Tennessee
Son of Tennessee Legend Enters 2027 Rankings As Top 25 Prospect | Rocky Top Insider
The son of a former Tennessee football legend has officially entered the 2027 rankings in its early, early stages.
According to 247 Sports’ initial 2027 rankings list on Wednesday, Cooper Witten – the son of former Tennessee tight end Jason Witten – is a Top 25 overall prospect in the 2027 rankings.
Witten plays safety for Liberty Christian in Argyle, TX, where his dad Jason is the head coach.
247’s rankings have Witten listed as the No. 25 overall player, the No. 2 safety in the class, and the No. 5 player from the Lone Star State.
Though still very early in his football career, Witten put together an impressive freshman season in 2023. Witten recorded 82 tackles, four tackles for loss, two interceptions (one pick-six), two forced fumbles, and three kick blocks to begin his high school journey, according to 247.
More from RTI: Instate Running Back Includes Tennessee In Top Five, Sets Imminent Commitment Date
Witten also plays basketball and runs for the track team at Liberty Christian.
It’s unclear if Tennessee has had any contact with Witten but 247 does not have the Vols listed on his slim offer sheet so far. Witten reportedly has six offers from Baylor, Duke, Missouri, Oklahoma, TCU, and UAB.
Jason Witten’s name is held dear by many Vol fans as a strong ambassador for Tennessee football during his time in professional football and in the booth. Witten joined the Vols’ football team from Elizabethton High School and would become a First Team All-SEC selection after the 2002 season.
Witten’s journey to Rocky Top is well-documented as he believed he was headed to Tennessee as a defensive end based on a promise from then-head coach Phillip Fulmer. But when spots opened up for Tennessee’s offense with injuries in the middle of the season, Witten begrudgingly accepted the position switch. All worked out, though, as the former Vol would go on to become a storied tight-end in the SEC and even set the Vols’ tight-end records for receptions (39) and yards (493) during his senior season.
Dallas Cowboys great Jason Witten ended his NFL career with 11 Pro Bowls and was a two-time First-Team All-Pro selection.
A photograph of Witten was placed on the back of the Neyland Stadium jumbotron for many years until it was replaced with a picture of current NFL star Alvin Kamara in 2021.
Tennessee does not have any commitments in the infant stages of the 2027 class but did make some major news in the 2026 class recently. In early August, Tennessee landed a commitment from QB Faizon Brandon, the top overall prospect in the 2026 class according to 247’s rankings.
Stay tuned to Rocky Top Insider for more Tennessee football recruiting news.
Tennessee
Tennessee Man Reaches For Item At Lowe’s. Then He Runs Into A Surprising New Touchscreen: ‘No Need To Wait’
Anyone who’s ever needed something locked behind a glass door (or some other security measure that makes it hard to just grab an item off the shelf) knows the drill. You try to click the button to call an employee, wait for an employee to show up, hope the employee isn’t busy with someone else first, and maybe even leave without your item because you’re tired of waiting or just frustrated at the friction of the shopping experience.
One Tennessee electrician went to grab wire for a job and expected the usual wait. Instead, he found Lowe’s had quietly changed the system to seemingly give customers more autonomy in the store.
Lowe’s Gets a Security Upgrade
In a trending video with more than 55,000 views, content creator and contractor Tim, of Tri Cities Electric (@tricities.electric), stopped at a Lowe’s in Tennessee to pick up some wiring for a job.
“One of my least favorite things about coming to Lowe’s was that I’ve obviously got to buy wire, and they keep it behind these cages,” he says, showing what look like wire doors on the retailer’s shelves.
This time, though, there was a touchscreen mounted right on the metal doors, so Tim tried it out.
“We simply click ‘use your cell phone,’ agree to whatever that is, put your phone number in,” he said.
A code landed on his phone seconds later, and he typed it back into the screen.
The screen accepted it, and two electromagnets holding the cage shut released on their own. No waiting for an associate required.
“Case is now unlocked. Got two electromagnets up here; they release. Now, I have all the access in the world to this. How neat. Good job, Lowe’s,” he said.
“No need to wait for wire at @Lowe’s anymore!” he wrote in the caption.
Why Stores Are Locking Everything
The National Retail Federation says that retail theft costs the industry about $95 billion across sectors, and stores have responded by locking down anything with resale value, Business Insider reported.
Visits by an Insider reporter to Walmart, Target, and Home Depot found the same pattern everywhere: power tools sealed in cages, spider-wrap alarms clipped onto smaller items, and security cameras trained on entire aisles.
Lowe’s specifically has cages on power tools, alarms on display units, and—as of last year—some tools that won’t even power on until they’re activated at checkout.
Retail Theft: Is It That Bad?
The “retail theft crisis” narrative is a lot messier than it sounds. Retail executives spent a solid year sounding alarms about “shrink”—inventory loss from theft, employee error, and accounting mistakes combined—but by 2024, several major chains were quietly walking those claims back, according to NPR.
Walgreens’ own finance chief admitted the company might have “cried too much” about theft the year before. And the industry’s go-to shrink figure, sourced from a National Retail Federation survey, has barely moved over the past decade—hovering around 1.4% to 1.6% of sales for years.
That hasn’t stopped the security theater, though: Nearly a third of shoppers say locked-up products make them think worse of a store, and more than a quarter say it’s enough to make them walk out without buying anything.
‘Better Than Home Depot’
The comments filled up with a mix of impressions about the tech.
“So then what’s the point of the cage….” a top comment read.
“Bout time because finding one of them associates isn’t easy,” a person said.
“Until someone leaves it open….” another wrote.
“And now you will be all kinds of marketing text or in that permissions agreement you gave them access to your contacts and to install software,” a commenter added.
Motor1 reached out to Tim via email and Instagram direct message for comment. We’ll be sure to update this if he responds.
Tennessee
Tennessee troopers investigating deadly crash involving UTV, train
SCOTT COUNTY, Tenn. (WVLT) – The Tennessee Highway Patrol is investigating a deadly crash involving a UTV and a train in Scott County.
According to THP’s preliminary report, the crash happened Saturday off of Route 27 near Helenwood just before 5 p.m. when the driver of the UTV, identified as 52-year-old Ronnie Lloyd, “failed to stop” at the railroad crossing and hit a moving train.
Lloyd was not wearing a helmet at the time of the crash, THP said.
Additional information was not released.
Copyright 2026 WVLT. All rights reserved.
Tennessee
2027 Georgia safety, Tennessee target announces commitment date
Four-star safety Ta’Shawn Poole will announce his commitment between Tennessee, Georgia and Florida State on July 17, according to Brendan Sonnone of 247Sports.
The 6-foot-2, 185-pound prospect is from Howard High School in Macon, Georgia. 247Sports ranks him as the No. 4 safety in the class and No. 6 player in Georgia.
Tennessee offered Poole a scholarship on Feb. 21, 2025. He has visited the Vols three times, including an official visit on June 5.
UNLV was the first school to offer Poole a scholarship on Aug. 1, 2024. Other Power Four schools to offer him scholarships include Louisville, Georgia Tech, Iowa State, Auburn, Missouri, Miami, North Carolina State, Kentucky, Nebraska, Florida, Michigan, Ohio State, Oklahoma State, North Carolina, Penn State, Ole Miss, Indiana, Mississippi State, Wake Forest, Alabama, Virginia Tech and Clemson.
Tennessee has 16 commitments in its 2027 football recruiting class: linebacker JP Peace, offensive tackle Princeton Uwaifo, quarterback Derrick Baker, athlete Jaden Butler, wide receiver KeSean Bowman, defensive back Carter Jamison and defensive back Brandon Leavell, tight end Malik Howard, defensive lineman Christian Mays, cornerback Dylan Haley, linebacker Kenneth Simon II, kicker Ford Fehling, long snapper Sam McKeown, offensive tackle Q’Mari Hudson, athlete Dayon Cooper, and safety Marcus Jones.
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