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Wasn't exactly sure where to put this but a good/short read on Cooks from SI.
Assistant huddle
• Kerry Cooks tries to think like a player. After all, the Notre Dame secondary coach was once a star Dallas-area recruit faced with the dilemma of whether or not to stay in-state. He thought he would attend Texas A&M, but wound up choosing Iowa and later briefly played in the NFL.
“A lot of people who live in Texas think there’s no other state,” said Cooks with a laugh.
But since 2011 Cooks has convinced six Texas recruits otherwise in getting them to sign with the Fighting Irish, including emerging sophomore wide receiver Corey Robinson, the son of former NBA star David Robinson. He’s also got a pair of current Lone Star commitments in Dallas-area wide receiver Jaylen Guyton and safety Prentice McKinney.
Cooks has made the Fighting Irish perhaps the front-runner for Plano, Texas, running back Soso Jamabo, one of the nation’s best at his position. Cooks has also emerged as one of college football’s hottest recruiters with seven commitments, a group that has him ranked as the nation’s 12th-best according to one service.
“I love Texas, I think I’m going to end up retiring there, but there’s so much more out there,” Cooks said. “I’ve been exposed to so many other universities, people, cultures and ethnicities that for me right now, I’m enjoying living outside the state of Texas and the connections that I’m making.”
Besides Texas, Cooks also recruits Louisiana, New Mexico and defensive backs regardless of location. The 40-year-old has twice declined opportunities to return to his home state and work as co-defensive coordinator for Texas A&M coach Kevin Sumlin, initially after Sumlin’s hiring in late 2011 and also following last season.
Cooks was Notre Dame’s co-defensive coordinator for two years prior to this season and was an assistant at Minnesota and Wisconsin before arriving at Notre Dame with coach Brian Kelly in 2010. “I love Sumlin, but for me where I’m at right now, it’s going to have to be something spectacular to pull me away from Brian Kelly and Notre Dame,” Cooks said.
Cooks maintains his next move would likely only be for a defensive coordinator gig at a major program or a job in the NFL, but doesn’t rule out an eventual return to Texas to coach. “I’m almost like a player,” Cooks said. “I’m still growing and developing.”
Assistant huddle
• Kerry Cooks tries to think like a player. After all, the Notre Dame secondary coach was once a star Dallas-area recruit faced with the dilemma of whether or not to stay in-state. He thought he would attend Texas A&M, but wound up choosing Iowa and later briefly played in the NFL.
“A lot of people who live in Texas think there’s no other state,” said Cooks with a laugh.
But since 2011 Cooks has convinced six Texas recruits otherwise in getting them to sign with the Fighting Irish, including emerging sophomore wide receiver Corey Robinson, the son of former NBA star David Robinson. He’s also got a pair of current Lone Star commitments in Dallas-area wide receiver Jaylen Guyton and safety Prentice McKinney.
Cooks has made the Fighting Irish perhaps the front-runner for Plano, Texas, running back Soso Jamabo, one of the nation’s best at his position. Cooks has also emerged as one of college football’s hottest recruiters with seven commitments, a group that has him ranked as the nation’s 12th-best according to one service.
“I love Texas, I think I’m going to end up retiring there, but there’s so much more out there,” Cooks said. “I’ve been exposed to so many other universities, people, cultures and ethnicities that for me right now, I’m enjoying living outside the state of Texas and the connections that I’m making.”
Besides Texas, Cooks also recruits Louisiana, New Mexico and defensive backs regardless of location. The 40-year-old has twice declined opportunities to return to his home state and work as co-defensive coordinator for Texas A&M coach Kevin Sumlin, initially after Sumlin’s hiring in late 2011 and also following last season.
Cooks was Notre Dame’s co-defensive coordinator for two years prior to this season and was an assistant at Minnesota and Wisconsin before arriving at Notre Dame with coach Brian Kelly in 2010. “I love Sumlin, but for me where I’m at right now, it’s going to have to be something spectacular to pull me away from Brian Kelly and Notre Dame,” Cooks said.
Cooks maintains his next move would likely only be for a defensive coordinator gig at a major program or a job in the NFL, but doesn’t rule out an eventual return to Texas to coach. “I’m almost like a player,” Cooks said. “I’m still growing and developing.”
