had to compete,” Jalen Harris said. β€œWe learned to have a good work ethic through him. Sometimes we wouldn’t want to work out; he’d make us work out. Now I’m happy he taught me that. Now I can do it myself. I know I gotta push through it and get better.”

Although he isn’t as big and strong as he needs to β€” the 6-foot-4-inch Harris reported to Arizona at 205 pounds and was up to 215 on the eve of the season β€” the freshman from Mesa Desert Ridge has worked his way into the rotation. He has come off the bench at the β€œStud” position and has four tackles in two games.

Harris started out wearing No. 52. But when special-teams coordinator Brian Knorr wanted to give him a look on the wing of the field-goal team, Harris needed to have an eligible receiver’s number.

β€œAt first, I wasn’t really thinking about it,” Harris said. β€œIt was just, whatever number I get. Then Coach Knorr asked me, β€˜What number was your dad?’ I told him 49. He’s like, β€˜Do you want that number?’ I said, β€˜Of course, why wouldn’t I?’”

Cornerback Lee Pitts had been wearing 49 and agreed to surrender it.

Now the real work begins for Harris β€” not only living up to his father’s name, but his number.

Jalen acknowledges that Sean was a β€œgreat player” at Arizona, an All-American and a third-round draft pick. Jalen is striving to be β€œgreater.” It starts with heeding his father’s advice, which Jalen summarized as follows:

β€œI’m competing against not just my teammates but everybody in the whole country. I gotta make sure I do the extra work. That’s what separates you from everybody else.”


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