Stephen Cooper (American football)

Last updated

Stephen Cooper
Stephen Cooper (American football).JPG
Cooper with the San Diego Chargers
No. 54
Position: Linebacker
Personal information
Born: (1979-06-19) June 19, 1979 (age 44)
Wareham, Massachusetts, U.S.
Height:6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Weight:235 lb (107 kg)
Career information
High school: Wareham (MA)
College: Maine
Undrafted: 2003
Career history
Career highlights and awards
  • A-10 Defensive POY (2001, 2002)
  • George H. "Bulger" Lowe Award (2002)
Career NFL statistics
Total tackles:503
Sacks:9.5
Forced fumbles:8
Fumble recoveries:5
Interceptions:8
Player stats at NFL.com  ·  PFR

Stephen Cooper (born June 19, 1979) is a former American football linebacker for the San Diego Chargers of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the University of Maine. He was signed by the San Diego Chargers as an undrafted free agent in 2003, and played his entire professional career for the Chargers.

Contents

College career

Cooper verbally committed to attend the U.S. Naval Academy but transferred closer to home at the University of Maine to try and earn a scholarship. In an interview with Tom Shanahan, Cooper said his decision was a family one. "We weren't really thinking about professional football," Cooper said, "We were thinking about a job after college, and if you go to the Naval Academy, you're not going to get turned away for a job." [1] Because his high school coach and Maine Black Bears football head coach Jack Cosgrove played together in college, Cooper was offered a scholarship and became an instant star. [2] Cooper earned Maine's Roger Ellis Rookie of Year Award his freshman year in 1999. As a junior, Cooper earned Atlantic-10 Co-Defensive Player of Year. During his senior year, Cooper racked up Atlantic-10 Conference Defensive Player of Year in 2002, the George H. "Bulger" Lowe award from the Gridiron Club of Greater Boston as the top defensive football player in New England, and was named a 1st Team Defense 2002 Associated Press NCAA Division I-AA Football All-American. [3] He was also an American Football Coaches Association and Sports Network All-American as well. [4]

In a game against Appalachian State, Cooper was named an I-AA All Star where he "turned the game around late in the third quarter, forcing ASU quarterback Joe Burchette into an interception with Maine trailing 10-0. The Black Bears scored two plays later and pulled out a 14-13 win. Cooper had 13 tackles, three solo and 10 assisted, three tackles for 15 yards of losses and two quarterback sacks for 14 yards of losses." [5] Throughout his college career spanning four years from 1999–2002, Cooper finished with 374 tackles, 57 tackles for loss, seven interceptions and 25 sacks. [6]

2002 steroid possession

A week after being named the top defensive player in New England, Cooper was caught with possession of about 1,000 steroid pills on November 1, 2002. He was riding in a car that was speeding on I-95 in Hampden, Maine. The driver, Patrick Kenney, allowed Trooper Michael Johnson to search the car in which he found the pills in a duffel bag sitting on the rear seat. [7] Cooper was not penalized for participation of any games during his senior year as possession of steroids did not violate NCAA rules. A New York Times report stated "NCAA spokeswoman, Laronica L. Conway, said the illegal possession of steroids was an issue for the institution to resolve. There is no violation of NCAA bylaws unless a player is accused of actually ingesting the pills, not simply possessing them, she said from the association's headquarters in Indianapolis." [8]

The University of Maine star pleaded guilty in federal court to possession of steroids. Cooper was released following his plea to the misdemeanor offense, and issued a statement saying he had planned not to use the drugs.

Professional career

The San Diego Chargers signed Cooper as an undrafted free agent on May 2, 2003. He played in mostly a backup role for his first 4 years before his breakout season in 2007 when he started all 16 games and recorded a career high 107 tackles. The following two seasons were also productive totaling 201 tackles and starting 28 games. He was placed on IR on December 31, 2010 after playing 12 games (11 starts) and recording 43 tackles during the 2010 season. He played 5 more games the following year before another injury cut his season short, being placed on IR on October 12, 2011. He would spend his entire 9 season career in San Diego recording 503 tackles, 9.5 sacks, and 8 interceptions in 125 games. He also recorded 68 tackles, 0.5 sack, and 2 passes defended in 8 playoff games for the Chargers.

NFL career statistics

Legend
BoldCareer high

Regular season

YearTeamGamesTacklesInterceptionsFumbles
GPGSCmbSoloAstSckTFLIntYdsTDLngPDFFFRYdsTD
2003 SDG 160161331.0112502510000
2004 SDG 1624232100.02000020100
2005 SDG 1623929101.51000000000
2006 SDG 1645431232.53000021000
2007 SDG 161610772352.05223018632-10
2008 SDG 12129972271.5341101060000
2009 SDG 161610271310.02000082200
2010 SDG 1211433761.00120262000
2011 SDG 501010.00000000000
125635033571469.5178610253185-10

Playoffs

YearTeamGamesTacklesInterceptionsFumbles
GPGSCmbSoloAstSckTFLIntYdsTDLngPDFFFRYdsTD
2004 SDG 107520.00000010000
2006 SDG 101010.00000010000
2007 SDG 33302460.50000000000
2008 SDG 22211290.00000000000
2009 SDG 119720.00000000000
866848200.50000020000

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References

  1. San Diego Hall of Champions – No Maine surprise Archived August 7, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  2. Wareham's Cooper wins state's quarterback challenge: 3/9/97
  3. Ivy League Sports Archived January 15, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  4. Chargers.com – Team » Roster » #54 Stephen Cooper | LB Archived April 3, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  5. I-AA College Football: Welcome to I-AA.org, the worldwide leader in I-AA College Football official news!
  6. Chargers.com – Team » Roster » #54 Stephen Cooper | LB Archived April 3, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  7. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on June 30, 2015. Retrieved June 21, 2007.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. PLUS: COLLEGE FOOTBALL; Steroid Possession Not Seen as Issue – New York Times