Cooper was educated in
Bombay at
Elphinstone High School and St Xavier's High School. In the 1943–44 and 1944–45 seasons he represented
Bombay in the
Ranji Trophy. Selected to play for the Rest of India against Western India States in February 1944, Cooper went in to bat at number eight and made his maiden first-class century. He finished the season with 383 runs at an average of 76.60. He improved further in 1944–45, scoring 551 runs at an average of 91.83 with two centuries, Cooper moved to England in 1946 to study at the
London School of Economics. He was signed by
Middlesex and played one game in the 1949 County Championship. The following season he got a longer run in the side but struggled to make an impact, averaging just 19.63 for the county. He was a champion batsman for
Hornsey Cricket Club for several seasons, scoring 1,117 in 19 innings in 1953 at an average of 139.62, before returning to India with his English wife to practise as a barrister. Cooper was the last surviving player from the Pentangular Tournament, which ceased after the 1945–46 season. He is also the longest-lived first-class player in the history of
Middlesex. He turned 100 on 14 December 2022, ==References==