John Harris, Minnesota golfer who won U.S. Amateur, dies

John Harris also was a Gophers hockey player, winning the NCAA title in 1974, the same year he was the Big Ten golf champion.

The Minnesota Star Tribune
September 18, 2025 at 4:31PM
John Harris shows off his trophy after he won the U.S. Amateur in 1993. (Tim Johnson/The Associated Press)

John Harris, one of the top amateur golfers in Minnesota history and also a PGA and PGA Champions tour player, died Wednesday.

He was 73.

Harris, who was born in Minneapolis and raised in Roseau, Minn., golfed and played hockey for the Gophers.

Harris, a center who had played on two Roseau hockey teams that reached the state tournament, was a four-year letterwinner in hockey for the Gophers. He was the second-leading scorer on the 1973-74 team, which won the NCAA championship — the first in program history. Harris’ brother Robbie was also a member of the team, which was coached by Herb Brooks. In 110 games in his Gophers career, Harris had 56 points (21 goals and 35 assists).

Two months after the Gophers won the NCAA hockey title, Harris won the individual championship at the Big Ten men’s golf meet in Iowa City. In July 1974, Harris won the Minnesota State Amateur title.

Harris played one season of minor league hockey before turning professional in golf in 1975.

After missing the cut in his first three events on the PGA Tour, he finished 26th in the Hawaiian Open in February 1976. That was his best finish in a PGA Tour event.

In 1983, he regained his amateur status and dominated men’s amateur golf in Minnesota over the next decade. He won the Minnesota State Amateur three times and the Minnesota State Mid-Amateur five times. He also won the Minnesota State Open in 1994 and 1995, while still an amateur.

ADVERTISEMENT

In August 1993, at age 41, he won the U.S. Amateur. Harris defeated Danny Ellis 5 and 3 at the Cypress Creek Course in Houston, becoming the second Minnesotan (Jimmy Johnston won in 1929) to win the U.S. Amateur. His victory in the U.S. Amateur came 12 days after he won the match that clinched the U.S. victory over Great Britain and Ireland in the Walker Cup at Interlachen Country Club in Edina.

After his 50th birthday in June 2002, he joined the PGA Tour Champions. He had six top-five and 14 top 10-finishes on the tour. His lone victory came in June 2006 at the Commerce Bank Championship in East Meadow, N.Y.

He retired from competitive golf in 2020.

about the writer

about the writer

Joel Rippel

News Assistant

Joel Rippel writes about sports for the Star Tribune.

See Moreicon

More from Sports

See More
card image
Jerry Holt/The Minnesota Star Tribune

The Vikings haven't made consecutive postseason appearances since 2008-09. The two most common reasons that befall a franchise? Injuries and instability at quarterback.

card image
card image