"Now he is going to play Argentina and South Africa in two test matches for the All Blacks."
Harris did not have a full Chiefs contract at the start of 2014 but through sheer hard work and determination he forced his way in.
"When you are training, the coach always says look out for the dude who is out the front so I guess that was something I could judge myself on and try and impress by that," Harris told the Bay of Plenty Times in May. "I tried to give it all and go as hard as I could. I think I was in the best shape of my life."
Harris grew up playing for the family's club, Te Puke Sports, but loved lifesaving almost as much as rugby. He competed for the Papamoa Surf Lifesaving Club, with beach sprints a specialty, helping his explosive sprinting power.
His rugby career took off at Tauranga Boys' College. Harris had two years in the First XV and swapped between blindside flanker and hooker.
With NZ Secondary Schools reps Sam Cane and Carl Axtens arriving from Reporoa College, it meant a shift to hooker for Harris.
When he is singing the national anthem with his All Blacks teammates on Sunday, that shift will prove to be the best move he has made.