2017 As a true
freshman in 2017, Harris
redshirted and did not play.
2018 In 2018, Harris missed the season due to knee injuries.
2019 As a redshirt-
sophomore in 2019, Harris started four games before separating his shoulder and missing the rest of the year. He led them to a berth in the
2020 First Responder Bowl, where they lost to
Louisiana 31–24.
2021 In 2021, Harris started 14 games, and completed 263-of-398 passes for 3,177 yards and 27 touchdowns with six interceptions. He ran for 566 yards as well and scored six touchdowns. Harris led UTSA to the 15th ranked team in the AP to the conference championship, where he was 19-of-28 for 218 yards and two scores, while adding 81 yards on the ground as UTSA beat
Western Kentucky 49–41. The Roadrunners lost in the
2021 Frisco Bowl to
San Diego State. At the end of the season, Harris was named second-team all-conference.
2022 In the 2022 season, Harris started 14 games and completed 328-of-471 pass attempts for 4,063 yards and 32 touchdowns. He also ran for 602 yards and nine scores, being named the
Conference USA most valuable player and first-team all-conference. Harris led the team to the
2022 Conference USA Football Championship Game, where UTSA defeated
North Texas by a score of 48–27. In the game, he threw for 341 yards and four touchdowns while completing all but five of his 37 pass attempts. UTSA was defeated in the
2022 Cure Bowl by
Troy, losing 18–12.
2023 Harris returned to UTSA for a seventh year in 2023. After suffering a variety of different injuries during spring camp and the regular season, Harris did not play in the
2023 Frisco Bowl. He would announce his retirement from playing football following the end of the season.
Impact in San Antonio With Harris on campus for a seventh season in 2023, he had been part of the program for more than half of its 13 seasons. In a 2023 ESPN story focusing on several "senior citizens" in college football, among them Harris, UTSA head coach
Jeff Traylor said about him:
Statistics ==References==