Harris made his first-class debut for the Leewards in the 1987–88 Red Stripe Cup, at the relatively old age of 30,[1] and his List A debut less than a week later, in the 1987–88 Geddes Grant/Harrison Line Trophy.
[2] He was initially included in the team as a wicket-keeper, coming in either sixth or seventh in the batting order, but later in his career was sometimes used as a specialist batsman, with either McChesney Simon or Ridley Jacobs taking the gloves.
[1] Harris began his first-class career with scores of 49 on debut against Trinidad and Tobago,[3] and 52 runs in the next match against the Windward Islands.
[5] Harris did lead the Leewards' run-scoring during the 1991–92 season, scoring 291 runs including a career-best 98 against Guyana.
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