Packers Deep Dive — 2nd Round Pick Edgerrin Cooper

A hard-hitting, fast LB who loves to blitz. Who will play MIKE?  

Here’s the thing about Edgerrin Cooper: When he stands in front of Lambeau Field, he can hug someone in Milwaukee. We’re talking wingspan (80+ inches) that doesn’t quit.  

It’s one of the many attributes that made Cooper one of the top two consensus linebackers in the 2024 class, and a screaming favorite among the Packer faithful when he was the second player picked (45th overall after trading back four spots) by Green Bay on Friday. 

I, too, am excited by much of what the Texas A&M product brings to the table, but there are some question marks, and I’m particularly intrigued by what this choice suggests about new DC Jeff Hafley’s scheme and use of personnel.

Basics first: A Covington, Louisiana., native, Cooper will turn 23 in November, stands just north of 6’2”, weighs 230 pounds and ran a speedy (for a linebacker) 4.51 40 with a 1.56 10-yard split. He has large (9 3/4) hands and the long, lean frame that is increasingly typical for modern linebackers. He did not do the agility drills at the combine, but he moves with fluidity, if somewhat upright. 

From a roster-building perspective, Cooper’s selection was a welcome and crucial early thrust of a draft strategy that prioritized improving the team’s middle-of-the-field defense with linebackers and safeties. And it was clear from the draft that Gutekunst is following Hafley’s stated desire for a more aggressive scheme with high-intensity players moving forward, pressuring the ball and dictating the action, rather than sitting back and waiting. It’s about time.

Cooper certainly brings many of those traits. His film shows a high motor, heat-seeking missile who likes to hit hard, although sometimes in lieu of actual tackling. His speed, quick first steps, motor and intensity make him particularly suited as a blitzer, and as a QB spy, a critical need for a team that has struggled against mobile quarterbacks.

Here's a hit-fest compilation:

 

Here’s what the CHTV draft guide said:

“He is most effective when shooting gaps and playing aggressively downhill. He can be disruptive at the line of scrimmage and use his speed to chase down ball carriers as a backside pursuit defender. He also demonstrates an explosive first step as a blitzer off the edge, giving him an effective secret weapon to use on third downs. Cooper also demonstrates true three-down ability because not only is he a dynamic rusher, but he also has the speed and fluid hips to change direction and hold up in coverage when out on an island in space. Where Cooper needs to improve at the next level is taking on blocks. In college, he survived by being quicker than offensive linemen and slipping their attempts. However, too frequently he was washed out of plays once he engaged with opponents. He can also get too eager and over-pursue the run, showing a need to play more disciplined.”

And here’s Greg Cosell, writing for the 33rd team: 

“While Cooper’s tape is impressive regarding tier athleticism and dynamic explosive movement, what you didn’t see a lot of throughout his tape was physicality and stack and shed in the box to make plays in the run game, and that is what will likely keep him off the field early in his career in base defenses in normal down and distance situations.”

It’s clear that Cooper can be lined up all over the place, and one gets the sense that in many ways he’s a better, more aggressive version of Quay Walker, with a higher ability to get to and/or follow the quarterback. He has a great knack for sliding past offensive linemen using his quick burst and a sneaky dip move under the arms of would-be blockers. And he appears quite coachable when it comes to working on needed improvements. 

This video gives some insight into his tape and his personality:

What Cooper and the safeties Green Bay drafted represent are chess pieces for Hafley to play with in different coverages that allow for both opponent-based match-ups and opportunities to confuse offenses with multiple pre-snap looks. Expect a lot of the traditional schematic lines to get blurred, as safeties and linebackers move up and back, in and out of the box and side to side. I can’t wait to watch it unfold. 

The challenge is how to achieve the goal without over-complicating things, and this is why I scratched my head a bit at Cooper’s selection. Regardless of whether a team runs a 3-4, 4-3, 4-2-5 or any other variant, the defense needs a quarterback. The leader, communicator, and tone-setter who understands every detail and nuance of the installed scheme. In other words, the MIKE, the guy with the green dot in the mold of Fred Warner, Bobby Wagner and Roquan Smith.  For that reason, I was partial to Junior Colson, the Michigan middle linebacker favored over Cooper by some of the top draftniks for similar reasons.

Colson played the middle consistently for Jim Harbaugh in Ann Arbor, and will again for the Chargers, whereas Cooper is much more of an LB/Edge hybrid. Walker doesn’t fit the MIKE bill, so who plays that role now? Isaiah McDuffie was a frequent sub for De’Vondre Campbell, so perhaps the coaches think he’s up to it. It would be great if he could  grow into that role. If he does, and assuming the Packers won’t be in base that often, Quay might see fewer snaps, depending on how quickly Cooper gets his NFL sea legs. Or perhaps the caches think Cooper can play the MIKE.

One X-factor is the other linebacker Gutekunst picked, Ty’Ron Hopper from Missouri. Hopper is much more the MIKE prototype, and in his senior year got the C stitched to his jersey. It will be interesting to see if his skill set and athleticism will crack the starting lineup in what is now a much stronger linebacker room.  GPG.

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Jonathan Krim grew up in New York but got hooked on the Packers — and on hating the Cowboys — watching the Ice Bowl as a young child.  He blames bouts of unhappiness in his late teens on Dan Devine. A journalist for several decades who now lives in California, he enjoys trafficking in obscure cultural references, lame dad jokes and occasionally preposterous takes. Jonathan is a Packers shareholder, and insists on kraut with his brats. You can follow Jonathan on twitter at @Jkrim.

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Comments (32)

Fan-Friendly This filter will hide comments which have ratio of 5 to 1 down-vote to up-vote.
NickPerry's picture

April 30, 2024 at 06:19 am

"And it was clear from the draft that Gutekunst is following Hafley’s stated desire for a more aggressive scheme with high-intensity players moving forward, pressuring the ball and dictating the action, rather than sitting back and waiting."

Just this alone makes the Hafley hiring SO MUCH more exciting. I just watched the highlight reel and I get those tapes showcase his highlight hits. But how can you not be excited about this kid and the possibilities? Man I can't wait for September!

Jalen Hurts ISN'T running all over the Packers in week one like he did the last time we played and they ran for 363 yards...363!!!! Not with this kid. Not with Bullard...Not with the Hafley Defense.

Lets Go!!

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Minniman's picture

April 30, 2024 at 03:01 pm

To the point of your last paragraph Nick - There's a difference between being stopped and being tackled.

The former ceases forward progress on that play - the latter leaves a sting that sits in your mind at the start of the next play.

THAT! Is what the LB and Secondary play of the Packers in the last 3-5 years has been lacking........... issuing consequences for running and contesting the collision.

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NickPerry's picture

April 30, 2024 at 04:58 pm

Yes sir...

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WD's picture

April 30, 2024 at 07:18 am

I loved the Cooper pick but the Steelers feel they got the steal of the draft with day two pick Payton Wilson. Time will tell.

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Guam's picture

April 30, 2024 at 07:32 am

Wilson is a boom or bust pick for the Steelers. If he can stay healthy he will be an asset but that is a big if given his injury history.

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stockholder's picture

April 30, 2024 at 03:07 pm

Wilson is the player to win again.
The steelers won with TJ Watt.
The steelers will win with Wilson.

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NickPerry's picture

April 30, 2024 at 05:00 pm

Hmmm...Pretty sure the Steelers haven't won a SB since BEFORE the Packers won their last one. Matter of fact without even looking I'd be tempted to bet the Packers have done more WINNING than the Steelers too...

Just FYI...They haven't won shit with Watt.

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stockholder's picture

April 30, 2024 at 06:14 pm

No but they did win their last 2 vs. Pack.
Keep in mind Nick.
We don't play in the AFC North.
We'd Loose. The NFC central is weak.

But check out their draft. It's awesome
.No. 1 Troy Fautanu, No. 2 Zach Frazier, No. 3a Roman Wilson,
No. 3b Payton Wilson, No. 4 Mason McCormick,
No. 6a Logan Lee, and No. 6b Ryan Watts are the draftees.
Thats how you protect a QB. Mean and Nasty.
And Wilson already stated he wants to be every Down.
Now thats what I'm talking about.

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NitschkeFan's picture

April 30, 2024 at 10:20 pm

stock, You write that they won with TJ Watt. Won what?

The Steelers have not won a SB with TJ Watt.
They have not been to a SB with TJ Watt.
They have not won an AFC Championship game with TJ Watt.
They have not been to an AFC Championship game with TJ Watt.
The Steelers have missed the playoffs in 3 of the 7 seasons they had TJ Watt.

Yup, all they do is win.

We know you hate the Packers but at least get your facts right. You just end up looking like a hater (and a dumb one at that).
I think the Steelers had a nice draft too but you can make that point easily without adding the idiotic comments. You just weaken your argument.

PS what the heck do the Steelers and TJ Watt have to do with Edg Cooper?

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stockholder's picture

May 01, 2024 at 06:34 am

They won at the position. BPA

As far as not winning a SB.
They have had problems
but it wasn't because of Watt.

They beat the Pack is all I said.
And you avoided the truth about
division strength.
Trying to push their failure of not getting to the SB.
Well, we haven't been there since 2010.

The Team comparison is what you object to.
The assumption of hating the packers isn't
the argument.
The comparison of winning the selection at LB was.
They won by taking Payton Wilson.

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T7Steve's picture

April 30, 2024 at 07:26 am

All these kids have their good and bad points. This kid is more wishy than washy. I trust Gute knows these guys in and out and trusts the coaches (who must be on board with the pick) to bring these guys to their peaks.

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TKWorldWide's picture

April 30, 2024 at 07:58 am

“More wishy than washy”? Meaning him being a productive player is more wishful thinking than a realistic expectation? Merely asking for clarification.

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T7Steve's picture

April 30, 2024 at 08:11 am

Wishful thinking on my part that he'll be a great defender. I was just trying to be cute, and it didn't work.

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Alberta_Packer's picture

April 30, 2024 at 10:48 am

I liked the attempt at word play.

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golfpacker1's picture

April 30, 2024 at 08:47 am

Wow, be careful T7, you don't want to get caught disagreeing with or questioning the Packers moves or picks. You will get called a "Glass 1/2 full guy", or told just shut up because the Packers know way more than anyone else could. There is nothing wrong with criticizing or expressing an opinion. This isn't Russia and even good fans can ask why.

Cooper will make rookie mistakes like all do, but even though he wasn't my first choice either, he has real talent and we really needed it at LB. I am glad we addressed it early because it was a huge hole and it is filled.

I would be curious to know why GB favored Cooper, and it appears Wallace, over Colson, Gray, & Wilson. Or even more, why they favored Hopper over Gray at LB. Or why Hopper over the obvious need filler @ OL just sitting there @ #91 like a present under the tree, Mason McCormick.

The buck stops with Gutey and he picked the guys he thought would help the most, hopefully he got it right.

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T7Steve's picture

April 30, 2024 at 09:20 am

Thanks.

I actually wasn't trying to sound critical of anyone but myself, because I don't know enough to think there's such a thing as a "sure thing" in the draft and am just hopeful for any new Packer.

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NitschkeFan's picture

April 30, 2024 at 10:10 am

gp1 I think (as most drafts) there will be several players that we Packers fans will watch to compare with Gute's picks. The Packers pick vs a similar guy available and taken later.

Jordan Morgan vs Tyler Guyton
Edgerrin Cooper vs any of the other ILB's (not really fair to compare against multiple guys)
Cooper vs DeJean (totally different position but a much beloved prospect)?
MarShawn Lloyd vs Jaylen Wright
Ty Hopper vs Cedric Gray (or Payton Wilson)
Evan Williams vs Musthapha or Vaki

It is probably an exercise that if done every season would drive a fan crazy.

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dobber's picture

April 30, 2024 at 06:30 pm

"It is probably an exercise that if done every season would drive a fan crazy."

Yup! :)

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Bitternotsour's picture

April 30, 2024 at 09:46 pm

There's a name for that activity. It's called Monday morning quarterbacking. Its as effective as holding your breath until you turn blue.

Celebrate the presents that you just received. Thou shalt not covet...

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GregC's picture

April 30, 2024 at 10:48 am

I have no problem understanding why the Packers favored Cooper over Colson. I watched some of the videos, and Cooper was all over the field while Colson was mostly just making routine plays. Colson looks like a solid MLB type though, so there's that. I just think the upside with Cooper is much higher.

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NitschkeFan's picture

April 30, 2024 at 10:54 am

Greg I have no problem with any of the picks really. I enjoy reading the info in "Draft Guides" and it makes the draft weekend more fun for me. But I assume some fans fall in love with their favorite prospect and are then going to spend years criticizing their team for taking someone else.

We all know the draft is a bit of a crapshoot so I was just pointing out that if you wanted to drive yourself crazy you could 2nd guess every pick your favorite team made if you wanted to look deeply into other options at the time.

Our recent example of Josh Myers vs Creed Humphrey bothers us all, but if we keep focusing on that type of thing it is just going to obscure the fun stuff.

My own little fav was I wanted Jaylen Wright and he went almost a full round after the Packers picked Lloyd. So I will probably compare the two for the next couple of season's until I move on to some other crush.

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GregC's picture

April 30, 2024 at 11:24 am

Yeah, I was hoping for Jaylen Wright too, then they drafted Marshawn Lloyd, and I immediately thought that he's probably better than Wright!

I studied the draft way more than usual this year, but I still didn't feel like I really knew much compared to the people who were doing the picking.

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dobber's picture

April 30, 2024 at 07:44 am

Nobody says that the green dot can't be McKinney (who will play every defensive snap) or even the SS. In the big nickel, which is where this team looks like it's going but hasn't really discussed schematically (and they won't), there's not really a Mike...there's 2 LBs plus that yet to be concretely defined "5". The Lions played a lot of 4-2-5 in '23 that's starting to sound a lot like what the Packers want to run, and Alex Anzalone--the "Will"--was their green dot. It could turn out to be Quay, yet.

We need to be careful to not carry expectations bred from a classic 4-3/3-4 scheme onto this defensive set. That said, neither Walker nor Cooper is likely to be very effective if the front 4 can't keep them clean. If they're going to one-gap and attack up front, that might be a challenge.

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splitpea1's picture

April 30, 2024 at 12:36 pm

You're definitely right about keeping him clean if we want to see him make those highlight plays, which he had quite a few of in college.

I expect to see a lot of up and downs at first due to his speed and aggressiveness, and he might be a bit more of a work in progress than thought. The real payoff should come after the rookie season after he gets more experience diagnosing plays. Tackling is also a concern, as he missed double digit times in all three seasons--so we'll see how good Hafley and his staff are in regards to that most important aspect.

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Leatherhead's picture

April 30, 2024 at 06:03 pm

dobber, as usual, you've made it plain. We're going to play a lot of the Big Nickel with two LBs, and one of them will be Quay Walker, and hopefully the other will be McDuffie,. Cooper and Hopper can take turns as the 3rd linebacker in the 4-3.

I think our front 4 is very good, but you are correct that keeping our LBs clean is more difficult if the emphasis is on attacking . This kind of gap splitting quickness looks good on the chalkboard, but it can result in some really big holes, too. IMO, we have enough talent in our front 7 that we don't need tricks. Pressure and contain with 4, use 2 to choke off the scramble or the safety valve, and make the QB throw downfield under pressure.

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LambeauPlain's picture

May 01, 2024 at 08:44 am

Xavier wore the Green Dot and QB'd the Giants D. It seems Hafley's new Post Safety can do it in Green Bay too. There are good options.

The other consideration is Hafley has stated the game plan will be simplified and designed for the upcoming opponent so the D can play fast. The D play caller should be more efficient getting the team lined up, I think.

For this reason, Quay is still likely in play for staying on the field as the Green Dot play caller. Hafley also said he plans to deploy Walker "where he can make plays."

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Alberta_Packer's picture

April 30, 2024 at 11:18 am

There is a school of thought that with fast, athletic and lighter LBs - you run directly at them - not away. Both Cooper and Walker appear to be deficient in block destruction. Choosing to go around blocks rather than through. The Packers know this. So I noted that each one of the Safetys chosen at the Draft were all physical and adept tacklers - particularly at or near the line of scrimmage. This was probably by design - with the intention of providing tackling support for the LBs.

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Leatherhead's picture

April 30, 2024 at 07:38 pm

I don't know if you remember the Mike Sherman team of 2003, but they had this formation, known as Bacon, where #71, Kevin Barry, would come in as the 300+ lb TE and he'd block down and he just crushed those puny humans.

Green had over 1800 yards rushing, and the Packers set a franchise record for yards on the ground. After a game with SF, the battered defenders said they knew what was coming, they just couldn't stop it. I liked it, big time. Why not just out-beef a team for a yard?

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LeotisHarris's picture

April 30, 2024 at 08:28 pm

U-71 Package, right?

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Leatherhead's picture

April 30, 2024 at 10:29 pm

Simple and effective. Why not Caleb Jones?

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LambeauPlain's picture

May 01, 2024 at 08:48 am

Yep...U-71. It was like the Lombardi Packer sweep. Defenses were saying "crap! Here is comes again!"

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vin0770's picture

April 30, 2024 at 06:09 pm

Or…X gets the green dot and calls the plays and uses his knowledge to get everyone lined up from the Safety position.

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