If you experienced dΓ©jΓ vu during the Arizona Wildcatsβ game against Houston last week, you werenβt alone.
Imagine what Cha-Ron Harris was feeling.
Her son, freshman Jalen Harris, wore a new number against the Cougars β 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.
βHe was happy for me,β Jalen Harris said. βBut he was like, βYouβll never be as good as me.β That always makes me want to be better than him. He said, βThe best guy already wore that number.ββ
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.
βHe always told us we had to compete,β Jalen Harris said. βWe learned to have a good work ethic through him. Sometimes we wouldnβt want to work out; heβd make us work out. Now Iβm happy he taught me that. Now I can do it myself. I know I gotta push through it and get better.β
Although he isnβt 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 βStudβ 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 receiverβs number.
βAt first, I wasnβt really thinking about it,β Harris said. βIt was just, whatever number I get. Then Coach Knorr asked me, βWhat number was your dad?β I told him 49. Heβs like, βDo you want that number?β I said, βOf course, why wouldnβt I?ββ
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 fatherβs name, but his number.
Jalen acknowledges that Sean was a βgreat playerβ at Arizona, an All-American and a third-round draft pick. Jalen is striving to be βgreater.β It starts with heeding his fatherβs advice, which Jalen summarized as follows:
βIβm competing against not just my teammates but everybody in the whole country. I gotta make sure I do the extra work. Thatβs what separates you from everybody else.β