OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - In the farm town where Cooper DeJean drew up football plays in elementary school and taught classmates to run them at recess, residents plan a huge party to watch the town's native son in the Super Bowl.
In Iowa’s farm country, small towns rally around a native son in football’s biggest game
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - In the farm town where Cooper DeJean drew up football plays in elementary school and taught classmates to run them at recess, residents plan a huge party to watch the town's native son in the Super Bowl.
The Philadelphia Eagles defensive back has lifted spirits in Odebolt, Iowa, a town of 920 people once known as the Popcorn Capital of the World.
Residents say he's also inspired children in the four towns that make up the local school district in this remote region of Western Iowa, where he played quarterback in stadiums carved out of cornfields.
On Sunday they'll gather in the Odebolt Community Building for a Super Bowl watch party they're calling the "Cooper Bowl." Many plan to wear special Eagles green T-shirts printed up for the occasion that feature DeJean's No. 33. It’s also a birthday party for DeJean, who turns 22 on Super Bowl Sunday.