NFL Draft Profile: Robert Cooper, Defensive Lineman, Florida State Seminoles

NFL Draft profile scouting report for Florida State iDL Robert Cooper
NFL Draft Profile: Robert Cooper, Defensive Lineman, Florida State Seminoles
NFL Draft Profile: Robert Cooper, Defensive Lineman, Florida State Seminoles /

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Robert Cooper
Florida State Seminoles

#91
Pos: iDL
Ht: 6015
Wt: 307
Hand: 1028
Arm: 3100
Wing: 7648
40: 5.30
DOB: 7/16/2000
Hometown: Lilburn, GA
High School: South Gwinnett
Eligibility: 2023


One Liner:

Cooper is a run-stuffing interior defensive lineman who will likely line up as a 2i or 1-tech at the NFL level, but he’ll only play on early downs considering his physical limitations and lack of development as a pass rusher.

Evaluation:

Cooper primarily plays the interior roles from 3-tech to 1-tech for Florida State. He is thick and powerful throughout his frame, which helps clog gaps and eliminate rushing lanes. Cooper displays a stout anchor to maintain gap integrity, even when challenged with double teams. He fires off the line with surprising explosiveness for his size, and his short-area agility and quickness are also impressive. The former four-star recruit plays with natural leverage. He excels at tracking the running back with his eyes and flowing down the line of scrimmage to the football. There are multiple examples of Cooper using his power to toss linemen or walk them back into the quarterback’s lap. He uses a spin move to create separation and reposition himself, but it rarely creates an advantage for him as a pass rusher. Cooper will sometimes pair his explosiveness with his surprising ability to get skinny and shoot gaps. He makes good use of hand swipes, but his hands lack refined, planned counters. While his hands are quick and powerful, the redshirt senior doesn’t deploy them frequently enough. He’s too inclined to fire into the offensive lineman and maintain contact rather than create separation or attack the lineman’s hands. Cooper has a history of committing penalties, including eight in 2019 and four in 2021. His only significant recent special teams experience is on the field goal block unit. Cooper’s arm length might raise some concerns as he struggles to generate separation from offensive linemen. He doesn’t get his arms up for pass breakups. Cooper is a pocket pusher instead of a pocket collapser, and he lacks the refined moves and counters to consistently threaten the quarterback. His hands need to be more active and deploy earlier, especially as he tries to find a solution after his initial burst fades. Cooper allows linemen into his pads too often. While he flashes good power, it’s not an overwhelming enough physical trait to make up for some of his technical flaws.

Grade:

6th Round

Background:

Cooper was a four-star recruit from South Gwinnett High School in Snellville, Ga., in the class of 2018. He was the No. 117 recruit according to 247Sports Composite board, No. 161 for Rivals, and No. 117 for On3.com. ESPN ranked him 92nd in the nation with an 84 grade out of 100. As a high school senior, Cooper amassed 42 tackles, including eight for loss and two sacks. As a junior, he totaled 54 tackles, including 16.0 for loss and four sacks. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and Georgia Sportswriters Association named Cooper First-Team All-State. He was an Under Armour All-American. Cooper chose Florida State over offers from Alabama, Arkansas, Boston College, Cincinnati, Florida, Kentucky, LSU, Maryland, Miami, Michigan, Michigan State, Mississippi State, North Carolina State, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Oklahoma, TCU, Tennessee, and Wisconsin. He was a 2021 All-ACC honorable mention. 


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