
Shadre Hurst, an offensive guard, is transitioning from Tulane to Houston for his final college football season. In addition to football, he expresses himself through painting, creating symbolic artworks like a self-portrait that conveys themes of ego and interpretation.
A canvas and assortment of paintbrushes inhabit Shadre Hurst’s residence. It’s a hobby the offensive guard enjoys when he’s not sealing a defender or dropping back into pass protection.
Hurst spent his four previous years of college in New Orleans, and as he shifts westward on the bayou from Tulane to a new setting in Houston, painting has provided an outlet to express himself.
Hurst recently crafted a self-portrait shadow figure, depicting himself standing to the sky. He enjoys incorporating symbolism into his paintings. For instance, he carefully crafted this portrait to convey a message of releasing your ego, but he likes to keep his symbolism somewhat ambiguous — leaving it up to the viewer for their own interpretation.
Each brush stroke is carefully planned and calculated, as the final product is envisioned from the initial stage of a blank canvas through the finishing touches.
Hurst approaches his football career with that same level of carefulness and thought, always brainstorming what he wants his finished product to look like. And after four years of anchoring dominant offensive lines at Tulane, Hurst envisioned his finished product in another environment. He wanted to be a Houston Cougar and rekindle an old connection with his former head coach Willie Fritz.
“I know Coach Fritz, and he knows how to win and loves to win,” Hurst said. “He recruited me out of high school, so I was really familiar with who we was, what he brings to a program, and those values. Those same values are what I committed to out of high school, so it’s the same feeling of that comfort knowing what I’m going to get.”
It’s a shared sentiment among many former Fritz players. The head coach prepares for year three at Houston, yet the Tulane to Houston pipeline isn’t slowing down. This offseason, three former Green Wave players — Hurst, running back Makhi Hughes, and cornerback Javion White — all made the trek to the nation’s fourth-largest city to reunite with the same head coach that recruited them out of high school.
Shadre Hurst spent four years playing college football at Tulane before transferring to Houston.
Hurst incorporates symbolism in his paintings, such as a self-portrait that conveys the message of releasing one's ego.
Hurst uses painting as an outlet to express himself when he is not focused on football, particularly as he transitions to a new team.
Hurst creates symbolic artworks, including self-portraits and other pieces that invite viewer interpretation.



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“It’s a great feeling,” Hurst said on reuniting with former Tulane teammates at Houston. “It made me feel like I made the right decision because it’s like, ‘Y’all see the same thing I’m seeing. I want to win. Y’all want to win. We’re all on the same page.’ We’ve been there and we’ve seen what it takes. We know Coach Fritz and trust what he’s gonna do.”
The feeling is mutual. Fritz acknowledged the wide array of suitors for Hurst this offseason, but the strength of the connection previously established at Tulane ultimately prevailed on the transfer’s decision day.
“He came here for a lot less,” Fritz said. “He’s a loyal guy. He’s a great player. He’s a great person. We’re very, very excited about having him here. He’s a tough, hard-nosed guy. He’s smart. He loves to practice, he loves football, and he’s an excellent student.”
Hurst was one of the most coveted linemen in the 2026 transfer cycle, entering with a distinguished résumé of two First Team All-American Conference selections, while serving as an integral component of a Tulane squad that qualified for four-straight conference championship games.
“You feel pretty confident when a guy like Shadre is next to you,” Houston right tackle Drew Terrill said. “He’s really strong on the field. He has some of the best lifting numbers I’ve ever seen in the weight room. He squats like 700, benches 500. He’s a monster, so you feel real comfortable out there. You feel like you have another guy that’s gonna fight every play with you.”
But before racking up all the accolades and championships, Hurst was treated to a frontseat view of the greatest statistical turnaround in college football history. When he arrived at Tulane in 2022, he committed to a program coming off the heels of a discouraging 2-10 season. Although Hurst played sparingly as a true freshman, he witnessed the Green Wave completely rewrite their narrative to a tune of a 12-2 record, embellished with an American Conference title, a thrilling Cotton Bowl victory over USC, and a No. 9 finish.
Over three years later, that magical season still resonates deep within Hurst.
“The first season there with him in 2022 going to the Cotton Bowl, winning the conference championship — seeing how he coached and led players and had everything organized and how we laid it out for us to be successful,” Hurst said. “That’s what made me like, ‘I want that again.’”
Hurst not only arrives to Houston with a Cotton Bowl victory and an AP Top 10 finish under his belt. Several months ago, his Green Wave crashed the national stage of the College Football Playoff — becoming the second team in American Conference history to do so.
Now his Cougars, fresh off a 10-3 campaign and a No. 22 year-end ranking, are eyeing that incremental jump to the CFP. The fifth-year senior only has one more canvas available, and Hurst hopes to leverage his past New Year’s Six and CFP experiences to paint his final masterpiece in Houston.
“Being at that level and having that experience helps me bring that here and instill it into other players here,” Hurst said. “We can go chase that same level of competition and championships.”