SportsLife 2016, issue 1 | Page 20

The Bombers humble new star By Scott Taylor, Photo credit Jeff Miller This week, Winnipeg Blue Bombers general manager Kyle Walters had a particularly enjoyable experience – he signed seven veteran free agents that, if they’re ready to play, should make the Bombers a better team that the one that went 5-13 last season. Among those new players was runningback Andrew Harris. Harris is a Winnipegger who has long wanted to play for the Blue Bombers. Although he’s 28, he still demonstrated last season that he’s good enough to compete and still possesses the speed and durability that coaches are after. In fact, he just finished a season in which he carried 222 times for 1,039 yards and seven touchdowns and caught 53 passes for 484 yards and two more TDs. He was second in the CFL in rushing and tied for second in rushing touchdowns. It seems Andrew Harris has always been forced to make potentially lifechanging decisions. Sure, making big decisions is a part of everyone’s life, but Andrew Harris has been forced to make them since he was a teenager. Since deciding to leave Grant Park High School when he was 16 in order to move over to Oak Park High School, Harris has been faced with more choices than most young men his age. To his credit, most of them have been spot on. “I was at Grant Park, playing football and I really liked it there,” Harris explained. “When I was young, I lived in Steinbach and then my mom and I moved into the city. Grant Park was right down the street from my house. It was easy to get to school and I was having a lot of fun and a lot of success playing football. But there is a lot more to Andrew Harris than simply carrying a football. He’s not what you would call a complicated young man, but he’s a smart one who has used football to make a better life for his family. His story is inspiring… “But I was starting to hang around with a bad crowd, I guess you could say, and it had a negative affect on my life. I knew that if I was going to stay out of trouble and make something of myself, I had to make a change. So I decided to transfer to Oak Park. It 20 / sportslife wasn’t easy getting there. It sure wasn’t convenient, but obviously it was the right thing to do.” As every football fan and casual CFL observer knows, Winnipeg’s Andrew Harris has become a Canadian Football League superstar. He’s also a two-time Manitoba Sportswriters and Sportscasters Athlete of the Year, the only man to have unseated Chicago Blackhawks captain in the past seven years. It could be argued that Harris is the most dangerous offensive weapon in the CFL. He can run and catch and he’s not a bad backfield blocker. And yet getting to the CFL wasn’t particularly easy for Harris. To be fair, he took a rather circuitous route. But it would appear that with all the other decisions he made, his road to professional football was, in the end, the right one. When he was young, Andrew’s mom, Carlene Boivin, sometimes struggled to pay the bills. In fact, Boivin, who is now a highly-regarded Winnipeg social worker, often worked two jobs to put food on the table and a roof over her small family’s heads. “I always wanted to be a hockey player when I was young,” said Harris who still plays three times a week with his buddies. “When I was young, my heroes were Steve Yzerman and Paul Kariya. I loved the game and still do today.” But while the Manitoba Junior Hockey League and even the Western Hockey League showed some interest in Andrew, the cost to play the game at a high level just became too much for he and his mom to handle. “The fees, the equipment, the travel expenses, I don’t know how a lot of families today that can afford it,” Harris explained. “I played at a time when composite sticks were just coming out. They were about $100. I played with a wooden stick, because I would go through one every week. When I looked around, I was the only one on the team