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Vikings to Meet with Another Rookie WR

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Georgia State Ted Hurst in 2024
Nov 1, 2024; East Hartford, Connecticut, USA; Georgia State Panthers wide receiver Ted Hurst (16) makes the catch against the Connecticut Huskies in the second half at Rentschler Field at Pratt & Whitney Stadium. Mandatory Credit: David Butler II-Imagn Images

With just three playable wide receivers on the current roster, the Minnesota Vikings appear to be in the market for another rookie, evidenced by a draft workout this week with Georgia State’s Ted Hurst.

Minnesota keeps digging into the mid-round receiver market.

Hurst will meet with the Vikings, and anytime a wideout is connected to the purple team, fans get excited because drafting WR talent is what Minnesota does best.

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Hurst Might Make Sense for the Vikings in the Mid-Rounds

Get to know a little about Hurst.

Ted Hurst lines up during Senior Bowl practice in Mobile. Ted Hurst
American Team wide receiver Ted Hurst (7) of Georgia State lines up pre-snap during Senior Bowl practice, with the action unfolding on Jan 28, 2026 at Hancock Whitney Stadium in Mobile. Coaches evaluate his stance, timing, and release as he prepares for team drills in a competitive all-star environment. Mandatory Credit: Vasha Hunt-Imagn Images.

Vikings Meet with Hurst

Minnesota is dipping its toes in the mid-round WR pool, as SI.com‘s Jonathan Harrison wrote this week, “The Vikings reportedly have a top-30 visit scheduled with wide receiver Ted Hurst. The 6-foot-4 Georgia State product is likely a Day 2 selection, with NFL Network’s Lance Zierlein saying Hurst is a ‘long-legged, vertical-minded wideout with the speed and ability to stress corners from snap to whistle.’”

“At the combine, Hurst ran a 4.42 40-yard dash. In two seasons at Georgia State, he caught 127 passes for 1,965 yards and 15 touchdowns.”

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Hurst currently ranks 84th on the Consensus Big Board, so a prospective 3rd-Round pick.

The Hurst Scouting Report

Hurst is 6’3″ and 195 pounds, known for his size, physicality, and contested catch prowess. He’s not an elite route-runner and has trouble separating from defensive backs.

Our Janik Eckardt on Hurst: “Hurst is a productive, physically imposing receiver who rose from Division II football to become one of the Sun Belt’s most effective pass catchers. His size, catch-point ability, and consistent production make him an intriguing mid-round option for teams seeking a developmental boundary receiver.”

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“While improvements in separation and route refinement will be important for his long-term ceiling, his combination of physical tools and production gives him clear NFL potential. Hurst projects as a mid-round selection in the 2026 NFL Draft, likely falling in the third- to fifth-round range.”

Hurst has an NFL comp somewhere between Alec Pierce and Donovan Peoples-Jones.

Ted Hurst participates in drills at the NFL Scouting Combine. Ted Hurst
Georgia State wide receiver Ted Hurst (WO24) runs through positional work during the NFL Scouting Combine, held on Feb 28, 2026 at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis. Evaluators monitor his movement skills, hands, and technique as he participates in drills designed to assess pro readiness against top prospects. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images.

Eckardt added, “His production, size, and strong pre-draft performances have elevated him from under-the-radar prospect to a legitimate Day 2 or early Day 3 candidate. His best fit is as a boundary receiver in offenses that emphasize play-action and vertical concepts.”

“Systems that utilize back-shoulder throws and contested-catch opportunities can maximize his strengths. He also offers value in red-zone packages due to his size and ball-tracking ability. Early in his NFL career, Hurst should compete for a rotational outside receiver role while contributing on special teams.”

Hurst has 4.42 speed and logged 1,004 receiving yards and 6 touchdowns in 2025 at Georgia State.

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The Current WR Corps from Head to Toe

If Minnesota parleys the Hurst visit into a draft pick while signing no additional free agents, the WR room would look like this in the summer:

  • Justin Jefferson
  • Jordan Addison
  • Tai Felton
  • Ted Hurst
  • Myles Price
  • Jeshaun Jones
  • Dontae Fleming
  • Joaquin Davis

The Vikings could also peruse free agency, as veterans like Tyreek Hill, Deebo Samuel, Stefon Diggs, and DeAndre Hopkins remain available.

Other WR Options in the Draft

Finally, suppose the Vikings are mid-round wide receiver shopping again — they just picked Felton in Round 3 last year — but don’t end up picking Hurst, these rookies should be on the board in late Round 2, in Round 3, and Round 4:

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  • Skyler Bell (WR) — UConn
  • Germie Bernard (WR) — Alabama
  • Zachariah Branch (WR) — Georgia
  • Deion Burks (WR) — Oklahoma
  • Malachi Fields (WR) — Notre Dame
  • Bryce Lance (WR) — North Dakota State
  • Elijah Sarratt (WR) — Indiana
  • Brenen Thompson (WR) — Mississippi State
  • Antonio Williams (WR) — Clemson
Antonio Williams prepares for drills at Clemson Pro Day. Ted Hurst
Former Clemson wide receiver Antonio Williams prepares for on-field drills during Clemson Pro Day, taking place on March 12, 2026 inside the Poe Indoor Facility in Clemson. Scouts and coaches observe his footwork, route setup, and readiness as he looks to showcase his athletic traits ahead of the NFL Draft. Mandatory Credit: Ken Ruinard-Imagn Images.

The Vikings also met with Williams from Clemson, and NFL.com’s Lance Zierlein describes his profile in this way: “Williams is a bona fide ball player with good size and an ability to make mischief when he totes the pigskin. There is freestyling inside his routes that create uncertainty for corners but teams might drill down on attention to detail and better efficiency to keep him on schedule.”

“He’s not a field-stretcher but he plays fast from snap to whistle and has the ball skills to bring in challenging catches. He’s more slippery than explosive with outstanding run-after-catch ability. Williams projects as a productive slot receiver with legitimate run/pass/catch talent that should appeal to creative play-callers.”

Back to Hurst, he has extreme youth on his side; he’s 21.

The NFL draft is 28 days away. Minnesota has nine picks this time, with four in the Top 100.


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March Madness 2026: What Jon Scheyer, Dan Hurley can learn from Tom Izzo, Rick Pitino

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WASHINGTON, D.C. — Jordan Scott had no shortage of options regarding where he’d play college basketball. A consensus top-100 recruit with offers from across the country, he was looking for a differentiating factor. He found them during his visit to East Lansing for Michigan State Madness in October 2024.

Other programs have preseason fan events and hallowed student sections like the “Izzone.” But Scott found something more.

“[Tom Izzo] being a huge part of the community here, for lack of better words, you don’t see that everywhere — you don’t see that anywhere besides here,” Scott said. “He trusts his community, and his community trusts him. … Just comparing this place to other places, it was like night and day, just how they do things here. It’s a special culture.”

It’s a trust Izzo built over 43 years — 31 as the head coach — and a trust that is becoming increasingly rare. Izzo is the second-longest tenured active head coach at one school, behind only close friend Greg Kampe’s 42 years at Oakland University.

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“I’m not sure anybody will stay in one place 31 years,” Izzo said, mentioning Purdue’s Matt Painter as one he hopes proves him wrong. “I’m fortunate to have the job I have. I am fortunate for the 31 years of success. I do not think people are going to stay in the same place like Jim Boeheim did. Mike Krzyzewski had a long run there.”

In an era when players and coaches change colors more often than not, the on-court bona fides of the four coaches in the nation’s capital for Friday’s Sweet 16 are unimpeachable. Izzo, Rick Pitino, Dan Hurley and Jon Scheyer have combined for 2,026 Division-I wins, five national championships and, including this year, 37 Sweet 16s. For as good as the players are — and in Cameron Boozer, Zuby Ejiofor, Jeremy Fears Jr. and Tarris Reed Jr. and others, they are very good — the coaches are driving the star power for this 2026 NCAA Tournament East Regional site. 

Each is a pillar of the sport, each in his own way. And the careers of Izzo and Pitino show the fork in the road that Scheyer and Hurley face as they build their own Hall of Fame résumés.

“I think that’s what makes it exciting, right?” said Scheyer, who is 38 and in his fourth year at the helm of his alma mater. “It’s going to be an exciting atmosphere, high-level basketball, high-level coaching for sure. … I just keep going back [to] having great respect and admiration, at the same time having great confidence when you step on the floor. That’s what I want our players to have, too.”

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The winding backroads to the HOF


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Scheyer’s sideline opponent, Pitino, was a forebearer of this era of movement. He got his head coaching start at Boston University, left for an assistant role with the Knicks, returned to the college ranks as Providence’s coach, left for the Knicks’ head role and then resigned to take the top job at Kentucky — all within a seven-year stretch.

He’d leave for the NBA one more time, taking the Celtics job, but not after lifting a Kentucky program mired in scandal to a 1996 NCAA title and a 1997 runner-up finish. But after four unsuccessful years in Bean Town, he returned to coach Louisville from 2001-2017, when he was fired amid multiple scandals (it was later re-worded to a resignation after a lengthy legal battle). After a brief stint in Greece, he returned to coach Iona and, in 2023, got hired by St. John’s.

“I’ve loved every place I’ve lived,” Pitino said. “I’m a different guy. I’m not a nester. Everybody is different. I don’t want to live in the same place my whole life. I enjoyed Greece probably more than any place I’ve ever lived for those two years, not knowing one person, just exploring all the islands. For me it was great. For Tom, it’s great being in East Lansing. He loves it there. Everybody is different.”

East coaches’ head coaching résumés

Jon Scheyer Rick Pitino Tom Izzo Dan Hurley
Duke (2022–present) Boston University (1978–83) Ishpeming (MI) High School (1977–79) St. Benedict’s (N.J.) Prep (2001–10)
Providence (1985–87) Michigan State (1995–present) Wagner (2010–12)
New York Knicks (1987–89) Rhode Island (2012–18)
Kentucky (1989–97) UConn (2018–present)
Boston Celtics (1997–2001)
Louisville (2001–17)
Panathinaikos (2018–20)
Iona (2020–23)
St. John’s (2023–present)

St. John’s is the fourth different program Pitino has led to the Sweet 16. He has mastered the ability to fit into new surroundings while still standing out. After all, beyond the coaching ingenuity, what 73-year-old — let alone a 73-year-old Hall-of-Fame coach — dons an all-white suit for big games, invites Bad Bunny to sit courtside and says his point guard, Dylan Darling, has “balls as big as church bells?”

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“Since he’s 73, you would think that he’s slowing down, but I think he’s only getting better,” Bryce Hopkins said.

“I think that coach still coaching at his age helps keep him young, honestly,” Oziyah Sellers said. “I remember he told me earlier in the year that he wouldn’t know what he would do with his life if he wasn’t coaching.”

Pitino has certainly taken the road less traveled, but perhaps that has given him the edge in identifying and courting players whose careers have taken several turns, too. The Red Storm’s top seven scorers are all former transfers.

“His resume, it speaks for itself,” said Sellers, who started his career at USC and transferred to Stanford before landing with the Johnnies. “He’s succeeded at every school he’s been at, and he’s ‘The Godfather’ in this college basketball world.”

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The open road ahead in youth


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Pitino’s junior by 35 years, Scheyer is his third Sweet 16 in four years as Duke’s head coach. The two are, in some ways, polar opposites. If Pitino is “The Godfather,” Scheyer is the prodigy. They will form the eighth-largest age gap between opposing coaches in any NCAA Tournament game. All Scheyer has known is Duke. He won a national championship as a senior in 2010 and, after a brief pro playing career, returned to Durham to be part of Krzyzewski’s staff before taking over the program in 2022.

Since then? The trajectory has him with the most wins of any head coach in his first four years on the job — and approaching that same record just in March Madness:

Coach School (first four years) Wins
Steve Fisher Michigan (1989–93) 12
Brad Stevens Butler (2007–11) 11
Ed Jucker Cincinnati (1960–64) 11
Jon Scheyer Duke (2022–present) 10
Fred Taylor Ohio State (1959–63) 10

Krzyzewski fielded several NBA offers over his 42 seasons leading Duke and declined each. In 2023, Coach K said, “I love Duke, and I love college, especially how it was then. I’m not sure that if it was today, and I was that age, I wouldn’t have gone.”

The “then” Krzyzewski refers to is when top players often spent their entire careers at one program. Christian Laettner, Grant Hill, JJ Redick and Shane Battier stayed for all four years. Jay Williams stayed for three. It’s a long-gone era, and Scheyer knows it. And the transaction-driven nature makes even the offseason more of a grind.

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When asked if he believes coaches will continue into their 70s, as Pitino and Izzo are and Krzyzewski did, Scheyer smiled and shook his head.

“I know from Coach K, initially when you start coaching, you have months, you finish the season, your players aren’t going anywhere, you go to the beach, you go wherever you want for a few months, you come back in the fall, and you’re ready to roll,” Scheyer said. “That’s just not the world we’re in. As you all know, it’s right to recruiting mode the next day, as soon as the season ends.

“But I think it’s incredible what [Izzo and Pitino] have done. … You look at the reflection of both of their teams. They still have the identity of how they’ve always coached: the toughness, the defense, all those things, but they’ve done it a different way.”

After all, the 2020s have been marked by high-profile departures, not just from septuagenarians such as Krzyzewski, Boeheim, Roy Williams and Jim Larrañaga, but from Jay Wright and Tony Bennett, too.

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The exit ramps and left turns not taken


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Hurley could be the best example of the thin line between staying and going — and, as of now, choosing the former. He turned down Kentucky in early 2024 and the Lakers a few months later, though he admits that turning down the Lakers was a difficult decision, one that Izzo, now his Sweet 16 opponent, helped with.

His players were briefly in a lurch. Reed, who had transferred from Michigan just months before the Lakers’ courtship of Hurley, remembers the immense relief of finding out Hurley was staying in Storrs.

“I came to UConn to play for a coach like Coach Hurley,” Reed said. “When Coach said he returned, I remember that first practice when he leaked out to the media, posted it on Twitter, he was ready to go from there.”

Returnees such as Alex Karaban and Solo Ball remember the uncertain few days of that July — long after rosters and coaching searches had formed, leaving them with fewer options if they needed to pack up.

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“Whatever he wanted to do, whatever would make him happy, his family happy, that’s ultimately what we all wanted,” Karaban said. “For him to come back and want to stay at UConn was a blessing for us. We greatly appreciated that. We just want to repay with him with how we play on the basketball court.”

“I thought he was going to be gone, to be honest, when it first came out,” Ball said. “Over time, when you get to know Coach, how he is as a person, all he wants to pour into is college athletes. It’s been great.”

The long road home

Perhaps the difference between staying and going can come down to personalities. Pitino has always wanted to move around. Izzo values the ability to “pump your own gas, wave to a neighbor, be around.” He had the same NBA rumor mill, the same opportunities to jump to marginally bigger college programs.

Or perhaps there’s more. The pressure of one spot can be downright grating. The nationwide monetary arms race gives more programs more opportunities to offer big paydays, better NIL, upgraded facilities and impressive support.

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“It’s nice to be in the same place,” Izzo said. “There’s pressure being in the same place, too. I don’t think most people are going to want to do that. I hope they do. I think it’s good for the university. I think it’s good for the players.”

Future offers will come for Hurley, one of the premier basketball minds at any level, and for Scheyer, who ticks the boxes of youth, smarts and experience coaching NBA players in-waiting. Both acknowledged the immense challenges they face.

“We talked about his opportunity with the Lakers and other places,” Scheyer said of Krzyzewski. “Down the road, that’s something you cross that bridge when you get there. For me, it’s 100% being at Duke, the place I want to be. We have unfinished business. That’s what this is all about for me.”

Hurley admitted it’s been a challenge, that turning down the Lakers two summers ago wasn’t easy and that coaching, period, even as a two-time reigning national champion, wasn’t easy.

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“Listen, I wanted a gap year last year,” Hurley said with a laugh that belied his serious answer. “I don’t know how Coach Izzo has done it. I don’t.

“I hope I’m looked upon when my career’s over, I don’t know that I’ll have his longevity, I can just only hope that people look at me as a coach the way they look at him and the way I look at him.”

Four disparate but remarkably successful coaching paths converge at Capital One Arena on Friday night. By Sunday night, one will continue to the Final Four, and three will return home. Where any of those four paths go — in the short and long terms — could be anyone’s guess.

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Denny Hamlin’s mother pleads for fire funding after fatal North Carolina blaze

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The mother of NASCAR driver Denny Hamlin made an emotional plea this week for increased fire department funding before Gaston County officials after she nearly lost her life in a North Carolina blaze that killed her husband in December.

Mary Lou Hamlin, 69, delivered a heartbreaking account of the Dec. 28 house fire that killed her husband, 75-year-old Dennis Hamlin, and reduced the family home to ruins.

Denny Hamlin at Charlotte Motor Speedway

Denny Hamlin looks on prior to a NASCAR Cup Series auto race at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025, in Concord, North Carolina. (AP Photo/Matt Kelley, File)

“I’m sorry, I was trying not to cry,” a tearful Mary Lou Hamlin said as she spoke before the Gaston County Board of Commissioners on Tuesday. 

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“Dec. 28 was one of the saddest days of my life. It was the last time I saw my husband of 52 years when I pulled him out of our burning home. In addition to losing my husband, I lost everything from my entire life.” 

Dennis and Mary Lou Hamlin were found outside the two-story home near Stanley, suffering from what officials at the time called catastrophic injuries. Dennis Hamlin later died from his injuries at a hospital, while his wife was transferred to a specialized hospital in Winston-Salem for treatment of her burn injuries.

NASCAR MOURNS DENNY HAMLIN’S FATHER, SAYS HE ‘SACRIFICED GREATLY’ FOR SON’S CAREER

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“I didn’t understand at the time that the firetrucks were there, but not the water,” Mary Lou Hamlin continued Tuesday.

“There was no water to put out my house. I am advocating for funding to be included on this year’s budget – training on emergency response, additional equipment, staffing as you just heard, are just a few things to help strengthen the fire protection in our area in which funds are desperately needed.    

Denny Hamlin at the championship race

Denny Hamlin, driver of the #11 Progressive Toyota, exits his car  after the NASCAR Cup Series Championship at Phoenix Raceway on Nov. 2, 2025, in Avondale, Arizona. (James Gilbert/Getty Images)

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Denny Hamlin’s sister, Lisa Chapman, also appeared before the board, recalling her shock after arriving on the scene.

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“There’s nothing worse than pulling up to the house on fire and seeing everybody standing in the road,” she said through tears. “No water being thrown on the fire.”

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Jerboa Jam update patch notes 

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Adopt Me is a pet simulator in which you unlock different Pets, fulfill their “Needs”, and help them grow bigger. On March 27, 2026, this Roblox title released its Sugarfest: Jerboa Jam update, which introduced a new limited-time minigame in which you can participate to earn Candy Eggs. Moreover, you can unlock two new pets, several pet wears, and a vehicle.

In this article, we’ll discuss everything that’s important to know about this update.


Patch notes for Sugarfest: Jerboa Jam update in Adopt Me

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On March 27, 2026, the developers of Adopt Me released the Sugarfest: Jerboa Jam update along with these official patch notes:

Sugarfest: Jerboa Jam notes

“Explore Candy Cliffs as Jiggly Jerboas to pick up Cheesecake in Jerboa Jam.

Jerboa Jam minigame

Native to the Candy Cliffs, Jiggly Jerboas burrow through the rock candy to find Cheesecake. Delicious treats sure to feed the entire family.

  • Collect as much Cheesecake as you can as a Team.
  • Pick up the Speed Boost to go faster, Jump Boost to jump higher, and Range Boost to be able to collect Cheesecake from further away.
  • All Boosts stack and last for the rest of the round. Enjoy the speeeeed.
  • Find the special Cheesecake Tokens to earn a bonus to your final score.
  • You’re finding Cheesecake as a team and sharing the final score. But the Boosts only work on the Jerboa that picks them up.
  • Once all Cheesecake has been found, it respawns.

New Pets

  • Jiggly Jerboa – 6,000 Candy Eggs – Common
  • Latte Kitsune – 600 Robux – Legendary

New Pet Wear and Plane

  • Jiggly Shoes – 2,250 Candy Eggs – Uncommon
  • Cheesecake Hat – 5,300 Candy Eggs – Rare
  • Gummy Aviator Scarf – 7,900 Candy Eggs – Ultra Rare
  • Gummy Biplane – 44,000 Candy Eggs – Rare”

FAQs on Sugarfest: Jerboa Jam update in Adopt Me

What is the Jerboa Jam minigame in Adopt Me?

A limited-time team minigame where you play as Jiggly Jerboas and collect Cheesecake across Candy Cliffs. The goal is to gather as much as possible to boost your team’s final score.

What are Cheesecake Tokens?

They are special collectibles that give bonus points on top of regular Cheesecake. Collecting them helps your team achieve higher scores faster.

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What rewards can you get from this update?

You can earn Candy Eggs to unlock new pets, pet wear, and a vehicle. One premium pet is also available through Robux.