Behind The Lines: NYP Finds Value in Temple

One of the themes first-year Temple head coach K.C. Keeler keeps bringing up at team meetings is to shoot for the top and not settle for incremental goals like winning one or two more games than last year’s team.

Keeler has repeatedly mentioned going for the championship this year and now he has a nice slideshow to drive home that point in the next team meeting because someone well outside of the E-O has mentioned Temple and the AAC title in the same breath.

On Thursday, the New York Post floated the possibility of Temple winning the AAC title.

In football.

This year, not some fictious year three or five years down the road.

My response: Why not?

College football can change from year to year.

Carl Hardin shares his surname with the greatest Temple head coach of all time, Wayne. He’s been sensational both in the spring and summer practices as Temple’s placekicker.

No greater example of that than Southern Mississippi. Pretty much the entire Marshall team which won the title in its league transferred to Southern Mississippi, which plays in the same league, following their head coach, Charles Huff.

That’s the way of the world in this transfer portal era. My feeling is that team will go from worst to first because of the coaching decision that university made.

Temple going from third worst to first due to the same reason might be mildly surprising, but not out of thr realm of possibility.

Keeler brought only the best running back on the Sam Houston State team, Jay Ducker, with him to Temple on the player level. On the staff level, he brought the architect of that 9-3 roster, General Manager Clayton Barnes.

Barnes and Keeler upgraded the Owls in every single area where they needed starter or depth.

They have two high-level AAC quarterbacks in Evan Simon and Gevani McCoy, a defensive line that goes 9-10 deep (Keeler’s words) and two star receivers (Colin Chase and JoJo Bermudez) to replace the Owls’ best wide receiver of the last three years, the oft-injured Dante Wright.

Are there areas of concern for Temple?

Sure.

The offensive line is pretty much the one that had Simon running for his life all last fall but with a new strength coach, a better offensive line coach and a better overall scheme, that one perceived weakness can be masked.

We will see.

Everywhere else–with the possible exception of placekicking–Temple has improved significantly. Even there, current Indianapolis Colts’ kicker Maddux Trijillo called his replacement, Carl Hardin, the second-best kicker in the AAC last year.

That, combined with the fact that the league is nowhere near as good as it was a year ago, means there is a lane for Temple to shock the world. It’s a small lane but, with Keeler in charge, there is a way Temple can squeeze through.

People are noticing, even a guy who writes for a paper 90 miles away.

Let’s hope we can call him a genius come December.

Monday: Some Interesting First Years

Friday (8/22): First Things First

Monday (8/25): Game Week

4 thoughts on “Behind The Lines: NYP Finds Value in Temple

  1. Isn’t it about time to name a QB starter with only 2 weeks till kickoff? Unless they might alternate both – looks like either will do fine tho.

  2. Simon has started every practice/scrimmage with the ones. Expect him to start. Plus, he will most likely be a single digit.

    McCoy will get his chance early if the offense doesnʻt produce in the first half.

    • I sent a DM to KC Keeler pleading with him to limit the single digits to players in their last year of Temple eligibility with my reasoning being Temple is the only school that can control whether or not a single digit plays at any other school. Simon qualifies. Very few others do. In two weeks we will find out if KC took my advice.

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