This is Amari Cooper’s world and we’re just living in it.

From a football perspective, that’s been the case during a rocket-fast start to the pro prospect’s junior season as he’s turned heads on a national stage at Alabama after returning to full strength with a new quarterback and offensive coordinator.

Already considered college football’s top wide receiver through four games, Cooper will ascend to a different galaxy Saturday with an unstoppable effort against an Ole Miss defense that’s given up one passing touchdown all season and has picked off a SEC-leading nine passes.

Heisman voters don’t favor wide receivers, but Cooper’s a transcendent talent deserving of the bronze statue if he keeps it up.

Cooper poked Will Muschamp in the eye with a handful of big plays last time out and abused what was perceived as the league’s top secondary coming into the season with a career-high 201 yards and three touchdowns.

Florida tried a variety of coverages against the nation’s leader in receiving yards per game, but nothing worked as zones were exposed, 1-on-1’s busted and star players’ egos bruised.

Cooper out-muscled sophomore corner Vernon Hargreaves several times and helped quarterback Blake Sims have a field day against an embarrassed defense which gave up a program record 645 total yards.

The performance pushed Cooper’s name to the Heisman forefront and kept film work relatively easy for Ole Miss defensive backs in prep for this weekend’s showdown.

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“I’m going to be honest: he’s a great receiver,” Rebels safety Mike Hilton said Monday. “He’s fast, when he blocks he’s physical, they get the ball into his hands anyway they can and let him make a play. We know that when he gets the ball we need to rally around and get him down.”

There’s no flaw in Cooper’s game and now that’s he’s healthy for the first time since his freshman season, breakdowns at the back end are inevitable.

Hugh Freeze is aware of Cooper’s exploits.

“Cooper is arguably one of the top three receivers in the nation, if not the best, and he’s been super explosive,” Freeze said this week. “You have to guard him on runs because of the screen game, and you have to guard him on the deep ball. He’s a difficult matchup for everybody, including us.”

Stubborn to an extent, Lane Kiffin’s made it a point to get the ball in Cooper’s hands to allow for his magic on the boundary and down the middle of the field. An abundance of screen passes have worked in the Crimson Tide’s favor and Sims has been given the green light to throw it out there when corners back off the line of scrimmage.

Given eight yards of cushion earlier this season, Cooper took this quick screen 52 yards to the house untouched against Southern Miss.

He’s on pace to shatter D.J. Hall’s single-season receptions record and will equal the former All-SEC wideout’s career stretch of consecutive 100-yard games with a quality outing in Oxford.

With Cody Prewitt lurking over the top, Cooper’s ready for anything the Rebels may throw in his direction.

“When teams try to double-team me or anything like that it’ll open up the run game, it’ll open up opportunities for other receivers to get open,” Cooper said. “It’ll just be to the other team’s disadvantage.”