Colorado transfer Omarion Cooper returns to previous home

Omarion Cooper is headed back to where his college career began

After playing for head coach Deion Sanders and the Colorado Buffaloes for one season, defensive back Omarion Cooper announced Tuesday he’s transferring back to the Florida State Seminoles, the same program he began his college career with.

Cooper joined the Buffaloes last May following the conclusion of spring practices and was locked in a battle for a starting cornerback spot throughout fall camp. Playing in nine contests during the 2023 season, Cooper accounted for 37 tackles, two TFLs, one sack and five passes defended.

More recently, CU coaches decided Cooper’s skill set was perfect for a coverage safety, so he switched positions during spring practices this year and played on the second-team defense while providing veteran leadership.

Shortly after the spring game, Cooper announced his intentions to enter the transfer portal for the second time in his college career.

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Omarion Cooper, Carter Stoutmire in ‘tight’ battle for starting CB spot opposite Travis Hunter

Carter Stoutmire and Omarion Cooper are fighting for Colorado’s starting CB spot opposite Travis Hunter

The Colorado Buffaloes have a few position battles coming down to the final few days. One of them is the cornerback spot opposite two-way star Travis Hunter.

Hunter, who has dazzled in camp and recently made a must-see interception, is locked in as one of the starters. However, the other spot is up for grabs between freshman Carter Stoutmire and Florida State transfer Omarion Cooper, head coach Deion Sanders revealed on Tuesday.

With the TCU Horned Frogs being the first opponent for the Buffs, it would be surprising to see the true freshman win the battle, but then again, Sanders lets the play do the talking.

It’s an extremely tight race, and Coach Prime even joked that whoever gets off the bus faster will get the spot. Nonetheless, both players will likely get ample playing time, and having too much talent is never a bad problem.

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Auburn transfer WR Tar’Varish Dawson commits to Colorado

Transfer WR Tar’Varish Dawson flipped his commitment from Cincinnati to Colorado

Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders has another weapon to throw to on the outside as former Auburn wide receiver Tar’Varish Dawson committed to the Buffs on Monday.

Dawson was a four-star recruit in the 2021 recruiting cycle who committed to Auburn out of Lehigh Senior High School in Florida. The 5-foot-10, 175-pound speedster entered the transfer portal on April 15 and had previously committed to Cincinnati on April 22 before flipping to Colorado.

The Buffaloes had two advantages in trying to get Dawson to Boulder. First, the Colorado-Florida pipeline has grown stronger since the hiring of head coach Deion Sanders. Second, Dawson was a Lehigh teammate of cornerback Omarion Cooper, who transferred into Colorado from Florida State just hours before Dawson joined the herd.

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Colorado begins May with commitment from another Florida State transfer

Omarion Cooper became the latest former Seminole to join the #cubuffs

The Colorado Buffaloes just keep on hitting home runs in the transfer portal.

On Monday morning, the Buffs landed former Florida State cornerback Omarion Cooper in the transfer portal, per Cooper’s Twitter profile.

This is now the third Florida State player to come to Boulder in the past week as Cooper joins Derrick McLendon and Brendan Gant as fellow former Seminoles to join FSU legend Deion Sanders at Colorado.

The Buffs saw a flurry of players leave after the spring game, but they have worked wonders in the portal despite the hectic exodus. Now, Cooper comes and joins a loaded secondary.

Cooper’s reasoning for coming to Boulder had a lot to do with Deion Sanders, per Hayes Fawcett of On3:

โ€œWhat stood out was the beautiful town and landscape ! The amazing people there and the coaching staff have lots of NFL experience. Why not get coached by the best and a head coach who is from the same city as me?โ€

Cooper has three years of eligibility remaining and was a four-star recruit in the class of 2021. He played in 12 games at Florida State last year.

Cooper also has a relationship with CU Director of Player Development James Chaney, who coached Cooper at Lehigh Senior High School in Florida.

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Sunday Thoughts: Michigan football recruiting and 2020 misinformation

Talking the 2021-22 recruiting classes, what prospects are likely Michigan commits and why we don’t buy these Big Ten rumors.

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It’s been a long time since we’ve done a Sunday Thoughts, but today seemed like a good day to resurrect it, even if it’s only for one week.

Let’s dig in.

Recruiting

This week, I delved into recruiting in a way I hadn’t since my tenure at 247Sports — and in some ways, with an even more tenacious edge.

It started with going to SMSB to see 2022 five-star Will Johnson from Grosse Pointe (MI) South, the Michigan legacy who’s also being heavily courted by Ohio State, Oklahoma, Penn State and Arizona State. I feel like Michigan is in great standing, but it’s going to be a long process for him. With all the coaches seemingly in on his recruitment, there’s no school from what I can tell, that’s pushing harder.

If that doesn’t kill the in-state narrative, I don’t know what will. Like Allen Trieu told me at the event, Michigan is doing what it’s always done — going after who it wants in-state. It won’t win them all, and hasn’t done so, historically. But I think, this early, Michigan looks good for Johnson.

Then I started delving mostly into 2022, but also spoke to numerous 2021 commits (and just a handful of targets in the current class).

While many think Michigan could be done at cornerback with just Ft. Lauderdale (FL) St. Thomas Aquinas three-star Ja’Den McBurrows committed, keep an eye on two targets in 2021: Tuscaloosa (AL) American Christian three-star Kamari Lassiter and Lehigh Acres (FL) Senior four-star Omarion Cooper, the Florida State commit.

I spoke briefly to Cooper who confirmed that Michigan is throwing everything it has to work to get him to flip — and he’s seemingly receptive. “They are still recruiting me hard,” Cooper told me. Hopefully I’ll get more on that soon.

When it comes to Michigan’s recruiting strategy, this that J.J. McCarthy told me, I think, tells you what you need to know:

โ€œIโ€™d almost come up with — like pick out recruits from Twitter and watching film and even from camps and everything,” McCarthy said. “And Iโ€™d always bring them back to Matty Dudek and everything like that, and he would say, โ€˜Awesome, love it.โ€™ If heโ€™d love a player, heโ€™d be like, โ€˜Weโ€™re probably gonna offer him.โ€™ And sometimes, heโ€™d be like, โ€˜Heโ€™s just not our guy. Heโ€™s not a fit for what we want to do here.โ€™ Character-traits and everything like that. And I kind of never understood his philosophy behind it and the whole staffโ€™s philosophy.

โ€œUntil I actually got into the group chat. And we started communicating as a class together. And I was like, โ€˜Oh. Now I get it. Now I get it.โ€™ Theyโ€™re recruiting a certain type of man to come to Michigan, and they believe thatโ€™s the most successful for them. Weโ€™re all gonna be able to do our job to make Michigan the most successful.

โ€œIn the group chat, weโ€™re all so similar in so many ways, and I really recognize that and realize that to where Iโ€™m like, โ€˜Oh, I get it! He actually knows what heโ€™s doing! Heโ€™s getting the job done!โ€™โ€

Once you know that — and it’s something I’ve seen over the past two years — the recruits that you hear saying they’re looking for a place that feels like ‘home,’ ‘a brotherhood’ or ‘a family atmosphere’ — you can pretty much assure that Michigan will be one of its finalists.

Moving onto 2022, there’s one recruit I spoke to who definitely espoused that mentality, and it’s one of the most impressive prospects I’ve ever spoken to. That’s St. Louis (MO) Lutheran of St. Charles County four-star running back Arlen Harris Jr.

I could have talked to Harris for an hour, as he’s mature beyond his years and has a firm grasp on who he is, who he wants to be and what he’s looking for. His top schools at this juncture, from what he told me, are Michigan, Stanford, Iowa, Mizzou and Penn State.

Here’s what he said that made me think Michigan will be in it for the long haul:

โ€œI would say a big thing for me is being challenged on and off the field. Michigan definitely brings that to the table,” Harris said. “Thatโ€™s why theyโ€™re a top school for me. I want to be able to work just as hard on the field and do that off. Just a balanced challenge for me. Obviously, I want to be at a place that feels like home and makes me feel wanted and not just a part of a program, a business or a team โ€“ but a family. I think those are some of the things I desire in a college team.โ€

But the notion that Michigan is fading on the national scene is just a narrative.

I spoke to plenty of top prospects, including Earl Little Jr., Jaleel Skinner, MJ Morris and Fabian Ross, and all of them spoke about how meaningful it was to be able to have that Sept. 1 conversation with head coach Jim Harbaugh — with some being somewhat awestruck about it. All being national recruits, however, it’s going to take some time before any of them comes to a decision, especially since none of the above have been to Ann Arbor.

Nonetheless, Michigan is doing an excellent job on the trail. It might take a minute, but I believe that 2022 could be equally as impressive on paper as 2021, once things start to open up and some of these prospects can actually get to campus.

Misconceptions

Listen — I’ve been pretty forthright on my thoughts on the Big Ten, at least on my podcast. I’ll explain.

I’m not saying that the Big Ten made a bad decision — I think that can only be answered in hindsight. But it made a hasty one. And if there were more skepticism from the players about playing football this fall, I’d be more inclined to think it’s potentially unsafe to play. But, with Michigan having, as Jim Harbaugh said on Saturday, nearly one-thousand tests in a row without any positives, if every school in the conference can adopt the same strategies as Michigan, there’s no reason why a season can’t be played safely.

But there are certainly some disinformation campaigns out there.

Take the Penn State doctor, who claimed myocarditis was found in 30-35% of Big Ten athletes before fully recanting. Many breathlessly shared the original article without looking at it critically, crying, ‘See?!’ There’s a reason why there’s so much distrust at the moment, and confirmation bias has certainly played a role. Again, I reserve judgment until we get the full breadth of what’s an actual danger and what isn’t in the long-term. But, I also find it funny that so many who rebut the amateurism model aren’t on the side of the players here. To a large degree, I do believe that if the players want to play, they should be given that opportunity, at least as other conferences take the field — and especially now that high school football is basically happening across the Midwest, with Michigan reversing course and allowing the MHSAA to start up here soon. Assuredly, U-M can protect its student-athletes better than some random high school that doesn’t have similar resources, right? And with those saying that college students are gonna behave poorly, based on what we’ve seen coming out of football, I don’t believe that’s the case. I think those going through stringent protocols who have had close to zero (but not zero) positive tests should have earned the benefit of the doubt given the track record.

Many will argue that it’s not about Michigan, but other schools. That’s fair. We’ve seen outbreaks with other programs. I do think there has to be a baseline of safety, as well as some baseline of protocols. Without of which, there can’t be play. I’m sure that’s being taken under consideration, and it’s also why we need to be patient as these things are potentially reevaluated.

But this rumor mill has been absurd.

I’ve had conversations with one person close to the situation behind the scenes at Michigan who would have full knowledge of the school’s current happenings. Based on that, no, the board of regents have not met and aren’t meeting this weekend for any reason, let alone to discuss U-M president Dr. Mark Schlissel. Also based on those conversations, I do not believe the report out there that Schlissel is holding the conference hostage and that he stands in the way of a potential fall season. No, him not returning Harbaugh’s correspondence is not a good look. I do think he should visit the football facilities and speak with those whose futures he’s potentially affecting. But these behind-the-scenes high crimes are laughable, to be honest, and it just feeds into a lot of wishful thinking.

Could a season start in October? I think it’s possible. But I don’t buy into these conspiracy theories and you shouldn’t either.

2021 Michigan target commits to ACC power

The Wolverines miss out on one of its top defensive back targets in 2021.

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Days after Michigan made the cut for one of its top targets in the 2021 class, it appears that ship has sailed.

The Wolverines, led by cornerbacks coach Mike Zordich, have been all over Lehigh Acres (FL) Senior four-star cornerback Omarion Cooper, and were rewarded by making his Top 6, along with Penn State, Louisville, Florida State, Texas and South Carolina. However, it wasnโ€™t long lasting.

Cooper apparently chose to stay closer to home, as he announced on Twitter on Sunday that he was pledging to the Seminoles just six days after the maize and blue and the others made his top group.

Michigan currently has one cornerback committed in 2021 in Fort Lauderdale (FL) St. Thomas Aquinas three-star JaDen McBurrows.

With Cooper off the board, the Wolverines will be that much more in pursuit of Tyreek Chappell, Ceyair Wright, Duce Chestnut and AJ Green.

Michigan makes cut for top-flight 2021 prospect

The Wolverines make the cut for the top-flight defensive back.

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One position that Michigan continues to strongly target is cornerback, where it currently has one player committed in the 2021 class in Fort Lauderdale (FL) St. Thomas Aquinas three-star JaDen McBurrows. But it’s looking to add another.

A player that’s long been a target of the Wolverines is another defensive back from Florida in Lehigh Acres (FL) Senior four-star Omarion Cooper, a player with 27 reported offers including Texas, Penn State, Florida, Florida State, Miami (FL) and Tennessee.

While he still is looking at some SEC and ACC schools, the maize and blue faithful can rejoice at the Wolverines’ efforts, as Cooper placed Michigan in his recently released Top 6 on Monday morning — along with Penn State, Texas, Louisville, FSU and South Carolina.

Via the 247Sports Composite, Cooper is rated the No. 271 player in the country, regardless of position, the No. 40 prospect in the state of Florida and the 18th-best cornerback.

He currently has one 247Sports Crystal Ball prediction which indicates that Florida State could be his future destination.

MICHIGAN OFFER: 2021 Lehigh Acres (FL) Senior CB Omarion Cooper

The Wolverines extended an offer to 2021 Lehigh Acres (FL) Senior cornerback Omarion Cooper on February 12, 2020.

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Ratings

Stars Overall Position State
247Sports
Rivals 4 207 15
ESPN 4 127 8 18
247Sports Composite

Vitals

Hometown Lehigh Acres (FL) Senior
Projected Position Cornerback
Height 6-foot-0
Weight 175-pounds

Recruitment

  • Michigan offered on Feb. 12, 2020, per his Twitter

offers

  • Florida
  • Florida State
  • Kansas
  • Kentucky
  • Louisville
  • Marshall
  • Maryland
  • Michigan
  • NC State
  • Penn State
  • Pitt
  • South Florida
  • Tennessee
  • Texas
  • Virginia Tech

Film

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Twitter

https://twitter.com/OmarionC2