Rolling on: Harris chooses Alabama
Antioch back set to begin classes in Tuscaloosa
Antioch High running back Najee Harris, the nation’s No. 1 recruit and the leading rusher in Northern California prep history, will play football at the University of Alabama.
The news, confirmed to The Chronicle by a source close to Harris, came as little surprise, given his verbal commitment to Alabama nearly two years ago. Even so, Harris kept his recruitment open and strongly considered Michigan, mostly because of the rapport he developed with head coach Jim Harbaugh.
Harris sidestepped several chances to tip his hand during practices last week for the U.S. Army All-American Bowl, a national high school all-star game played Saturday in San Antonio. He even suggested to reporters that he might bypass the traditional “announcement” of his decision in favor of simply arriving on the college campus of his choice.
That’s essentially what happened — Harris traveled straight from San Antonio to Alabama on Sunday. Spring-semester classes begin Wednesday.
Harris made his nonbinding verbal commitment to Alabama
in April 2015, near the end of his sophomore year, during an unofficial campus visit to Tuscaloosa, Ala. He took official visits this past fall to UCLA, Alabama, Cal and Michigan.
All along, Harris hoped to graduate early from Antioch so he could enroll in college for the spring semester. He secured the grades and SAT score he needed and officially became a high school graduate Dec. 22, after completing his final exams.
Early enrollment has become an increasingly popular move among top college football recruits, allowing them to participate in spring practice with their new team.
Throughout his recruitment, Harris provided few clues into his thinking beyond the Alabama verbal commitment. But he pointed to the SEC, widely regarded as the toughest conference in the nation, in explaining the Crimson Tide’s appeal.
“I really love competition, and there’s nothing better than the SEC,” Harris said in a November interview. “Then when I went there, you feel that thing in your body, like, ‘OK, this is where I want to go.’ I felt comfortable there. …
“But I got that feeling at Michigan, too, and Ohio State.”
Harris, 18, is the rare running back recruit who blends size (6-foot-3, 226 pounds), speed (4.5 in the 40-yard dash) and elusiveness. That became obvious as a junior, when he gained 2,744 yards rushing and scored 39 touchdowns in leading Antioch to an 11-0 regular season. The Panthers then lost to Foothill-Pleasanton in the North Coast Section Division I semifinals.
This past season, Harris rushed for 2,776 yards and scored 36 touchdowns as Antioch went 8-5 and reached the NCS championship game for only the second time in school history.
Harris finished his career with 7,948 yards rushing, the fourth-highest total in California history, according to CalHi Sports. He also scored 99 touchdowns.
These gaudy numbers help explain the recruiting stampede to Antioch the past two years.
Harbaugh created a stir with his Oct. 14 visit to see Harris play. Two weeks later, Alabama assistant coach Tosh Lupoi and then-offensive coordinator Lane Kiffin watched (as did USC running backs coach Tommie Robinson) as Harris gained 175 yards in a lopsided victory over Heritage-Brentwood.
All three of those coaches, like Harbaugh, followed NCAA recruiting guidelines and avoided more than a passing hello to Harris. But Alabama reinforced its interest in early December, when Lupoi and head coach Nick Saban made a home visit to the Antioch apartment where Harris lives with his mother, Tianna Hicks.
Hicks posted photos on Twitter of Saban and Lupoi posing with her and a coworker Dec. 7 at Kaiser’s offices in Walnut Creek, and later that night at home with her and Harris. Hicks also posted photos of their earlier visit to UCLA and subsequent visits to Cal and Michigan.
The recruiting race took its toll on Harris, who acknowledged his anxiety and stress as his final high school season unfolded. He became increasingly restless to leave Antioch and take the leap into the high-profile world of Division I college football.
As he said last month, “I’m ready for the next chapter in my life.”