The ABCs of Temple football recruiting

By Mike Gibson
If you listen to coach Al Golden, and I try to do that every chance I get, whether it’s on signing day or Fan Fest or Cherry and White day, whenever, you will become conversant in what I call Goldenspeak.
“Core values” … you’ll hear that a lot.
“Going forward” … that’s another favorite catch phrase of his, so is “it’s all part of the process.”
There are a few more, but I won’t write a Golden/English Dictionary here.
The point being that before all of that, Golden came up with a phrase he thought enough of to put on the wall at Edberg-Olson Hall.
“Hunting a MAC title with local talent.”
It’s become a core value, if you will, of the program, err, going forward. So much so that it has appeared in the school’s football media guide the past few years.
What you won’t hear Golden say is that he’s going after this Holy Grail, this MAC title, with BCS-level talent.


“Let’s face it, guys, Temple is a Big East team playing in the MAC. Their talent level made us look like a high school team.”
_ Akron fan’s post on ZipsNation.org
after Temple’s 56-17 win last year

If Hunting for a Title with Local talent is the program’s self-proclaimed headline, then “by the way, we’re playing with BCS-level players in a non-BCS league” has to be some kind of subhead.
I know it’s not as catchy, but it’s true.
It’s like the guy wrote on the Akron message board, ZipsNation.org, after Temple thumped Akron, 56-17, last year.
“Let’s face it, guys,” the long-time Akron fan said, “Temple is a Big East team playing in the MAC. Their talent level made us look like a high school team.”
The implication was clear and so were the on-field results.
While Akron might beat out Kent State or a player, Temple is beating out Vanderbilt.
While Kent State might beat out Ohio for a player, Temple is beating out Maryland and Michigan State.
You only need to stop at the A’s, B’s and C’s of the signing brochure to find that out.
I did a story for the Philadelphia Inquirer today on a couple of basketball players from Friends’ Central, who received offers from Temple and other big-time schools. Before that goes into the paper, you have to fact-check those claims against the Scout.com database. Soout.com will say “yes’ if a player has been offered and “no” if he has not. It’s a pretty cut-and-dried system, the best there is.
I thought about that while thumbing through the pages of the 2010 signing class brochure the other day.
I followed the same routine Temple’s football signees and the claims made in the brochure, with only one or two exceptions, were verified by Scout.com’s system. That’s pretty good when talking about 27 incoming freshmen.
Niyi Adewole, a linebacker from Upper Darby, had an offer from Vanderbilt, as did Myron Ross, a running back from Wissahickon.
Antonio Belt, a wide receiver from Forestville, Md., “selected Temple over Maryland and Michigan State.”
Wyatt Benson, a linebacker from Haverford School, picked Temple over “Stanford and Pitt.”
Brian Burns, a defensive back and former next-door neighor to Benson in Southwest Philly, “selected Temple over West Virginia and Rutgers.”
Taray Carey, a defensive end from Whitehall, picked Temple over UConn and Boston College.
Those are just the A’s, B’s and C’s. It’s like that all the way down to defensive tackle Dante Weaver, who the brochure says picked Temple over Rutgers and Maryland.
Lsst year, the Owls signed a quarterback, Chris Coyer (pictured), on the night Ohio State extended him a conditional verbal offer (you visit us, we will offer). Temple was on Coyer for months and OSU arrived on the scene in the last day.
Coyer said, basically, “thanks, guys, but no thanks I made my mind up. I’m going to Temple.”
Now, after a year of fine-tuning, the Coyer quarterback Stealth Fighter is shined and polished and ready to leave the E-O hanger to wreck havoc on the rest of the MAC.
He could have gone to Ohio State, much like many of his teammates could have gone to more recognized schools.
Good schools with good football programs.
They could have gone anywhere.
They chose Temple.
Bill Cosby, who made that commercial famous some 20 years ago, should be proud.
So should every Temple fan.

5 thoughts on “The ABCs of Temple football recruiting

  1. Mike,You know I love the blog and wish Temple the best but before you say"The Owls are the ringer in the MAC football pick-up game, varsity players in a JV league."Maybe you should win the JV league title? or maybe even the division of the JV league you are in.Temple has some serious advantages over some of the schools in the MAC and should be a top 4 team in the conference every year but, hell, look at what the Chips have been doing for four years, are you really 'out of their league'?

  2. Tim,no offense, but Golden is a sensational recruiter (good-looking guy, all the Moms love him, etc., smooth talker) whose efforts in that area haven't even begun to be felt by the rest of the league yet.This post is more about the future, than the past. This year, specifically.Just the redshirted freshmen of last year (15) were better than the entire 25-man class the year before and this class is better than that one.Temple took a JV team (by those standards) up to Central Michigan and lost by a respectable 24-14 with no RB and no QB.That all changes this year when the Bernard Pierce of QBs joins the fold.

  3. What makes you so sure that Coyer is the guy this year? Do you have some information available to you that the rest of us don't?I was just curious because I haven't seen anything that would lead me to believe that Coyer has an edge over Charlton or Stewart. That said, I hope you are right.

  4. Golden has been coaching 4 years most, if not all, of his players this season were Al Golden recruits. So the MAC has seen a lot of his recruits.Yes, he is a great recruiter and yes he is a great developer of talent. As good as a recruiter as he is Beckman out recruited him this year, in his first full year at Toledo.Temple happens to be my pick for the East this season (they were last year too but some JV school in Ohio won it).And the 24-14 thing is nice but that a team that EMU beat, and you only beat EMU by a couple of scores this past season. Any given Sunday does not matter, what matters is consistency and until Temple wins the MAC, at least twice, to talk about the team as being in a different league than the rest of the conference is getting just a bit ahead of yourself.Anyway convo's like this are fun and all but there is a long way to September-Regards

  5. It takes a lot more than 4 years for the recruits to run through the cycle (i.e., the first couple of years, AG didn't have the luxury of red-shirting). Getting one good redshirt class in last year was key.That was really his first redshirt class.About Coyer:What makes me so sure?Well, I'm not soooo sure … BUT … I'm consoled by the fact that Jim Tressel at OSU and his staff were sure enough what they saw on film was enough to give the kid a scholie. Tressel never wanted to be in the same area code as Charlton and Stewart and that, in a weird way, is comforting.He gets paid a lot more big bucks than me to be sure, so I will sleep well entering this season at QB.

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