🏈 Mississippi State will 'do what we do,' use single coverage on Alabama's Amari Cooper

Mississippi State has the worst pass defense in the SEC and will go up against perhaps the best receiver in the country on Saturday in Alabama's Amari Cooper.

Still, the Bulldogs don't plan on changing anything specifically for one player and plan on single man coverage against Cooper, the physical threat who leads the SEC in receiving and is among the country's best with 79 catches for 1,215 yards and 10 touchdowns.

Mississippi State is giving up 300 yards per game through the air, last in the SEC. But the Bulldogs lead the SEC in sacks and are near the top in rushing defense and tackles for loss.

"We do what we do," Mississippi State defensive coordinator Geoff Collins said. "The emphasis all year and all the time is to stop the run.

"At times, there will be kids put in 1-on-1 situations on pass rush or an open-field tackle, so the kids understand that we move stress around throughout the game and sometimes you're going to have some stress on you, so the challenge is to make that play when it comes."

Bulldog cornerbacks Jamerson Love, Taveze Calhoun and Will Redmond could find themselves in individual battles with Cooper without help.

Cornerbacks coach Deshea Townsend, who starred at Alabama in the late 1990s, said the Bulldogs would rotate players on Cooper, but wouldn't change what they've been doing.

"We're going to do what we do," Townsend said. "It's always a challenge at corner to go out and stop those guys from catching it. This week, it's just another guy. (Cooper is a) really great player, has a lot of catches and the challenge always comes to us on the back end.

"The main thing is, he really accelerates coming out of his cuts, he's really good in press, makes spectacular catches, so they find a lot of ways to get him the ball. It's going to be important for us to recognize where he's at and try to stop him from getting those catches."

Alabama offensive coordinator Lane Kiffin could add another wrinkle and try to create matchups against slower linebackers.

"We cannot do the same thing over and over again," Mississippi State head coach Dan Mullen said. "They will find out what we are doing and will take advantage of it. We have to change up the looks and the people that are covering him. He is going to catch the ball, but when he catches it, we have to get him on the ground. He is really good before the catch, but he is even better after the catch."

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I can't escape the feeling this is the story line for this game; not the "contain Prescott" theme we've seen this week.

I'm certainly not discounting anything Prescott brings to this game. He's had a good season. I'll readily admit I scoffed at the idea he'd be on the Heisman watch lists.

I simply don't understand why MSU would choose to defend the passing game this way when they've got games, this season, to look at and see it hasn't worked.
 
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I don't know who singled him. Ole Miss always had a safety over the top, as did Arkansas and LSU. UT single covered him early, but quickly came out of it. Even UF's terrific corner, Hargreaves, could not do it.
 
I'm looking at a couple of darkhorses to shine in this game, White and Ch. Jones. Maybe even an A. Stewart sighting. Of course, these guys in addition to Cooper having a solid game. But i think White or Jones will contribute in significant way.
 
They can bracket him with a safety when he his split out, but he is a nightmare when he is lined up beside Blake in the backfield!! Traditionally, your LBs are responsible for a back out of the backfield. If you go nickel, you are lining up a safety with the responsibility of covering him one on one. Bracket him and you risk OJ down the seam or DeAndrew over the top on a deep post. Pick your poison Bullies!!
 
I don't know who singled him. Ole Miss always had a safety over the top, as did Arkansas and LSU. UT single covered him early, but quickly came out of it. Even UF's terrific corner, Hargreaves, could not do it.
People who tried to single cover Amari Cooper

UF, UT, Ole Miss, Arkansas, LSU, and TAMU

Succeeded - LSU, Arkansas, Ole Miss

Failed - UF, UT, and TAMU

Key notes on this were that in all three successful attempts they held him under 100 yards and all three used safety help to keep him contained. In the Ole Miss game, Amari was only 7 yards from 100 yards of receiving. In the LSU game he was 17 yards from achieving it but had a key TD early in the game.

The BIGGEST piece of the puzzle is other than UT, each game at home he succeeded easily in being a huge factor in the game.

Amari Cooper Home vs Away statistics for the year.

Source: http://www.cfbstats.com/2014/player/8/1046185/receiving/split.html

Home Games 4 REC YDS 665 YPC 17.05 TD 7 Yards Per Game 166.3

Away/Neutral Site Games 5 REC YDS 550 YPC 13.75 TD 3 Yards Per Game 110.0
 
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