Age, Biography and Wiki
J.W. Harris was born on 14 July, 1986 in Coleman, Texas, United States, is an American bull rider. Discover J.W. Harris's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 38 years old?
Popular As |
James William Harris |
Occupation |
N/A |
Age |
38 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Cancer |
Born |
14 July 1986 |
Birthday |
14 July |
Birthplace |
Coleman, Texas, United States |
Nationality |
|
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 14 July.
He is a member of famous Rider with the age 38 years old group.
J.W. Harris Height, Weight & Measurements
At 38 years old, J.W. Harris height
is 5ft 10in (2017) and Weight 160 lb (2017).
Physical Status |
Height |
5ft 10in (2017) |
Weight |
160 lb (2017) |
Body Measurements |
Not Available |
Eye Color |
Not Available |
Hair Color |
Not Available |
Dating & Relationship status
He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
Family |
Parents |
Not Available |
Wife |
Not Available |
Sibling |
Not Available |
Children |
Not Available |
J.W. Harris Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is J.W. Harris worth at the age of 38 years old? J.W. Harris’s income source is mostly from being a successful Rider. He is from . We have estimated
J.W. Harris's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2022 |
Pending |
Salary in 2022 |
Under Review |
House |
Not Available |
Cars |
Not Available |
Source of Income |
Rider |
J.W. Harris Social Network
Timeline
Harris entered the NFR in 8th place, about $50,000 behind the leader Wesley Silcox. On December 9, Harris won the 7th go-round. This was his third consecutive victory. He rode Frontier Rodeo's Smoke Screen for a score of 94.5 points, only 1.5 points shy of the arena record. From among 15 competitors, he was the only one with 6 eight-second rides. "It’s the highest score I've had at the Finals and third highest I’ve ever been". said Harris, whose NFR total of $92,644 was second among the 119 competitors.
On Friday, June 13, Harris and three-time World Champion Bull Bushwacker met up for a $50,000 matchup at Chad Berger's DCB PBR Bull Riding Challenge in Bismarck, North Dakota, a PBR Touring Pro Division event. When the gate opened, Bushwacker pitched Harris to the ground in less than 4 seconds. "I left good with him," Harris said. "I didn’t let him beat me out of (the chute), and just right where he threw me off, I just set my hips too soon and raised up too soon. He just kept dropping and just pushed me over his head". Bushwacker's owner, Julio Moreno, earned $10,000 for the buckoff. No buckoff time was officially recorded because the matchup was an exhibition. Berger had doubled the bounty to $100,000 a few days ago.
On Friday, November 3, at the PBR BFTS World Finals, Harris sustained a strain to his right pectoral muscle. He was ruled as probable to continue. On Saturday, he announced he would get the injury repaired after the Finals were over. "Why not come?" Harris said. "It is the biggest stage in bull riding. I don’t know why you wouldn’t. I don’t care if you have a broken leg. If you can get on, you come here." Harris rode Beaver Creek Beau for a qualified ride; it was his only one this Finals. Harris was the 8th rider to make a qualified ride off the 2,000 bull in 63 outs. He finished the season ranked 32nd in the World Standings. He had spent the better part of the season riding with a "groin strain and torn abdominal muscle", so his ranking was actually better than it should have been.
On Sunday, January 7, Harris announced that he was leaving the PBR and returning to the PRCA, which means he is returning to rodeo full-time to focus on winning a fifth gold buckle. Harris spent nine years in the PRCA before dedicating his focus solely on the PBR for three years. "I got to where I just didn’t like coming to [the rank bulls] anymore," Harris said. "It really is not my thing, I guess you could say. All of the lights, cameras and drama. I was trying to be something that I wasn’t. I was trying to be a PBR bull rider instead of a rodeo cowboy. There is just not a whole lot of common ground with the other guys in there. There is a few. Outside of a few, it is not there." He also pointed out his comeback to win the 2014 Rookie of the Year award as well as his career high 93.25 points ride on Honey Hush, which is his favorite. Those things stand out when held up against people who said he didn't belong in the PBR.
At the 2018 NFR, Harris joined veteran announcers Jeff Medders and Butch Knowles in the booth during the airing of the event on CBS Sports Network to provide color commentary during the bull riding segments.
Harris was out for approximately six months and experienced pain in his right leg and his back after the accident. The family made the trip to Dallas, Texas, to see Dr. Tandy Freeman, who diagnosed Harris with a torn right PCL. The injury required another surgery which would keep Harris out of action for another six months. Harris had been close to returning to the BFTS after his previous hip and elbow surgery, and was eyeing the Thackerville, Oklahoma, event, set for September 3. The accident completely ended his aspirations for a world title in any rodeo circuit in this season. Harris was 3-for-7 in three events this season. Harris began the 2017 season with five BFTS injury exemptions.
On September 12, in Springfield, Missouri, at the PBR BFTS PFIWestern.com Invitational presented by Bass Pro Shops, Harris matched up with the late 2015 PBR World Champion Bull Long John in Round 1. Harris scored a ride on Long John, but after hitting the ground, he was stepped on by the bull and knocked unconscious. Harris suffered a concussion as a result. In 2018, Harris talked about the incident, describing the event. He says that he was unable to dismount because of their proximity to the bucking chutes. Instead, when Long John threw him down, Harris' shoulder "caught on the chute" and he was trampled. Harris said that Long John "nearly shoved one of my lower vertebrae out of my spine", resulting in chronic back pain.
Harris turned in what the PBR considered his best performance so far. He went 4-for-6 to finish third in the event average. First, he made a qualified ride of 90.5 points on the bull Pound the Alarm in Round 5. Then, he made a qualified ride on the bull Honey Hush for a BFTS career high 93.25 points in the championship round. He earned 3,736 points towards the World Standings. Harris competed in 14 events on the BFTS that year. He finished the year 9th in the standings, due to a 43.24 percent riding average. Harris planned to focus on the BFTS in 2015, but also planned to attend as many rodeos as he can. He still wanted to break Don Gay's record of 8 championships.
On March 22, in Albuquerque, New Mexico, at the Ty Murray Invitational, in WisePies Arena, on a Sunday afternoon, Harris met up with the three-time World Champion Bull Contender Mick E. Mouse for the third time. His owner, Marlene Henry, was watching anxiously 10 yards (9.1 m) away from where Harris was preparing in the chute. The bull threw Harris to the ground in 2.97 seconds. Henry was anxious about the matchup; she hoped Harris didn't ride her bull as they were trying to break Bushwacker's buckoff streak record of 42 straight buckoffs. But at the same time, she had respect for him. Mick E.'s handler Ken Loudamy added, "I loved that he picked him and I love that he has that tenacity in him to try and ride him. I think he can ride him". Harris felt if he could work out his issues with the location of his free arm, he could ride him. But, due to medical issues, Mick E. Mouse was euthanized in early August 2015, unridden.
Harris made some headway in the PRCA field in August with three victories. He entered three rodeos in one weekend at the beginning of August and won them all. One of the victories was a high 93-point ride on Rafter H Rodeo Livestock's bull Stiff Drink at the Sikeston, Missouri, Jaycee Bootheel Rodeo, who was very rank and he had always wanted to attempt. The ride tied for the best bull ride of 2014 and earned him $4,780. Harris regained the lead from PRCA rookie Sage Kimzey on August 4, and it was his first time in the lead since February 24. Harris rode Pete Carr Pro Rodeo's bull Thunder Cat for 91 points at the Lea County Fair and Rodeo in Lovington, New Mexico, to win that event and $5,076. Then he rode Pete Carr Pro Rodeo's bull Bowser for 84-points at the Riding Club PRCA Rodeo in Crossett, Arkansas, to earn $3,158. Counting his two 90+ rides in August, Harris had 89 rides that were scored over 90 points, which at the time was a record.
On August 31, 2014, in Thackerville, Oklahoma, was the first time Harris met up with the notable, unridden Mick E. Mouse. After watching Joao Ricardo Viera and Mauney select two of the hardest bulls in the Championship Round, Harris used his third draft pick to select Mick E. Mouse, another difficult bull. He could have selected an easier bull as he had only ridden one bull in the last 10 BFTS events. That 86.75 point ride on Jo Jo was his second highest score of his BFTS career. And then this ride became "the closest any rider had ever been to conquering Mick E Mouse" in his career. Harris rode the bull for 7.47 seconds, only about one-half second from the whistle. Cody Lambert, Livestock Director for the PBR, believed that it would have been one of the greatest rides in PBR history: "I think he would have been 96 on him then". Announcer and two-time PBR World Champion Justin McBride said that he thought Harris would ride Mick E. Mouse and that he still believes he will. Harris would face the bull two more times.
In mid-October, at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas, Nevada, Harris competed in the PBR BFTS World Finals. It was his first finals qualification. On October 22, Harris won the first round in the PBR Finals with a qualified ride on Owens/Lane's bull Jo Jo for 88.75 points. He had some trouble getting started, but he came from behind to win the PBR 2014 Rookie of the Year award. The PBR Rookie of the Year award is presented to the bull rider who earns the most points in the World Standings on their season on the BFTS. In 2013, the PBR switched to a points based system rather a monetary system.
Heading into the 2014 NFR, the defending champion was ranked 6th in the PRCA World Standings. He trailed the leader, Kimzey, by $65,858. He was seeking his fifth title. On Saturday, December 13, Sage Kimzey, the 20-year-old rookie from Strong City, Oklahoma, won the PRCA World Bull Riding Championship with $318,631 and the NFR Average title with 671 points on eight head. He won four rounds which tied a record held by Harris and a few other cowboys. Harris turned in an average performance this year. His earnings of $109,182 put him in 9th place, and his average total was 310.5, $11,953 putting him in 6th place.
In 2013, he won the first round of the CBR World Finals which allowed him a spin on the bounty bull. At Cheyenne Frontier Days, during the CBR World Finals, he made a qualified ride, and drove his newly won Mahindra Max Tractor out of the arena.
On Saturday night, February 1, Harris competed in the Xtreme Bulls Tour. The event took place in the Rushmore Civic Center at the Black Hills Stock Show & Rodeo in Rapid City, South Dakota. Harris made the best two qualified rides of the event – a 92-point ride in the long round and an 89-point ride on Sutton Rodeo's Crystal Springs Peach in the championship round – to claim the title in the 2014 Rapid City Xtreme Bulls Tour.
On September 13, in Springfield, Missouri, at the PFI invitational, Harris made a qualified ride for 90.25 point ride on World Champion Bull Contender Sweet Pro's Long John in the Championship Round. It filled out his 3 for 4 event winning performance for the weekend and helped him win the event. He also rode Cowboy Soul for 83 points and Legacy for 87.50 points. He was bucked off Pile Driver 4.65 seconds. This win in Springfield put him in 6th place in the World Standings. Harris spent this season challenging the rankest bulls, such as Smooth Operator, Little Red Jacket, and the late Mick E. Mouse, but not quite getting a qualified ride on any of them. Harris used his 8th selection to pick Long John while knowing he needed a high score to win the event. But more broadly, Harris was hoping to conquer Long John as the start of a streak that could get him to the world champion bull rider title. Commentator and seven time PRCA world champion Ty Murray believed Harris could do it. "I think so. He knows what it takes and he knows what it takes to ride rank bulls". Murray said. "I think there definitely has been an adjustment for him coming up to this league. He is in a good position right now when you are looking at how beat up J.B. is and how bad Joao is riding".
In Round 1 of the 2012 NFR, Harris took the lead with a 90.5 point ride aboard Four Star Rodeo's bull Stink Eye. He came into the NFR only a bit more than $7,000 behind long-time World Standings leader rookie Cody Teel. Teel answered with a qualified ride that brought him fourth place. Teel rode Gauteraux's Iron Horse for 74.5 points and earned $167.225. Had Harris won this NFR, it would have been his fourth title. Harris moved from second place to first by earning $18,257 and earned a total of $170,886. Ultimately, Teel won the championship in his rookie year.
On Saturday night, May 31, the J.W. Hart PBR Challenge began in Decatur, Texas. Even though it is Touring Pro Division event, it's run like an elite tour event, with top ranked bulls lined up. This year two-time PBR World Champion J.B. Mauney and J.W. Harris were matched against 2012 World Champion Bull Asteroid, and 2013 PRCA Bull of the Year Shepherd Hills Tested. Hart put up $25,000 in a 1,000 Miles From Home $25,000 winner-take-all challenge. The PBR selected the bulls they regarded as the toughest: 2013 PRCA Bull of the Year Shepherd Hills Tested had a 94.74 buck off percentage. 2012 PBR World Champion Bull Asteroid had been ridden only a couple of times. Asteroid threw Mauney in two seconds and scored 46 bull points. Shepherd Hills Tested threw Harris in 6.17 seconds and scored 45 bull points. Harris almost made a qualified ride.
On January 29, 2011, at a CBR event in the Lea County Event Center in Fort Worth, Texas, Harris won the event. Harris made a qualified ride on the bull Psycho Todd for a score of 88 points in the long round. Then, in the Championship Round, he made a very high 91 point ride on the bull Directory Assistance. The combined score of 179 points was more than he needed to be proclaimed the winner. He received a check, a Resistl 20X Cowboy Hat, and a Henry Custom CBR Golden Boy Rifle. The win took him to 11th in the season standings. When CBR President Tuff Hedeman inquired how he felt about starting the season with a win,
Shane Proctor entered the 2011 NFR with what some said was "an insurmountable lead". Harris spent the NFR eroding Proctor's lead until he was only $20,000 away from that lead entering the 10th round. However, Proctor still won the championship, even though he broke his left arm entered into the last event.
In mid-March Harris earned 110 points between the PBR Velocity Tour and the Touring Pro Division to get to No. 35 in the World Standings. Harris blamed himself for getting cut from the BFTS. Harris won the Touring Pro Division event with 88.5 points on the bull Big Sexy. A week prior, Harris came in fourth at the Hampton, Virginia, Velocity Tour event. The two events brought him the 110 points and a return to the BFTS which started with the Ty Murray Invitational. He finished in the 34th slot in the Ty Murray Invitational, an event which Stormy Wing won.
The year 2009 was his best finish, which was 4th place. Most of his CBR fans expected a higher ranking due to his winning the George Paul Memorial Bull Riding and later on winning the first round of the CBR World Finals which allowed him a spin on the bounty bull.
Harris is 5 feet 10 inches (178 cm) tall and weighs 160 pounds (73 kg). Harris was residing in Mullin, Texas, when he met Jackie, whom he married on October 3, 2009. They have a daughter and a son. Jackie was Miss Rodeo Arkansas in 2004. In 2013, Harris and his wife bought a ranch in Goldthwaite, Texas. They raise bucking bulls, which are Brangus-Hereford crosses.
In February at a PRCA event in San Antonio, Texas, Harris received his worst injury of his career in 2008. "I guess my worst injury was (when) I had a bull crush the left side of my face last year in San Antonio. They had to put plates and screws and all kinds of good stuff in there". After he received five concussions this season, he started wearing a helmet and believes he started becoming more successful. He was the second world champion bull rider after BJ Schumacher in 2006 to do so.
Harris, who had been wearing a helmet since 2008 due to five concussions, stopped wearing one. His example had contributed to the number of riders wearing helmets, but now Harris said that he received concussions even while wearing a helmet, and that helmets can't prevent concussions no matter how they are designed.
On January 17, 2007, at the Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo in Fort Worth, Texas, a relatively unknown 20 year-old J.W. Harris won the PRCA Xtreme Bulls riding event. Most of the observers that day had never seen him perform. "I've never heard of him...But, if he keeps riding like he did tonight, he's going to have a good future," said Don Gay, an eight-time bull-riding title winner. Gay also commented that Harris's riding will improve as he matures. He added that he will become more educated on injuries. "He's going to get better at taking care of himself," Gay says. "When you are young, you don't think about that so much. But as you mature, you learn how to do that because you know that there is no check coming in when you are sitting on the sidelines. I really like J.W. Mostly because of his attitude. He believes in himself and in what he can do." Gay become more convinced of Harris' "outstanding" capabilities at an Xtreme Bulls event in Reno, Nevada, where Gay was broadcasting for ESPN. "He rode Werewolf on a reride he didn't have to take," Gay recalls. "He scored a 96, and stole the show. That really impressed me."
In 2006, it was at the Xtreme Bulls event in Reno, Nevada, that he made a qualified ride on the bull Werewolf for 96 points which brought him into the forefront of bull riding. A69 Werewolf, a double bred Naccarato bull, was a finalist in the PRCA and PBR in the same year, a rare accomplishment.
On Friday night, December 10, in Round 9 of the NFR, Harris claimed his third consecutive World Bull Riding Championship. He placed second in the ninth round with an 89.5 point ride on Insaniac. It was his 7th qualified ride, and two more than any other rider in the first nine rounds. He also won the NFR Average Championship. His total season earnings were $194,287, plus $44,910 or more from Saturday night. Harris broke B.J. Schumacher's NFR earnings record in 2006 of $142,644 since he has earned $106,484 at the NFR plus at least $44,910 on Saturday night. He rode 7 of 10 bulls and won four rounds. He won $158,738 that year to conclude the NFR with $246,541 in total earnings combined season plus NFR earnings. He rallied from 8th in the World Standings to win and set a world record in NFR winnings. He was the first bull rider to win three world titles, and also consecutively, since 8-time champion Don Gay.
Harris qualified for the NFR nine times consecutively from 2006 through 2014. Harris won four Bull Riding World Championships while competing in the PRCA. Harris won the championship from 2008 to 2010, and again in 2013. He also won two NFR Average titles in bull riding in 2008 and 2010. He qualified for the RAM National Circuit Finals Rodeo (RNCFR) three times in 2006, 2009–2010. He won the RNCFR twice from 2009 to 2010. As of January 2018, his total PRCA career earnings are $1,828,728. Harris concludes his four-year career in the PBR 58-for-166 (34.52 percent riding average). He has three PBR BFTS World Finals Qualifications (2014–2015, 2017). He also has three 90-point rides and three event wins. Harris started on the CBR tour in 2005. For the next nine years he finished among the top ten. The year 2009 was his best finish, which was 4th place. Along the way, he has racked up numerous Horizon Series wins, multiple second and third-place finishes and six event wins on the CBR ‘s The Road to Cheyenne Tour.
Harris joined the PRCA in 2005. In his first year as a professional he managed on little money for expenses. Following a no score in Nampa, Idaho, he ran out of money for expenses. His uncle paid when they needed money to drive to Cheyenne Frontier Days. On Championship Day, he won the Championship Round. He finished second in the average. He won $10,000 that day and bought take-out for his uncle. This was the first year Harris made the CBR final year-end World Standings. Also this year, Harris joined the CBR televised tours. For the next nine years he finished among the top ten.
In 2004, Harris hit the semi-professional rodeo trail for the Cowboys Professional Rodeo Association (CPRA), won the year-end bull riding championship for said organization, and won $6,501.23 prize money. The next year, he started competing professionally. He competed in the PRCA from 2005 to 2014. Starting in 2007, Harris joined the PBR tour, in one of the lower level tours, the Touring Pro Division. He competed on the BFTS from 2014 to 2017. He competed on the CBR tour from 2009 to 2014, then again in 2018. In January 2018 he announced he would retire from the PBR and return to the PRCA. Going forward in 2018, Harris is competing solely in the PRCA.
James William Harris, known as J.W. Harris (born July 14, 1986) is an American professional bull rider on the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA) tour. He won the PRCA Bull Riding World Championship four times at the National Finals Rodeo (NFR). He is a former competitor on the Professional Bull Riders (PBR)’s elite tour, the Built Ford Tough Series (BFTS). He also competed on the Championship Bull Riding (CBR) tour. Harris is the first bull rider since Don Gay to win four PRCA world bull riding titles. He is also the first since Gay to win three of them consecutively. Harris is also the 2014 PBR Rookie of the Year.
James William Harris was born on July 14, 1986, in Coleman, Texas. He was named after a roughstock rider, James Garlick, and his own great-grandfather, William. His father, Mark, was the Texas Circuit Rookie of the Year in 1989. Harris was raised in Peaster, Texas, because his father was employed on a ranch there. When Harris was 15 years old, the family moved to May, Texas. He was one of an 18-person graduating class at May High School.
The winner of the last two rounds prior to Round 9, Cody Teel, came in fifth in Round 9 with a 77.5 point score on the bull Seminole Wind. Teel led the aggregate with 575 points for seven rides. No one would have been able to catch him in Round 10, so he won the NFR Average title. Since Teel was second in the World Standings counting season and NFR earnings with $165,179, he could not have earned enough in Round 10 to catch Harris. Thus, Harris was declared the winner after Round 9, even though there was one round remaining. After Round 10, Harris won total earnings of $252,829, clearly the outstanding winner. Harris matched another record with Don Gay, this time by becoming the first bull rider to win four world championships since Don Gay, 1979–1981.
In mid-October, Harris qualified for his first PBR World Finals, earning a qualifier jacket and a ring. He finished the season as one of the top 35 riders to accomplish this. Harris competed his first season on the BFTS after he earned a place following three event exemptions. He completed the season ranked 31st in the World Standings. He made qualified rides on 12 of 31 bulls for a 38.71 riding percentage. He ends with two top 5 finishes and four top 10 finishes. According to the ProBullStats Bull Riding Compendium, Harris has 102 outs (riding out of the chute on a bull) in 74 events this season. Harris has said this his worst year in terms of injuries and how he felt, but next season he would focus on the PBR.