September 19, 2024

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Rahjai Harris of East Carolina explains the significance of 47, a unique running back number.

When tuning into East Carolina Pirates games, one unconventional number particularly sticks out in purple and gold.

Yes, the No. 47 has been an allowable number for the running back position throughout the annals of football history. Even before the NFL loosened its jersey number restrictions prior to the 2021 season, 47 was encompassed in the permitted range of running back numbers from 20 to 49. However, nobody really wears it.

The last tailback — not fullback — to wear 47 in the NFL was Nate McCrary, who logged two career snaps and one rushing attempt on Dec. 5, 2021. You’ll have to trek two decades back to find the last running back to attain 1,000 yards in a 47 jersey, which was former Oakland Raiders standout Tyrone Wheatley in 2000.

Yet East Carolina running back Rahjai Harris chose the number 47 at Byrnes High School in South Carolina. Then he envisioned himself in a 47 jersey on each of his recruiting visits. Finally, the instant he selected ECU and arrived on campus in Greenville, NC, he didn’t waver from the number.

As years progress and running backs finagle their way up the depth chart, they’ll typically ditch their bulkier, double-digit numerals for leaner, flashier, single-digit jerseys. That trend does not apply to Harris though, who remains true to 47 in his fifth year suiting up for the Pirates.

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“My dad wore it,” Harris said. “His goal was the NFL, but some things popped up and he had to leave the game alone. I just took over the torch and I’m here to finish what he started.”

Rahjai Harris’ father Rodney Harris was a star running back at Spartanburg High School in South Carolina during the late 90s. Rodney rushed for over 1,600 yards as a junior and over 1,400 yards as a senior, leveraging his high school success into a college football career at Georgia Military College. But there was a point where Rodney had to hang up No. 47 when Rahjai’s oldest sister was born. Rodney subsequently left Georgia Military College to prioritize the highest responsibility of fatherhood.

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