Dorie Harrison
Biography
Personal: Harrison is the daughter of Ida and Dennis Harrison. She works as a makeup artist. She is one of 12 children in her family. Her sister, Isabelle, played college basketball at Tennessee and enters her third year with Athletes Unlimited Pro Basketball. Her brother, David, played college basketball at Colorado before being drafted by the Indiana Pacers in the 2004 NBA Draft and has enjoyed a 10-year professional career in Switzerland, France, Spain, Finland and Israel. Her brother, Isaiah, played basketball at Freed Hardeman before a professional career overseas in Australia and Spain. Her sister, Deedee, played volleyball at Tennessee. Her sister, Della, played softball at Chattanooga. Her sister, Dianne, was a member of track and field team at LSU.
College Experience: Harrison is a three-year letter winner at Lipscomb after transferring from Kentucky after 2018-19 season. She completed her college career with 563 points and 377 rebounds over 71 games. She also notched 59 blocked shots with Lipscomb and Kentucky. She appeared in 39 games over three seasons at Lipscomb with 26 starts. She averaged 8.9 points and 6.5 rebounds with the Bison. She earned the starting assignment in 13-of-15 games as a redshirt senior. Harrison ranked third on the team in scoring with a 7.8 average while making 45-of-108 three-point field goals. She also ranked fourth on the squad with 15 blocked shots. She saw action in 18 games during her redshirt junior campaign, including eight starts. She led the Bison and ranked fourth in the Atlantic Sun Conference with 7.3 rebounds per game during 2020-21 season. She was a member of the 2021 Atlantic Sun Championship All-Tournament Team. Harrison played in six outings with five starts during her first season at Lipscomb before missing remainder of the year with an injury. She appeared in all 32 games as a freshman at Kentucky in 2017-18. She was a starter in eight games who averaged 6.7 points and 3.8 rebounds per contest. She notched eight double-digit scoring performances with the Wildcats, including a pair of 16-point outputs.