Mids give whole new meaning to term whistle-blower


Mike Gerardi (14), the QB phenom of spring ball, cheers on Peanut Joseph during TD run.
By Mike Gibson
Nothing could be more fitting this year than Temple playing at Navy on Halloween.
Navy played a dirty trick on Temple and it could turn out to be an unexpected treat for the Owls come Saturday.
This year would have been the fourth year of a home-and-home contract with Temple.
Navy and Temple, both in good faith, signed a contract to honor two home and two away games.
Temple honored the final part of its road commitment with a trip to Navy last season.
Then the Owls threw a scare into Navy last season, leading, 27-7, in the fourth quarter before losing, 33-27, in overtime.
Navy’s brass thought for a minute about the possibility of playing Temple in hostile Philadelphia in 2009, then placed a phone call to Temple.
“Err, you know that game we promised you? We’re not coming.”
Navy tore up the contract and would have paid Temple a $200,000 fee for breaking it, but that left the Owls in a bind. They had no team to replace Navy.
So Temple athletic director Bill Bradshaw did the only thing he could do with an 18-inch battleship gun pointed squarely at his head:
Offer to play the game in Annapolis.
“Yeah, that’s the ticket,” Navy said.
Navy has a distinct advantage at home. The Middies have a fan who blows whistles when Navy ballcarriers are seemingly stopped, yet the fan never gets kicked out of the stadium and game officials feign deafness around him. He’s the guy who blew a whistle three times while Temple defenders stopped a ballcarrier on fourth and goal, only to see the guy get off the ground and run into the end zone with the officials signaling touchdown and Temple coaches yelling, “what the fu*k?” The whistle caused Al Golden to run onto the field and scream to officials after the bogus score. Temple players stopped tackling the Navy guy for fear of being called for a penalty, only to see the Navy guy score after the whistle. He’s the guy talked about in a response to this well-written post, page down to an answer by Navy72, on a Navy fan website. (He’s a skinny guy with brown hair and a moustache, and last year parked his backside across the aisle from a group of Temple fans in the end zone. If you see him blow one whistle, please point him out to security this Saturday.)
Yet there is irony in this situation this year.

Getting the Owls out of here at this time can only help them do what they need to do, focus on the task at hand

The irony is that Navy might have done Temple an inadvertent favor.
I mean, did Navy know the World Series would be played in Philadelphia that day?
No.
The Phillies are playing that day in Philadelphia and the city is crazed right now.
Everything else in sports is an afterthought, even the Eagles.
All of the parking lots around both stadiums will be all Phillies red all day long.
Getting the Owls out of here at this time can only help them do what they need to do, focus on the task at hand. This is an important game between two teams who have won five straight games. The winner, especially if it’s Temple, will get sorely needed recognition on a national scale.
It’s was a dirty trick Navy played, no doubt.
If the Owls get a win, though, it will be a delicious treat.

7 thoughts on “Mids give whole new meaning to term whistle-blower

  1. Great Great win for Temple! Not only did they beat a good Navy team on the road (where they choked last year), but they did it in spectacular come-from-behind fashion. You just about never see Temple come from behind to win. Especially, this season, they have been getting out to early leads, then barely hanging on to the finish. But, today they finished. Vaughn Charlton looked he was doing an impression of JaMarcus Russell for the Raiders. It was all Bernard Pierce, all day. (roughly) 30 carries for 270 yards. A mammoth perfromance. The defense came up huge in the 4the quarter. McManus was clutch. Every time Navy went ahead, Temple answered back. A really tough win. Very impressive. I bet Pierce will barely be able to walk tomorrow. My only concern going forward is Charlton, I thought he took a step forward against Toledo but it looked like he took two steps back at Navy. He had no rhythm, but also he never had much of chance to establish a rhythm. Temple ran on every down they could until they were forced to throw. I think at the very least Rhule has to get Charlton involved on some 1st and second down plays if no other reason than to prevent a repeat of what we saw from Charlton in the second half today.6 in a row!

  2. Somebody on this team has to be able to hit an open receiver. VC has got to be the worst QB since Mike Mc Gann. Brutal.

  3. I want this team to be the best team it can be. I'm elated … thrilled … happy … about the win, but I'm VERY concerned about our inability to put a productive D1A quarterback in uniform. That was an absolutely abysmal performance and there were open Temple receivers running through the Navy secondary all day.I can understand not burning Coyer's redshirt (I think) but why not give Mike Gerardi a series or two or three a game? What would it hurt?

  4. Mike, give Coyer the nod and see what we have. As the program grows into something worthy of respect, I'm sure we won't have to worry about recruiting QB's. I love watching Bernard Pierce but he and the offense demands balance – we have decent receivers who are not being utilized as they deserve.

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