Jason Harris shouldnât have walked away from the motorcycle crash that broke his back during a race in Idaho in 2023.Â
But he did. And even though doctors said it would be a year before he could ride again, he was back on his bike within four months and was soon racing again.Â
Harris, who grew up in Lyman, turned 17 in June and has not only left that potentially devastating crash behind, heâs gone pro.
In September, he signed a contract with Husqvarna Motorcycles, joining its 2025 factory team. Heâll run long-distance desert races on high-performance 250cc motorcycles.
His father Shaun Harris got Jason his first minibike when Jason was just 4 years old. Watching his son grow into motorcycle racing has made him proud, but itâs also come with an edge of worry.Â
âYes, Iâm concerned, very concerned,â Shaun told Cowboy State Daily about the worry a parent has for his child. âBut itâs such a passion of his since he was very young. He had a goal to be factory rider from the time he was 5.
âGetting hurt in his sport is almost inevitable. You sent him out on a 100-mile race, and you donât know whatâs going to happen.â
The challenge and danger are part of the allure of racing, Jason Harris told Cowboy State Daily.Â
âWhen I started racing, everybody told me itâs not a question of if you crash, itâs a question of when,â he said. âIâd like to think I got my big one out of the way.
âTeenage boys naturally want adrenaline, and I just picked a high-adrenaline sport.â
âIt Was Instantâ
Shaun said he had no doubt the path his son would take the moment he saw Jason astride his first minibike.Â
âIt was instant. When he got on that bike, there was a sense of freedom for him. You could see he had a world to explore. Within the first day, he was building obstacles to challenge himself on his motorcycle,â he said.Â
Jasonâs parents also discovered that their sonâs passion for motorcycles could help mold him into a better person.
âWhen he first got into it, we could see that it was his currency. We used it to encourage good behavior. We would tell him, âWeâre going to take your riding away if you engage in bad behavior,ââ Shaun said.Â
Jason agreed that helped him be his best.Â
âI realized, âHey, this is fun, this is competitive.â My parents used it as a way to raise a good kid. If I didnât have good grades, I couldnât race,â he said.Â
Shaun said his son has a racerâs heart.Â
âJason was just aggressive enough, he wanted to win,â he said. âHe wanted to accomplish something that others hadnât.âÂ
At age 8, Jason pulled off an impressive accomplishment.Â
âHe was the first little kid who cleared a triple jump on his little 65 (65 cc mini-bike),â Shaun said.Â
Long Courses
Mention dirt bike racing, and many people might think of motocross events â where riders run laps on groomed courses, with soaring jumps and steeply-banked curves.Â
Motocross track racing is a rush, Jason said â but his chosen sport, long-distance desert racing, is different.
Riders run courses that go for 100-120 miles or more, across open country â usually along rugged two-track roads or single-track trails.Â
âWeâre not going for repeated laps on a closed track. Everything is new to us,â he said. âWe donât hit the same ground twice during a race.â
Itâs a matter of reading the terrain and always thinking a few seconds ahead, he said, so keen eyesight is a must.Â
Racers must be in peak physical condition, he added.Â
âYouâre wrestling a 230-260-pound machine. And youâre trying to make it do what you want it to do. Itâs not like a horse. It doesnât stand on its own. It doesnât run on its own,â he said.Â
Sometimes racers go for flat-out speed, but often it comes down to precise maneuvering around rocks, trees and other obstacles.Â
âI think Iâve gotten my bike up to about 105, but normally, your average speed in those races is 30-40 miles per hour,â he said.Â
âI Was In Two Piecesâ
During the fateful 2023 race in Idaho, Jason wasnât even two miles out from the starting line when he started down a rocky dry wash, and something went wrong.Â
âI hit something at a weird angle, and it bucked me off the bike. Instead of the motorcycle flying away from me, it landed on top of me, and thatâs what broke my back,â he said.Â
With other racers sure to come careening through, staying there wasnât an option.Â
âI got up and walked off the trail and when I did, I felt it wasnât right. My spine was separated from my hips. I was in two pieces. I shouldnât have been able to walk, but I did. That was the adrenaline,â he said. Â
Recovery was a painful ordeal, and he ended up with six screws in his back.Â
âI would say that the pain from the broken back was not as bad as the old Asian lady pulling out my catheter at the hospital,â he said.Â
Being in great physical shape from training and racing helped him recover more quickly than doctors expected, Jason said.Â
âIt Gives Me Energyâ
Itâs been amazing to watch Jason go from competing at the state and regional levels â and then win two national championships in 2024, Shaun said.Â
But he hasnât forgotten his Wyoming roots and still participates in Wyoming Off-Road Racing Association events whenever he can.Â
âItâs a great series and super-fun,â Shaun said.Â
While starting a pro racing career is a huge thrill, a deep love for the sport is what really matters, Jason said.Â
âMy goal is to beat myself. At the end of the day, thatâs the best I can hope for,â he said.Â
Riding is the best therapy, he added.Â
âWhen youâre stressed, go ride the dirt bike. When youâre not feeling like yourself, go ride the dirt bike,â he said. âFor some reason, it gives me energy. It makes me feel good. Iâm doing something that most people canât do.â
Contact Mark Heinz at mark@cowboystatedaily.com

Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.