Note: Professional first are on the national level unless otherwise indicated.
Started racing: August 7, 1992, on his seventh birthday. His father took him to a BMX track and he was hooked.
First race bike: Huffy
Sanctioning body: American Bicycle Association (ABA)
Home sanctioning body district(s): ABA California District 7 (CA-7 1993).
First race result: First place 7 Novice.
First win (local): See above.
First sponsor: AXO approximately in February 1993.
First national win: Turned Professional: November 2001 Age 16 immediately after the
American Bicycle Association (ABA) Grand Nationals. Redline teammate
Kim Hayashi also turns pro on this occasion.
First Professional race result: First Professional win: First Junior Pro* race result: First Junior Pro win: First Senior Pro** race result: First Senior Pro win: The American Bicycle Association (ABA) Empire Nationals on May 18, 2003, in
Kingston, New York.
Status: Not actively racing (last year raced was 2019 in USA BMX Vet Pro)
Height & weight at height of his career: Ht:6'0" Wt:190 lbs.
*In the NBL "B" Pro/Super Class/"A" Pro/Junior Elite Men depending on the era; in the ABA it is "A" Pro.
**In the NBL it is "AA" Pro/Elite Men; in the ABA it is "AA" Pro.
Career factory and major bike shop sponsors Note: This listing only denotes the racer's primary sponsors. At any given time a racer could have numerous co-sponsors. Primary sponsorships can be verified by BMX press coverage and sponsor's advertisements at the time in question. When possible exact dates are used.
Amateur •
AXO Sport: February 1993-Early 1994 •
Answer Products, Inc.: Early 1994-November 1999. Harris was the first racer Answer Products ever sponsored. :As of December 31, 2008 Harris is still unsponsored. He recently raced the 2008 ABA Grand Nationals in
Tulsa, Oklahoma, as a privateer. He did not make the main in "AA" pro. --> •
Answer BMX Products: March 5, 2009 – 2010. After being without a major BMX sponsor since late July 2008 and in recovery from injuries Harris resigns with his second sponsor and first one he came to national prominence with as an amateur. His first race with his old but new sponsor was the ABA Winter Nationals in
Phoenix, Arizona, on March 6–8, 2009. •
Supercross BMX: 2010–April 2012. Following over a year of sponsorship with Answer Products, Harris joined the Supercross BMX Factory Team. While on Answer, Harris rode the Supercross ENVY frame-set. •
Doublecross Bikes: April 26, 2012 – November 2012. Less than 2 weeks after announcing his departure from Supercross, Bubba announced he will be taking his talents to Doublecross Bikes. He would remain with them through the 2012 USABMX Grand National Championship.
Career bicycle motocross titles Note: Listed are District, State/Provincial/Department, Regional, National, and International titles in
italics. Depending on point totals of individual racers, winners of Grand Nationals do not necessarily win National titles. Only sanctioning bodies active during the racer's career are listed. Series and one off Championships are also listed in block.
Amateur National Bicycle League (NBL) American Bicycle Association (ABA) •
1993 California District 7 (CA-07) No.1 •
1994 10 & Under Cruiser Gold Cup West Champion •
1994 9 Boys Southern California State Champion •
1995 9 Boys World Cup Champion •
1995 9 & Under Cruiser World Cup Champion • 1995 10 Expert and 10 Cruiser Grandnational Champion •
1996 10 Expert and 10 Cruiser World Cup Champion • 1996 11 Expert and 11 Cruiser Grandnational Champion •
2001 16 Expert and 16 Cruiser No.1 Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) USA Cycling BMX: Professional National Bicycle League (NBL) • None
American Bicycle Association (ABA) • 2002 Pro Cruiser National No.3 • 2005 Pro Race of Champions (ROC) champion. • ''2004,'05 World Champion'' • ''2004,'05,'06 National No.1 Pro''
International Bicycle Motocross Federation (IBMXF)* • None (defunct)
Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI)* •
2005 Elite Men World Champion USA Cycling BMX: • None
USA BMX: • None
BMX product lines • Bubba Harris Signature Series of various products: :Redline Aluminum Flight Mini, Flight, Flight Expert, Flight Junior, Flight Pro XL, Flight Pro XXL, Flight Series Cruiser frames and forks.
Notable accolades • He is a 2002 ABA
BMXer magazine Golden Crank winner for Professional Rookie of the Year. • He has become only the second rider in BMX history, and the first in the ABA, to win the Senior Pro 20" class three consecutive times winning the "AA" pro class title in 2004, 2005, and 2006, tying
Terry Tenette. Terry Tenette was the first pro racer to do so in 1990,'91 & '92 in the National Bicycle League "A" Pro (Elite Men) class. Other three consecutive title wins have occurred in other classes in the past.
Brent Patterson did it prior in the NBL Pro Cruiser class in 1981,'82 & '83 and
Cheri Elliott in the ABA's girls amateur 20" division in 1983,'84 & '85. Other racers have done it and exceeded it in other classes since.
John Purse came close to doing it in 1997 after winning the title with the NBL in 1995 and 1996 but a crash in the NBL Grand National semi finals ended his bid for a "
three-peat". Terry Tenette was still the only one to have done it in 20" Men's Senior Pro until 2006. Bubba Harris would have made it four in a row breaking Tenette's record if he took the 20" AA pro title again in the ABA racing circuit in 2007. However while in preparation for the 2008 Summer Olympics he suffered an ankle injury in
Beijing, China on August 20, 2007, that took him out of the running to accomplish that feat. • He was enshrined into the
National BMX Hall of Fame - Class of 2023.
Significant injuries • Fractured his arm at the ABA Lonestar Nationals in
Beaumont, Texas, on March 5, 2000, after going two years without an injury. He was laid up for approximately three weeks until the weekend of March 26 of the ABA Winternationals in
Phoenix, Arizona. • Fractured shoulder at the Nellis Silver state NBL/UCI National race in
Nellis, Nevada, on March 26, 2006. Was laid up for seven weeks until the ABA Dixieland Nationals in
Marietta, Georgia, on May 20, 2006. • Suffered a separated shoulder at the UCI national in
Las Vegas, Nevada. • Suffered a jammed elbow at the UCI Supercross time trials on September 7, 2006, in
San Jose, California. • Exactly one year to the day BMX competition was to start in the 2008 Olympic Games in
Beijing, China, he completely dislocated the left ankle at the
talus bone on August 20, 2007, in Beijing, China on the official Olympic track during his first run of his Time Trial. Coming out of the second turn he took an extra two pedals before setting up for the jumps. This did not leave him enough time to make the transition smoothly. He hit the first jump of the rhythm section and his right foot became unclipped from that pedal. He hit two successive jumps essentially one footed, his still clipped in left foot taking the weight. • Still maintaining Olympic hopes he was in training for the Summer Olympics at a track at the Olympic Training Center in
Chula Vista, California. His Olympic dreams for making the 2008 team came to an end when he broke his right ankle in practice for the Olympic Trials on June 12, 2008. Ironically, the training track is an exact replica of the Olympic BMX track that the BMX events for the Beijing Olympics would be held on. His crash was on the second straight. He had hoped that it was a bad sprain but the next day doctors confirmed the break and Harris withdrew his name from the Time Trial competition leaving only seven competitors. On June 14, 2008, Harris saw his good friend Mike Day win the Olympic team Qualifying Trials and qualified for a sure slot on the USA BMX Olympic Team. He was cheering him on straight through. A few days after the Trials Harris had surgery to remove some of the floating bone chips left over in his left ankle from his severe August 20, 2007, dislocation. • Harris suffered from cracked ribs after a crash at the ABA Silver Dollar Nationals in
Reno, Nevada, on the weekend of January 11, 2009. He reportedly fell on his handlebars when he crashed. He returned to racing after a near two month layoff at the ABA Winter Nationals in
Phoenix, Arizona, on March 6–8, 2009. ==Post BMX Racing Career==