The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Freshman WR Harris shows character quietly

Academic achievemen­t at Newnan High School typifies dedication.

- ByKenSugiu­ra ksugiura@ajc.com

College football coaches (or their subordinat­es) make a practice of checking the social-media postings of high school prospects, as what they have to say can often lend insight into a recruit’s personalit­y or character. Coaches have been known to pull scholarshi­p offers based on an athletes’ offensive tweets.

In a different way, Georgia Tech freshman wide receiver Pejé Harris revealed a little bit of himself after he received and then accepted a scholarshi­p offer from Tech in January 2017 during his junior year. It is customary for prospects to announce scholarshi­p offers and commitment­s. The practice is understand­able — it’s the sharing of exciting personal news. That said, the posts can sometimes have a look-at-me bent to them.

Harris, though, stood outwith his social-media response — he did nothing. In fact, word of Harris’ commitment to Tech didn’t become widely known until June of that year, five months later.

Harris said he doesn’t consider publicizin­g scholarshi­p offers to be bragging, but just didn’t see the need.

“My friends asked me a lot — was I going to post it, was I going to tell the world,” Harris said. “But Tech never asked me about it. It definitely didn’t feel like I just had to do it. I never thought about it. Never really wanted to put it out there like that.”

He delighted his coach at Newnan High with his indifferen­ce.

“The coaches at Tech knew, his family knew, he told us,” Chip Walker said. “That was it. He was good with it. It just tells you a little bit about his character and what he wants to achieve. I think especially in today’s time, when everybody wants to do all that other stuff, he’s not worried about it. He’s worried about playing football and about getting an education and he’s worried about being the best person he can be.”

Besides soft hands, an appetite for perimeter blocking and good size for his position (6-foot-2 and 215pounds), Harris brings to Tech a humility and drive that figure to serve him well in his time in a Yellow Jackets uniform.

Harris’ guidance counselor at Newnan, Mike Barnes, saw both qualities in the two years he worked with him.

“Overall, he’s just a really, really good kid,” Barnes said. “He’s humble, he’s a ‘Yes, sir/no ma’am kind of a student. Not really arrogant. Working in a (Class) 7A school, sometimes your top athletes kind of have a little arrogance about themselves, and he definitely doesn’t have that.”

After the first semester of his senior year, Harris was on track to graduate with honors, but had a chance to earn high honors.

“After he talked with his family, he came back and said, ‘Let’s do this,’” Barnes said.

At a time when classmates were coasting to the graduation finish line, Harris picked up an advanced-placement (college-level) economics class and dropped a less rigorous course to earn the necessary points. Needing a 95 average for his four-year transcript, Harris pushed himself to the end and finished with “95 and some change,” Barnes said.

“You see (that sort of ambition) in girls, but you don’t really see it with the young men,” Barnes said. “Just for him to go after a goal like that is not something you see on an everyday basis. It is rare and it just goes to show he and his parents value education.”

Harris is the second of three. His older brother Brandon is a sheriff’s deputy and his younger brother Joshua is a rising sophomore at Newnan.

Perhaps not surprising­ly, Harris is the son of two educators. His mother Vera is the principal of a Coweta County middle school. His father Patrick Sr. is a P.E. teacher at another middle school in the county and coached Pejé (pronounced “P. J.”, short for Patrick Jr.) in football. (Harris’ parents are divorced but remain on good terms.)

“I want to be smart,” Harris said. “I don’t want to known for football, or just football. I want to be known for, ‘Oh, that kid Pejé, he’s great at football, but he was good at getting his work done. He’s high honors.’ That meant so much to me.”

Vera, who played basketball at Southern Miss, is a football nut. She is the rare mother who was quite happy to see her son graduate from flag football to the tackle version because flag “just wasn’t going to cut it for Mama.”

She seems cut out to be the mother of a Tech wide receiver, for whom20 catches is a big season.

“Our big thing with him was asking him to make sure that he didn’t focus somuch on whether or not the ball was being thrown to him,” she said. “To focus more on doing whatever your job is at that moment. If you’re supposed to be getting open to catch the ball, get open. If you’re supposed to be blocking for the running back, then block. Whatever your job is.”

Harris takes coaching well, whether fromhis mother or others. He attended the one-day camps of Tech great Calvin Johnson for four years, and listening to him recount the experience, it’s clear he wasn’t there just for a selfie and to bask in Johnson’s greatness. Sitting ina bagel shopin Newnan, Harris could still recount lessons that Johnson imparted. For instance, watch the cornerback’s hips.

“It’ll tell when they’re about to flip their hips (come out of their backpedal to start running alongside a receiver), when they’re about to break down (prepare to change direction),” hesaid. “Small things like that, small details like that really help you with your route running and blocking.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Georgia Tech freshmanwi­de receiver PejéHarris’ endless efforts to improve his football skills include thumb-stretching exercises.
CONTRIBUTE­D Georgia Tech freshmanwi­de receiver PejéHarris’ endless efforts to improve his football skills include thumb-stretching exercises.

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