Temple should give thumbs down to Penn State

Maybe an unpopular opinion here, but Temple should probably say no to Penn State’s offer of a joint practice.

Maybe even a joint spring game.

There are a couple of good reasons for that.

One, Temple has nothing to gain.

Two, Temple has a lot to lose.

Penn State gave Temple two transfer quarterbacks, one was Kevin Newsome (above) and the other won the Maxwell Trophy as the best college football player in the nation (Steve Joachim). But there was no NIL then.

I’ve always said the Cherry and White game spring game was a maddening affair because the good guys always played the good guys. Thought it would make sense for Temple to bring in a team from a similar-sized FBS league (not its own) and play a “real game” against them to get a better gauge of where they are and what they have to do to get better.

In the Cherry and White game, if the offense did well you really didn’t know if that was because the defense was bad and the offense was good or that the offense was really good because the defense was also decent.

Kevin Newsome went from second team QB at PSU to third-team QB at TU but he wrote this great song.

One year, the Owls had a transfer from Shippensburg gain over 100 yards in its spring game. Turns out he was a bust when the real season began in the fall. That was a year the Owls had a bad defense.

Penn State would have been great, say, a dozen years ago.

Now Penn State routinely raids Temple-sized schools, including Temple itself, when it plucked Arnold Ebiketie from the Owls and put him on their DL.

Temple and PSU play in a “real game” in 2026. That should be enough.

James Franklin probably won’t walk over to one or two Temple players that he likes after a Cherry/Blue scrimmage and shake their hands and whisper something into their ears but why even give him that chance?

To be fair, Temple has done the same with a couple of Penn State players–quarterback Kevin Newsome comes to mind–but they usually have been Penn State backups who became Temple backups.

Those were trades that only benefited one ballclub, not both. New Temple coach K.C. Keeler seems to realize that, as he said he is considering the offer but hasn’t decided yet.

For a future spring game opponent, Temple probably should look south to take on someone its own size outside its own league and playing the same level of football.

A team like Sam Houston or even Delaware makes a lot more sense at this point than someone like Penn State, however enticing a spring game involving the Nittany Lions might be to Temple fans.

Friday: The Last One Ever?

3 thoughts on “Temple should give thumbs down to Penn State

  1. Joint practice is a long way for the NCAA. They dropped the ball wrt to NIL and the transfer portal. But, they will vote against the joint practice as a way to assert their relevance.

    It should be local if it ever does happen, TUFB vs Delaware, JMU, etc.

    Truly frustrated and disappointed in Temple’s recent announcement reference player revenue share/NIL. They basically stated their intent to be in the bottom third of the AAC.

    IMHO Keeler got hoodwinked, and we fans should not expect much, if any help, during the next portal window. TUFB can’t afford competitive talent.

    The AD continues his program hamstring antics.., how long will it take for Fry to realize just how much Arthur is hurting the institution? SMH…, MBB is at rock bottom, without a glimmer of light.

  2. For a change, NCAA shot down the idea. Fran Brown and Coach Prime wanted to do a match-up this spring (Syracuse-Colorado). I guess no one threatened NCAA with legal action if they didn’t accede.

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