Jets WR Omar Cooper Jr.: New Kid on the Block Makes Debut as No. 19 Player in 2026
Jets WR Omar Cooper Jr.: New Kid on the Block Makes Debut as No. 19 Player in 2026
Jovan Alford|
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New York JetsWe haven’t talked much about the skill position players in our top 25 rankings of most important Jets in 2026, as it’s been about the guys in the trenches. However, that’s starting to change as on Tuesday, we discussed Mason Taylor’s impact and importance, and now we’re going to talk about rookie wide receiver Omar Cooper Jr., who comes in at No. 19.
After seeing the passing game falter in 2025, the Jets upgraded their skill positions in the 2026 NFL Draft in April, selecting Kenyon Sadiq at No. 16 overall and then trading back into the first round for Cooper Jr. at No. 30 overall.
The former Indiana Hoosier is the perfect fit for what Frank Reich will want to do on offense, as he can play both on the outside and in the slot. Having that versatility will mesh well with Adonai Mitchell, who is entering his first full season in New York. Cooper Jr. is coming off a terrific final season of college football with the Hoosiers, where he had 69 receptions for 937 yards and 13 TDs and a national championship.
The Jets will hope that the winning culture Cooper helped establish at Indiana will carry over to the NFL.
Why is Omar Cooper Jr. so important

The simple answer to this question is that the Jets needed more dynamic playmakers, and the rookie wide receiver offers that.
Last year, Jets fans were treated to a lackluster wide receiver core that saw Garrett Wilson only play seven games due to injury, and the addition of Mitchell, who was acquired at the league’s trade deadline in the Sauce Gardner deal. But would you know that neither Wilson nor Mitchell was the team’s leading receiver?
Instead, it was Mason Taylor who led the Jets in targets (65), receptions (44), and was second in receiving yards (369) behind Wilson. That’s less than ideal in today’s game, but it was an indictment on the rest of the WR core – John Metchie, Tyler Johnson, Isaiah Williams, Allen Lazard, Josh Reynolds, and Arian Smith.
Needless to say, that shouldn’t be an issue this season with Cooper likely sharing the WR2/3 role with Mitchell. The rookie wide receiver won’t blow you away with his speed like Arian Smith, but he can still create big plays with yards after the catch at 4.42 40-yard dash speed.
A starting WR trio of Wilson, Mitchell, and now Cooper is much better than what the Jets had to start and end last season, and it should hopefully lead to a big year for veteran quarterback Geno Smith.
Omar Cooper Jr.’s strengths and weaknesses

One of the first things that jumps out at you when watching Cooper Jr. is his ability to go up and make the tough catches. That will instantly make him a quarterback’s friend for a long time in the NFL.
As we also mentioned earlier, his versatility will help him get on the field immediately. Cooper drew comparisons to Deebo Samuel, who can also play across the formation. The goal is to get him the ball in space. He’s built like a running back, which helps in getting yards after the catch.
Cooper also knows how to find the open space in zone defense, which will be huge in Year 1, as defenses will likely be keying on Wilson. Therefore, it will be up to Cooper and Mitchell to take advantage of certain matchups in given weeks.
Now, when we look at his weaknesses, or better yet, we’ll call it room for improvement. Cooper will not wow you with his explosiveness like Mitchell or hopefully Smith will. His route running isn’t the best right now due to his lack of urgency and acceleration, but that’s something he can and must improve on to be successful in the league.
Additionally, Cooper’s effort on run blocking will need to improve as well because for him to stay on the field, he’ll need to be an adequate blocker, especially when you have one of the better RBs in the league in Hall.
Overall, there’s a lot to be excited about with Cooper, who will have a role in this offense this upcoming season.
What happens if Omar Cooper Jr. gets hurt

If the rookie wide receiver were to be unavailable for some games, that would surely put a damper on his first year in the league. However, it could create additional opportunities further down the depth chart for guys like Isaiah Williams, Arian Smith, and possibly Tim Patrick.
Williams, who made a name for himself as a return specialist last season, also showed off his receiver skills with Gang Green. The 25-year-old racked up 26 receptions (36 targets) for 193 yards and played a team-high 183 snaps out of the slot, per StatRankings.com.
Then there’s Smith, who had a quiet rookie season – seven receptions (16 targets) for 52 yards, and needs to show improvement on offense in his secondary. And we can’t forget about Patrick, who can also play in the slot and be a factor as a run blocker too.
That said, none of those guys have the upside of Cooper, whom the Jets are banking on to be one of their top receiving threats in the coming years. However, New York can at least trust that Williams and Patrick can step up at a moment's notice.
Why we ranked Omar Cooper Jr. here

Even though he hasn’t played a single down in the NFL yet, there’s a lot to love about Cooper’s game and how he could help the Jets in Year 1.
The former Hoosier standout has the skills and talent to be a WR2 alongside Garrett Wilson, who is a star in his own right. But luckily for Cooper, he doesn’t have to take on that by himself, as the Jets might have something in Mitchell, who has really taken strides in OTAs and minicamp.
Nonetheless, with the Jets having new talent at WR, TE, and RB, we should not expect Cooper to have a 1,000-yard season in 2026. However, if he can have about 500-700 receiving yards with at least 4-5 touchdowns, I think most Jets fans would consider that a win. And this time next year, we’ll likely be moving up Cooper into the top-15 or maybe top-10.
Published 23 minutes ago
JOVAN ALFORDJovan has over 13 years of experience in sports media, including stops at The Philadelphia Tribune, SB Nation, FanSided and Hoops Habit. Most recently joining OnSI, his teams covered include the New York Jets, New York Yankees and New York Knicks.
‘Lucy Lost’ Review: A Winsome Family Animation With Welcome Narrative Complexity
From the blockbuster stage and screen iterations of “War Horse” to the underseen “When the Whales Came” to the recent, BAFTA-winning “Kensuke’s Kingdom,” the books of English author Michael Morpurgo have reliably made for sturdy, literate family films of a comfortingly old-fashioned stripe. That streak continues with “Lucy Lost.” A handsome and emotionally involving wartime adventure cleverly adapted from Morpurgo’s 2014 book “Listen to the Moon,” the film marks a most promising feature directing debut for French animator Olivier Clert, who brings a pleasingly cosmopolitan sensibility to a story set predominantly on Britain’s remote, tranquil Isles of Scilly.
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Following a well-received premiere as a special screening in Cannes, followed by a main competition slot in Annecy, this French-language work has the potential to resonate with young audiences globally, given the right distribution and multilingual dubbing. English-language backers may be inclined toward star voice casting, but would do well to honor the rich regional specificities of the film’s setting — as Clert has done in the film’s gorgeously rendered landscapes, frequently lit like an English Romantic painting. The director was previously a creative consultant on Netflix’s “Klaus” and a storyboard artist on “Little Amélie or the Character of Rain”; “Lucy Lost” bears some tonal resemblance to the latter, though it’s more broadly accessible, with a visual style clearly influenced by vintage Studio Ghibli, particularly in its character design.
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There are echoes of Ghibli’s “When Marnie Was There,” too, in the film’s story, a growingly sophisticated construction that begins as a simple, bucolic portrait of childhood isolation, before its timeline splits, flips and is realigned in quite surprising fashion. The structural liberties taken with Morpurgo’s text by Clert and co-writer Helen Blakeman pay off cinematically, though children much younger than the book’s preteen target audience may be left a little adrift.
The year is 1915, and while the First World War may be raging in Europe, the sleepy Isles of Scilly — off England’s Cornish coastline — seem distantly removed from the conflict. Still, its reverberations are felt by the locals, particularly regarding the mysterious backstory of Lucy (voiced by Charlie Rosenzweig), a frail 11-year-old girl whose hair has been bleached white by trauma, and who is repeatedly visited by hallucinations. Not all of them are disturbing: One is an ebullient imaginary friend her age named Milly (also Rosenzweig), who claims to be visiting across time and space from her home in America.
Milly is also the only friend Lucy has, bar her protective older brother Alfie (Zach Valentin-Dattas). Their parents, Mary (Jessica Monceau) and Jim (Quentin Faure), insist on keeping her at home and away from other children, claiming she needs to recover from an unspecified accident; cruel rumors circulate through the community that the mostly housebound child is a witch. One type of social prejudice expands into another as the film’s scattered narrative fragments gradually come together. “Lucy Lost” is slow to show its hand in its gently paced first half, but that’s no bad thing: Clert gives patient viewers time to invest in these variously damaged or repressed characters before boldly reconfiguring their relationship to each other, and ours to them.
Simple line creations, with wide eyes and large heads atop spindly bodies, the characters are appealingly if not very distinctively drawn, but the world they inhabit is realized with rather more depth and texture: Clert is attentive to the region’s grassy natural beauty and the mineral-slate palette of its sky and sea alike, while local flora and fauna are evocatively woven into Lucy’s island exploits when she does venture outdoors. Musically, meanwhile, Anne-Sophie Versnaeyen’s lovely score ranges from sparse, lilting strings to a full orchestral sweep as the story builds in scale and scope, somehow swelling from soft village parable to hefty historical fiction, even taking in the famous sinking of the Lusitania. How Clert’s ambitious adaptation achieves this, in under 90 minutes to boot, is best experienced in real time.
Jump to Comments Loading comments...Panthers Signing Eetu Luostarinen To 8-Year Contract Extension
Story byThe Florida Panthers are locking up another one of their key pieces to a long-term deal.
Florida is coming to terms with forward Eetu Luostarinen on an 8-year contract extension that will carry an average annual value (AAV) of $5 million, according to PuckPedia.
AdvertisementAdvertisementLuostarinen is entering the final year of a 3-year deal that carried a $3 million AAV, so this will be a significant raise for the young Finn.
The Panthers are also showing an incredible amount of trust in the 27-year-old, offering him a full eight-year term.
Luostarinen arrived in South Florida as part of the 2020 Trade Deadline deal that sent Vincent Trocheck to the Carolina Hurricanes in exchange for Erik Haula, Lucas Wallmark, Chase Priskie and Luostarinen.
His play has progressively improved during his time with the Panthers, growing into an integral part of the team’s forward ranks.
Often paired up with countryman Anton Lundell, Luostarinen features a high-end, two-way game and can play either the wing or center.
AdvertisementAdvertisementHe’s also an elite penalty killer with sneaky strong offensive capabilities.
The deal will give Florida 12 players, including Luostarinen, who are signed through at least 2030: Sasha Barkov, Matthew Tkachuk, Sam Reinhart, Aaron Ekblad, Gus Forsling, Sam Bennett, Brad Marchand, Seth Jones, Carter Verhaeghe, Niko Mikkola and Lundell.
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Photo caption: Jan 8, 2026; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; Florida Panthers center Eetu Luostarinen (27) looks on during warm-up before the game against the Montreal Canadiens at Bell Centre. (David Kirouac-Imagn Images)