New York Post

Air Raid’

Cowboys trade for Oakland’s Cooper, making everyone more valuable

- Amari Cooper

THE Raiders are getting good at shipping away star talent. And they also are getting good at collecting firstround draft picks.

Oakland will trade struggling wideout Amari Cooper to the receiver-starved Cowboys in exchange for a 2019 f irstround draft pick, according to multiple reports Monday. This comes just a month after the Raiders sent All-Pro pass rusher Khalil Mack to the Bears for a first-rounder. Including their own pick, the Raiders now will have three picks in the f irst round of next year’s draft.

Cooper will land on a Dallas team in desperate need of a wide receiver. But fantasy owners will tell you he has been among the most frustratin­g players in recent history.

You draft him each year based on talent and his potential in an offense with upand-coming quarterbac­k Derek Carr. You play him expecting production. He fails to deliver week in and week out. Finally, you sit him, and he goes haywire. You have renewed confidence, put him back in the lineup, and he resumes his disappoint­ing habits for weeks and weeks.

Well, the good news is the fantasy community is about to find out if the problem with Cooper’s inconsiste­ncy is Cooper, or if the problem was coaching or quarterbac­k or just a bad Oakland environmen­t.

It is hard to declare with clarity the fantasy ramificati­ons of the deal because of Cooper’s wild inconsiste­ncy, and because the Cowboys offense, at the least the passing game, has been more dysfunctio­nal than the Raiders.

It could be a ripple — Cooper continues his roller-coaster output and the Dallas offensive production is minimally affected. Or it would be a tidal wave — Cooper could be the missing piece. We see Cooper’s arrival opening up other viable options in the passing game — like Cole Beasley and Michael Gallup — and making QB Dak Prescott more trustworth­y as a low-end fantasy option. And Cooper will help lure defenses away from the line of scrimmage, creating more room for Ezekiel Elliott and the running game.

We’ve seen Prescott perform solidly as an NFL quarterbac­k. His performanc­e went in the tank in unison with the loss of Elliott to suspension and injuries to the offensive line last season, and now this season he has struggled without a top-tier receiving talent. Cooper solves that problem.

The Cowboys have a bye then are at Tennessee in Week 9. Barring credible reports of an incredibly quick transition by Cooper, our first target date for using Cooper in our lineup is Week 10 versus the Eagles.

The impact of this deal won’t be limited to just Cooper’s new Cowboys teammates. There will be waves in Oakland as well. The team won’t just suddenly stop throwing. Passes still will be thrown. Some of them will even be caught. Some of those catches will even be made by Raiders.

Jordy Nelson becomes more valuable. Seth Roberts and Martavis Bryant appear on the fantasy radar. Carr and the running game are largely unaffected, because Cooper wasn’t making a big impact anyway.

We think he will now, only in a different uniform.

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