2024 NFL Draft: Top CB prospect Cooper DeJean says he can beat Caitlin Clark one-on-one in basketball
2024 NFL Draft: Top CB prospect Cooper DeJean says he can beat Caitlin Clark one-on-one in basketball
Iowa’s former CB isn’t lacking confidence
![]()
Getty Images
Caitlin Clark may be the greatest women’s basketball player of all time, but there’s another former Iowa athlete who thinks he can beat her in a game of one-on-one.
Cooper DeJean, the former Iowa cornerback and one of the top-rated prospects in this year’s NFL Draft, said that he was asked by NFL teams on numerous occasions during the combine if he could beat Clark in a game of hoops.
“I said that I think I could win,” DeJean said Tuesday in an interview with CBS Sports.
DeJean’s answer caught me off guard, and he could tell.
“You don’t think I can win?” he asked, which I responded by reminding him that Clark, the former Iowa Hawkeyes superstar and the Indiana Fever’s No. 1 overall draft pick, is widely considered to be the greatest women’s basketball player ever. In DeJean’s defense, he does have a hoops background. In high school, he was a three-time letter winner at point guard.
“She’d definitely score on me, for sure, but I think I could pull if off,” said DeJean, who added that Clark’s shooting prowess would be his biggest challenge. “It would be close, though. … She can shoot from anywhere, I think.”
DeJean’s confidence against Clark is no knock against Clark, but more of an insight into DeJean’s confidence in his athletic ability. He was a highly successful multi-sport athlete in high school, winning state titles in track and in football. DeJean was a 1,000-yard receiver as a sophomore before leading his high school to back-to-back state titles as its starting quarterback. He scored 59 total touchdowns as a senior in addition to picking off three passes as a defensive back.
DeJean went to Iowa to play safety, but moved to cornerback when injuries hit the Hawkeyes’ secondary during his freshman season. He went on to enjoy immense success at cornerback, picking off seven passes and returning two for scores. DeJean’s pick six against Kentucky in the 2022 Music City Bowl contributed to him winning the game’s MVP award.
DeJean’s versatility, one of his strengths as a football player, has created some uncertainty regarding his draft stock. While no one is doubting his status as a first-round talent, there have been questions about whether or not he would be better off moving back to safety at the next level.
Those questions don’t seem to be a concern for DeJean, who is looking to help his future team win in any way possible.
“Really, wherever the team needs me, wherever they see me at, wherever they think I can impact the game the most,” said DeJean, who has teamed up with Head & Shoulders and their Make Every Wash Count campaign. “Whatever position that is, I’m willing to do that. Obviously, I played corner most of my college career, but I feel like there’s multiple positions in a defense that I can play. I just want to trust the coaches that have been doing it for a long time and try to make an impact wherever they put me.”
News
At my wedding, my grandfather handed me an old passbook. My father quickly took it and said, “That bank shut down in the ’80s—he’s just confused.”
Part 2 “Mr. Mercer?” he said again, his voice carrying the weight of bad news and good news tangled together so tightly they were impossible to separate. The second executive,…
Part 2 + 3: I kept $20M in my mom’s safe. Next morning she was gone with it—and I laughed because of what was inside
Part 2 Because the black bag they raced out of that house with only had… Twenty million dollars in perfectly printed counterfeit bills. I had swapped the real purchase packet…
Part 2 + 3: My daughter married a Korean man when she was 21. She hasn’t been home for twelve years, but every year, she sends $100,000.
Part 2 And then, someone called out in a voice I would know anywhere. “Mom…?” The single word hit me like a physical blow. My heart slammed against my ribs…
My sister switched my baby powder with flour as a joke during a family visit. Thirty seconds after I used it, my six-month-old baby stopped breathing. I rushed her to the hospital…
Part 2 “It looks like someone deliberately exposed her,” Dr. Morrison finished. The words landed like broken glass in an open wound. I stared at her, the hospital blanket twisting…
Part 2: I am 65 years old. I got divorced 5 years ago. My ex-husband left me a bank card with 3,000 dollars. I never touched it. Five years later, when I went to withdraw that money…
Part 2 The manager’s heels clicked across the polished tile like a countdown. She was in her early sixties, silver hair pulled into a neat bun, navy suit tailored sharp…
Part 2: At my wedding, my grandfather handed me an old passbook. My father quickly took it and said, “That bank shut down in the ’80s—he’s just confused.”
Mr. Mercer?” the second executive repeated, his voice low and measured, like a man delivering news that could tilt the rest of a life. His name tag read Richard Harlan,…
End of content
No more pages to load