DE shifts gears to ride with UA
The second in a series highlighting newcomers to the Arkansas Razorbacks football team.
Alfred Harris’ black-andgold Jeep is nearly constructed. But his grandson, Nick Fulwider, won’t wear matching colors.
In the summer of 2009, Diahann Fulwider dropped her children off to vacation at her parents’ house in Montgomery,
Ala.
Harris, an electrician at Alabama Power, enlisted her 9-year-old son, Nick, as his assistant
Fulwider in the garage.
They stripped wires and fixed electrical sockets.
Then Harris thought of a
project that would bond them every summer thereafter. They’d build a Jeep and paint it black and gold — the colors of Harris’ beloved Alabama State Hornets.
Those summers molded Fulwider’s interest in mechanical engineering, which later helped him shorten a list of more than two dozen football scholarships that included the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville.
But in the summer of 2009, Harris sent his grandson back home to Tyrone, Ga., hoping he would one day attend his alma mater, Alabama State.
Fulwider excelled at nearly ever sport he tried. Soccer. Basketball. Baseball.
His baseball coach also coached the youth football team, the Locust Grove Tigers, and approached Fulwider’s parents.
“He’s gonna play football with us,” Fulwider said the coach told them.
Each fall, Fulwider grew larger and stronger. Each summer, so did his grandfather’s Jeep.
By his senior year at Sandy Creek High School, Fulwider was 6-7, 249 pounds, and played defensive end for the Patriots football team.
The offer letters poured in. Michigan State and Ole Miss. West Virginia and Wisconsin.
The Fulwiders took so many trips to Power 5 conference campuses, it resembled the front end of an Alabama State men’s basketball schedule. That’s as close as Fulwider would come to connecting with the Hornets, which did disappoint his grandfather for a short time.
Fulwider first visited Georgia Tech — the nation’s No. 3 mechanical engineering school, according to U.S. News & World Report — 27 miles away from his home.
“I’m right down the street from there,” he said. “I was able to check it out. Got my feel for it. It’s a very good school.”
Then he visited North Carolina, which also had coursework that aligned with his interest.
“I was really looking into North Carolina,” said Fulwider, who orally committed to the Tar Heels in November. “And when I got up here [Arkansas], it just really felt like home. It really did. They had my major, and it always just felt like home here.”
Fulwider officially visited Fayetteville on Dec. 15, more than a week after the Razorbacks hired new head Coach Chad Morris.
Fulwider had been in previous contact with defensive line