Harrison played Division 1 men's lacrosse from 2002 to 2005 for the
Johns Hopkins Blue Jays men's lacrosse team for Coach
Dave Pietramala. He was a Writing Seminars major. Kyle is one of the most decorated players in the long history of Johns Hopkins lacrosse. One of Harrison's college coaches, Seth Tierney, said "Kyle was uncoverable in his last three years. There was not a player in the country that could cover him, and he proved that. At big moments, he had big goals, but the best part is that he was never about himself. He was about making his teammates better and making them more confident.” Kyle Harrison's college lacrosse career was a landmark in the history of African-American participation in the sport. In 2005, the
New York Times described Harrison as "lacrosse's most prominent African-American star since
Jim Brown was a first-team all-American at Syracuse in 1957". Historian
Bruce Nelson stated that that year's "presence of Kyle Harrison,
Johnny Christmas and Harry Alford are indicative of the changes that are occurring".
2002: Freshman season Harrison's first year at Hopkins was also Coach
Dave Pietramala's first year as head coach. During Harrison's first year at Hopkins, he was on the first midfield line and started in all 14 games. He totaled 13 points on the season, scoring 9 goals and 4 assists. He was also the team's number one faceoff man, winning 120 out of 190 faceoffs, notching a win percentage of 63.2% and scooping 85 ground balls. His faceoff percentage was the sixth highest in the nation and his ground ball percentage was twelfth highest in the nation, averaging 5.07 ground balls per game. In the season-opener game against defending national champion Princeton, Harrison scored two goals in an 8–5 upset. Also, he was especially effective late in the season, winning 63 out of 87 (72.4%) faceoffs. In the two playoff games, he won 27 out of 42 (64.3%) faceoffs and grabbed 19 ground balls.
2003: Sophomore season During Harrison's sophomore year at Hopkins, he was one of five finalists for the
Tewaaraton Award, and the only sophomore amongst them. Additionally, he earned 2003
USILA Second Team All-American honors. Throughout the season, he had a 20-game point-scoring streak that extended from late in the 2002 season through the NCAA Semi-finals against
Syracuse University. In the playoffs, he scored five goals and added two assists. In an 11–10 OT victory against North Carolina, he scored a career-high three goals, including the game-winner. Also, he finished the season eighth in the nation in faceoff winning percentage (62.6%), winning 109 out of 174 faceoffs, and leading the team in ground balls with 83 ground balls.
2004: Junior season During Harrison's junior year at Hopkins, he won the
McLaughlin Award for the nation's top midfielder, was again a finalist for the Tewaaraton Award, and was a 2004
USILA First Team All-American. He reached a new career high with 33 points on the season, scoring 26 goals and 7 assists. for 33 points. Three of the goals were game-winning goals. In the playoff quarterfinals, he scored three goals and one assist against
University of North Carolina, and in the playoff semi-finals, he scored 2 goals against
Syracuse University.
2005: Senior season In Harrison's final season at Hopkins, he led the team as co-captain to an undefeated 16–0 season, culminating with winning the 2005
NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship. This year he was named the Tewaaraton Award recipient, becoming the first minority to receive the award. He also won the
McLaughlin Award for the second time, and earned
USILA First Team All-American honors for the second time. Throughout the 16 games that season, Harrison scored 24 goals and 20 assists, totaling 44 points. Harrison also played alongside freshman
Paul Rabil on this 2005 team, who would continue on to win the 2007
NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship and the 2007 McLaughlin Award.
JHU Hall of Fame Induction Harrison was inducted into the
Johns Hopkins University Athletics Hall of Fame in 2016. Throughout his four years at Hopkins, Harrison was a 3-time
USILA All-American, 2-time
McLaughlin Award National Midfielder of the Year, and 2005 Tewaaraton Award National Player of the Year. More than 15 years after graduating, he remains the only Johns Hopkins player to win the Tewaaraton Award. Harrison netted a collegiate career total of 126 points, scoring 81 goals and 45 assists. As a faceoff specialist for Hopkins, Harrison ranks 3rd in school history with a 61.1% win percentage, victorious in 328 out of 537 faceoffs. Scooping a career total of 304 ground balls, he is one of just 11 players in school history with more than 300 career ground balls. ==2005–21: Professional lacrosse career==