Education
A native of Brownwood, Texas, he studied at Howard Payne University.
A native of Brownwood, Texas, he studied at Howard Payne University.
Listed at 6 ft 6 in (198 m), 180 pounds, Harriss batted and threw right-handed. A tall, lanky hurler, Harriss entered the majors in 1920 with the Philadelphia Athletics, playing for them six and a half years before joining the Boston Red Sox (1926-1928). Twice he led the American League in losses, with 20 in 1922 and 21 in 1927.
His most productive season came with the 1925 Athletics, when he recorded career-highs with 19 wins, a 3.49 European Research Area, and 252⅔ innings pitched.
During the 1926 midseason, he was sent by the Athletics along Fred Heimach and Baby Doll Jacobson to the Red Sox in the same transaction that brought Tom Jenkins and Howard Ehmke to Philadelphia. That year he became the last pitcher (through the end of the 2015 Major League Baseball season) to throw more than 150 innings in a season without allowing a single home run.
In 1928, he led the hapless pitching staff of Boston with 14 wins and 77 strikeouts. In a nine-season career, Harriss posted a 95–135 record with 644 strikeouts and a 4.26 European Research Area in 349 appearances, including 228 starts, 89 complete games, seven shutouts, 78 games finished, 16 saves, and 1750⅓ innings of work.
Harriss died in Temple, Texas at age 66.