JT (James Thomas) Giles-Harris was conflicted about which collegiate sport to pursue while he was a two-sport star at St. Joseph Regional High School in New Jersey. He committed to Duke lacrosse as a sophomore, choosing the Blue Devils over Maryland, Syracuse and Virginia.
Early in his junior year, Giles-Harris decommitted from Duke, as lower-level football offers poured in. He considered Holy Cross, Lehigh, Albany, Towson and Navy. He recommitted to Duke lacrosse later that year.
“There was a bit of a tug of war,” John Harris said. “But just like Joe, with JT, it came down to getting a Duke education.”
Even now, football still holds sway. Giles-Harris said he is exploring the right fit where he can use his fifth year of eligibility to play on the Division I gridiron and work toward earning a master’s degree. Recently, Virginia's Dox Aitken announced he will play football next year at Villanova, and Maryland's Jared Bernhardt is also exploring the gridiron for his fifth year.
“Not too many people can run around me. And by not being particularly tall, I can keep smaller guys from getting under me,” Giles-Harris said. “I’ve gotten pretty good at shadowing people, which is like covering wide receivers. If you take one wrong step, it’s the difference between a completed pass and a knockdown.”
What separates Giles-Harris from many Division I defensemen, Caputo said, is both his ability to cover one-on-one and his high-level skill at using space effectively while navigating the countless picks and two-man offensive games that are prevalent in the sport now.
“J.T. knows how to play his man and half of another,” Caputo said, “by showing [a possible help move] and getting back to his man, like a yo-yo. That’s what Division I defense is about now.”
“JT is not satisfied,” said Duke head coach John Danowski, alluding in part to the fact that Duke has come close but has yet to win a national championship during Giles-Harris’ time in Durham. The Blue Devils were ranked No. 5 in the preseason.
“Like a lot of thoroughbreds, he doesn’t remember all of the good or great plays he makes, and he beats himself up over the plays he doesn’t make,” Danowski said. “That drives him. The thoroughbreds assume they’re going to make all of the plays.”