Keeler: A pick Temple fans can get behind

Wherever he’s been, K.C. Keeler has developed great relationships with his players and Temple should be no different. I defy anyone to find a similar photo of Rod Carey or Stan Drayton celebrating like this on the field with their players.

After a couple of head-scratching decisions on its last two football CEOs, Temple University finally went in a more logical direction by picking K.C. Keeler to lead the Owls’ football fortunes today.

More like a head-nodding decision than a head-scratching one.

It’s about time and maybe just in time.

That’s because the last two guys were hired by ADs tied to their picks: Pat Kraft played football at around the same time at Indiana that Rod Carey did–they missed each other by one year but both played the same position at Indiana (center).

Arthur Johnson’s first high-profile pick at Temple was to hire a guy he saw walking around the University of Texas football building every day: Running backs’ coach Stan Drayton.

One was a head coach. The other was an assistant.

Hard to believe that you claim to conduct a national search for a head coach and end up with a guy who worked in the same building you did and that’s exactly what happened with the Johnson/Drayton relationship.

Carey had success in the Midwest with little knowledge of Temple and Philadelphia. Drayton hadn’t coached in Philadelphia since the 1980s but for Penn and Villanova. Neither is Temple or even close. Drayton had to learn to be a head coach while on Temple’s dime and Temple’s time and that rarely works out.

This time, Johnson hired a guy he didn’t know personally but a winner at every place he’s been. That’s important because, before Keeler, no one ever proved they could win at Rowan. At Sam Houston and Delaware, he benefitted from following legends in Willie Fritz and Tubby Raymond. Keeler can take all of those lessons learned to a place where multiple men have proven they can win: Wayne Hardin, Bruce Arians, Al Golden, Matt Rhule and, to a lesser extent, Steve Addazio and Geoff Collins.

The blueprint for winning at Temple is simple: Establish relationships within a great recruiting base (46 percent of the nation’s population is within a five-hour drive of Philadelphia) and recruit the hell out of that base. Establish the run and have explosive plays in the downfield passing game off play/action fakes.

The last three years we’ve pulled our hair out watching Temple teams try to establish the short passing game first. That’s not Temple TUFF. It never was. It never will be. As a result, Temple couldn’t generate anything on the ground or keep its defense off the field.

Temple needs some big offensive linemen who were recruited and developed by P4 schools but find themselves as backups through no fault of their own. It also needs to scour the ranks of FCS schools and get players who should have been recruited at a higher level.

In the transfer portal and NIL era, that means getting disaffected guys who went off for riches at P4 schools only to find themselves riding the pine elsewhere. All of those kids have a chip on their shoulders and Temple football in the past has thrived when giving kids a chance to play against good competition.

Let’s face it: Temple isn’t going win an NIL bidding war for players, but it does offer an opportunity to play right away and, in Keeler, is picking a guy who thrived despite having the lowest NIL in the nation at Sam Houston State.

At Temple, a lot of the rich grads who could have supported football either tragically died in a plane crash (Lew Katz) or got involved in legal troubles (Bill Cosby) or had a dispute with his fellow pop legend (John Oates). Oates likes Temple football, Darryl Hall doesn’t.

Not a whole lot of deep pockets in an alumni base that had to scrouge to find SEPTA tokens to get to school every day.

Keeler is free to concentrate on a quick rebuild at Temple right now.

After beating Liberty last week, Keeler needed only Western Kentucky to lose to earn a spot in the CUSA title game. Unfortunately for him, and fortunately for Temple, Western Kentucky won and Keeler can hop on the recruiting trail for Temple.

Already, a number of top Drayton recruits have reaffirmed their commitments to the new staff to play for Temple. There seems to be a renewed enthusiasm in the Edberg-Olson Center. Now all that remains is for Keeler to convince top returning players like Evan Simon and Torrez Worthy to remain on board. Once Keeler grabs Simon at the press conference and tell him he’s going to give him an offensive line that would keep him upright, Simon might stay.

Keeler knows how to navigate the portal without an infusion of NIL money, and while some Saudi billionaire hopping on board would be nice, Temple had to find a guy like that to bridge the gap. Keeler has won with guys who haven’t made money and there’s no reason to expect he can’t do the same in the future.

Keeler would do well to keep certain members of this staff, including OL coach Chris Wiesehan, running backs coach Tyree Foreman and linebackers coach Chris Woods. Wiesehan and Foreman were here with other staffs while Temple was winning and can offer helpful hints to Keeler how things were done then vs. how things have been done over the last three seasons.

Plus, Keeler is very familiar with the Temple brand. He was a linebacker on the 1979 Delaware team that lost to Temple, 31-14. That was the Blue Hens only loss on the way to the Division II (now FCS) championship. Those Owls he lost to were just 16 points from a 12-0 season and a possible mythical national championship of their own.

Keeler can share old war stories with his fellow linebackers of that era on the other side of the ball, Steve Conjar and Mike Curcio and possibly get them on board to drum up alumni NIL support.

After beating Liberty, Keeler went on national TV for an interview and his Philadelphia accent sounded more genuine than the really good one Tina Fey used to mimic on SNL.

This guy knows Philly. He knows Temple. More importantly, he knows how to win.

Temple hasn’t had a guy like that in a long time.

Welcome home.

Wednesday: The Press Conference

11 thoughts on “Keeler: A pick Temple fans can get behind

  1. An ‘Interesting ‘ pick. Not sure, we will see, with hope.

  2. Success, stability, and sustainment.

    Look at his history, this guy won’t jump ship after 2 or 3 years.

    Restore the brand and let it sit atop of the AAC.

    • Love this pick. Considering that the Penn State offensive coordinator is the leading candidate for the West Virginia job, Temple got a better replacement than at least one P4 school. Wouldn’t be surprised if Keeler is ranked in the top five of new head coaching hires when all is said and done. (Remember Stan was ranked in the bottom five when he was hired. Last by Athlon sports. They were right and Temple was wrong then.) It’s nice when Temple’s pick is seen as a home run nationally.

      • Been super critical of the AD for just cause. He deserved it.

        However, IMHO he got this one right. I would have gone w/Huff but I don’t know all the sordid details of the search, offer, and hire.

        The delta and cap on success will be NIL. Can Temple be competitive in NIL?

        Keeler will do his job. Can the Temple University institution do theirs?

        For far too long Temple has sat and abstained.

        With competitive NIL TUFB is atop the AAC. 6-6 w/o.

  3. Couple of questions with the December 9th portal date coming up, what is the situation of players who have previously entered the portal before the 2024 season started and didn’t get picked up by any school. There has to be a good number in this category, can they be “recruited ” right now? Since Keeler has been working the transfer angle since before the portal have to think TUFBs performance here will be much better than it was under Drayton.

  4. “Throughout Temple’s search for its newest football coach, one detail the Owls brass emphasized to potential candidates was the need for patience regarding the university’s name, image, and likeness approach along with revenue sharing.” Philly Inquirer

    SMH, definitely not the approach taken by Tulsa and ECU.

    Hey, come be our coach. Do the best you can b/c we are still studying, and trying to decide whether or not we want to commit and compete.

    Now I fully understand why Keeler took the job. Come back, get paid. And if Temple doesn’t commit, go home, and retire to live happily ever after knowing you did the best you could.

    Freakin’ Temple

  5. Great take, Mike. I’ll add this. Bring on Gabe Infante as a coordinator as a succession hire to replace KC after he retires.

  6. Sam Houston fans are devastated about losing Keeler. Much different from the excitement NIU fans shared when they were relieved of Carey. It’s a good sign.

    • Incredible the reaction of Temple fans. Most (90 percent) are like me saying that this makes much more sense than hiring a RB coach or a Syracuse defensive assistant who gives up 30 ppg. One or two says he’s too old. My feeling has always been if you can do the job it really doesn’t matter how old you are. Temple is not expected KC to be here until he’s 90 so age should not be a consideration.

  7. I’ll bet the Lefkowitz’s (AD foundation) had a lot to do with this hire by sitting on Johnson – he probably wouldn’t have done it on his own. BTW, what’s Keeler’s deal? Whatever it is at least time it looks worth it.

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