NU Football: Will Cooper be a Husker?BY MITCH SHERMAN
WORLD-HERALD BUREAU
LINCOLN — Khiry Cooper is laying low.
The Nebraska football and baseball prospect, on target to start school next month in Lincoln, returned home recently to Shreveport, La., to spend time with his ailing grandmother.
With Aug. 3 in view as the reporting date for NU football camp and the Aug. 15 Major League Baseball signing deadline looming, Cooper is not taking calls or returning messages.
But three Nebraska coaches, after Cooper spent the past five weeks in Lincoln to attend summer school, offered this: They still expect him to reject a six-figure signing-bonus offer from the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
"As far as I know, he's coming," Nebraska receivers coach Ted Gilmore said, "but stranger things have happened. All we can do is wait and see what he has to tell us."
Cooper, 6-foot-2 and 180 pounds, starred as a wide receiver and center fielder for Calvary Baptist High School in Shreveport. He is expected to play both sports at Nebraska.
When he signed with the NU football team in February, Cooper did not rank among the five or so most prominent recruits in coach Bo Pelini's first class.
That all changed June 5, when the Angels drafted him in the fifth round.
Cooper turned down an initial offer in the $200,000 range.
While in Lincoln this summer, Cooper trained with the football team and took a few swings in the batting cages at the Hawks Center. He also got to know Eric Newman, the NU pitching coach and baseball recruiting coordinator.
"I get the sense from Khiry that he is very aware of what's in front of him," Newman said. "His situation at Nebraska is not something that you walk away from for $200,000. For lack of a better word, you've got to make (the Angels) pay.
"I don't know if I said this directly to Khiry, but if he gets anything less than a couple million dollars, he's probably shortchanging himself."
The Angels, no doubt, have money to pay. The organization's first-round pick this year went to the Minnesota Twins, retribution for the offseason signing of free-agent outfielder Torii Hunter.
Second-round selection Tyler Chatwood signed for a reported $547,000. Cooper is among two of the Angels' top 10 picks who remain unsigned.
Meanwhile, the NU football and baseball programs remain in communication about their prospective two-sport participant.
Gilmore and baseball coach Mike Anderson, in fact, discussed the situation Monday. Anderson said he told Gilmore it's not Aug. 15 that should most concern Nebraska but rather Aug. 7 or 8, when the Angels assess their signing-bonus budget and make a final run at Cooper.
"There's nothing we can do about that," Gilmore said. "We can't offer him any money."
Among the NU coaches, Ron Brown is perhaps the most optimistic about Cooper.
Brown, the tight ends coach who recruited Cooper, developed a strong relationship with the player and his mother in part because of mutual acquaintances through the Fellowship of Christian Athletes.
"I saw his maturity in the recruiting process," Brown said. "He did not press panic buttons. He was one of our last commits, but he always kept his priorities focused and in front of him."
Cooper twice declined opportunities to visit Nebraska during the recruiting period - once because of an event at his high school and later to attend a church camp.
"He's got a non-negotiable mechanism on how he makes decisions," Brown said, "and it's not going to be a situation where people talk him into something.
"Is that a guarantee we're going to see him here at Nebraska? No, but I don't think he'll be wooed. I feel very good about it being in his hands."