Eighteen receivers were among the first 118 players selected in this year's NFL draft. The first 17 have been active for at least one regular-season game.
And then there's Jarius Wright, pick No. 118, the invisible man to all but those who get to watch the Vikings practice.
Despite playing, er, practicing for a team starving for another play-making receiver, Wright remains stuck in a seemingly parallel universe where he runs in place doing nothing while his peers in the Vikings draft class bring strength, stardom or depth to other previously weak areas at offensive line, defensive back, tight end and the kicking game.
"It's just been real difficult because I like to play," said Wright, who caught 168 passes, averaged 17.5 yards and scored 24 times at Arkansas. "I like to compete. I like to help the team out."
Yet Wright has sat while others zoom on by. Three of the next six receivers drafted behind him already have played and caught passes. One of the three who hasn't is Wright's college and pro teammate, Greg Childs, who certainly would have played by now if he hadn't blown out both knees in training camp.
Wright, meanwhile, has spent the past nine weeks as a back-burner curiosity among fans still clinging to the possibilities they attached to him after he caught six passes for 122 yards (20.3), including a 59-yard touchdown, against Houston's backups in the Vikings' preseason finale. But the 5-10, 180-pounder suddenly finds himself relevant again. Percy Harvin, the guy he backs up, is on crutches with a left ankle the size of a Butterball turkey that's unlikely to shrink in time for Sunday's game against the Lions at Mall of America Field.
"Me, personally, I do think it's my opportunity to crack the door," Wright said. "I've been patiently waiting and if they feel like I'm ready, I feel like I'm ready also."
Reporters aren't allowed to watch any meaningful part of practice during the regular season. So any reports of progress that Wright has made from an undistinguished training camp come from coaches and teammates who always protect their own.