did I say "All-Big XII first team?"
no. I used the others to show that NCAA-NFL is irrelevant. I used better players to show the extent of that irrelevance.
Just so you know:
Shattered school career-records with 154 receptions for 1,445 yards (9.4 avg) and 16 TDs, topping the previous marks of 114 catches by Eddie Hinton (1966-68) and 13 TDs by Keith Jackson (1984-87)...His 1,445 yards rank sixth on the Sooners’ all-time record list...Was a John Mackey Award finalist and All-American selection as a junior...
My point is this: Bennett's scheme put Cooper in a situation that VERY few other SS would be put in. OU exploited this further by splitting out Smith on an island to make Coop cover him in space. That is highly unusual in college, especially 7 years ago. Not many teams had a TE with as much athleticism/size/hands that they were splitting out like that.
You compared Trent Smith with Sproles, Roberson, LP and Frazier. That's just plain stupid.
And at the end of the day, no matter how much you want to whine about Bennett's scheme, it was incredibly effective in the CCG. That's the bottom line. The weak link wasn't the scheme, it was the player.
And a safety over a split out TE isn't exactly uncommon, in college or the NFL. I'm not sure why you thought it was some radical concept. If the TE is tight on the line, it's more likely to get a LB in coverage, like Travis Ochs did so well. When the TE splits out, a safety usually gets the coverage. You don't see teams double covering the TE every time he's split out.
Think about what you're saying for just one second. If you think a second DB is needed for deep coverage every time the TE is split out, then you're saying that you would never provide help on a WR in that situation. Or you would call a timeout and put in a nickel/dime package every time a coach split out his TE.
This is why you're not a coach.
You should stick to highlighting the similarities between Tommie Frazier and Trent Smith.