Now’s the time to gush over BP (Bernard Pierce)


Temple football Fan Fest coming to Ocean City (N.J.) main pier between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. on July 10.

I’ve never met David Sourber but, from what I gather, he beat me to the punch with what I thought was an innovative ideal _ create a “Bernard Pierce for Heisman” Facebook page.
Type in “Bernard Pierce for Heisman Facebook” on google and you are likely to find it.
Sourber is from Manheim, Pa., and is on target to graduate from Temple University in 2012.
He represents the current students who bring a passion to and support for the school too many of the older grads can’t begin match.
All you have to do is go to the games, especially last year’s Villanova game, where about 15-16,000 of the fans were students dressed in Cherry and pouring their hearts and lungs out for the Owls in the stands. Walking out of the stadium that night, I was more heartbroken for those kids in the stands than I was for myself (and nobody takes a Temple football loss harder than I do).

Six Owl numbers that will (maybe) get you some lotto money:
White Balls:
Six _ The number of 1986 Heisman Trophy runnerup Paul Palmer.
Fourty-four _ The number of Palmer’s blocking back, fullback Shelley Poole, who went through the hole preceeding Palmer like a bowling ball knocking down pins. An unsung hero if there ever was one.
Thirty _ the number of the 2010 Heisman Trophy winner (hopefully) Bernard Pierce. Also the number of 1979 Garden State Bowl MVP Mark Bright.
Eleven _ The number of Big East offensive MVP Walter Washington (2004), the most dominating year by a player on a losing team maybe ever.
Twelve _ The old number of Vaughn Charlton, this year’s Owl who made the greatest sacrifice for the team in switching to tight end (and becoming No. 3). Another unsung hero.
Powerball (red ball):
Nine _ The number of quarterback Steve Joachim, who holds the highest honor (Maxwell Trophy) heretofore ever bestowed upon a Temple football player (1974)

This Bernard Pierce for Heisman thing is getting some legs mostly because of the legs Pierce showed last year.
Bernard Pierce is, in my mind, the complete package.
If puts up a similar year to last and stays healthy, he should be in the conversation right up until the night the five finalists get together.
Unlike David Sourber who wasn’t born then, I got to know Paul Palmer up close and personal like during his Heisman Trophy run in 1986.
Paul Palmer was a great, great back. Fast. Shifty. Could break tackles. Great vision.
While playing for Temple, he finished second in the Heisman Trophy balloting that year only to Vinny Testaverde of Miami.
Yet having watched both Paul Palmer for four years and Bernard Pierce last year, I’m convinced there is nothing … NOTHING … Bernard Pierce can’t do that Paul Palmer did.
In fact, there was little Paul Palmer could do his first year that Bernard Pierce didn’t do.
After one game in which Palmer carried the ball 43 times, a reporter asked then Temple coach Bruce Arians why he gave him the ball that much.
“We gave him the ball because he could handle it,” Arians said. “You know, it ain’t that heavy.”
Good line, Bruce.
If I had to give Palmer the edge over Pierce in any category, it would be his durability.
Pierce carried the ball a lot last year, but so did Palmer. On the other hand, Boo-Boo was fast, but not as fast as Pierce. I think Palmer avoided the big hit more than Pierce and that might have something to do with the injuries.
Pierce, though, combines world-class speed with great moves in the open field and an ability to break tackles and punish defenders.
I watched a lot of college football on network TV and did not see anyone as good. Unlike most non-BCS backs, Pierce has Penn State and UConn on the schedule, as well as the MAC, so he’s got opportunities to lead his team to eye-popping wins that will get him into the conversation as early as September.
So the Heisman is right there for the taking.
If David Sourber helps him get one step closer to the New York Athletic Club, his Bernard Pierce for Heisman page is a worthwhile endeavor.
When Temple goes 13-0 and wins the national championship in Jan. 2011 and Bernard Pierce takes home the Heisman, 100,000 people will claim to be Owl season ticketholders. You can show them your season-ticket stubs by clicking below:

Al Golden contract extension a good deal


Oddly, Al Golden bears a facial resemblance to Bruce Arians here.

“I’m thrilled … for the opportunity to continue our commitment of making our football program a vital component of the Temple Community, support the mission of the university and to strengthen the Temple Brand on a national scale.”
_ Al Golden

I like the way Temple athletic director Bill Bradshaw works, quietly and behind the scenes.
I ran into Bill at the signing day function and mentioned something about Al’s contract and Bill said, “Al Golden can have a contract extension any time he wants.”
Bradshaw didn’t elaborte.
He didn’t need to for a Joe Schmoe like me.
I didn’t take it as a good sign at the time because I interpreted it as a “contract extension” of the current contract with the same financial terms in place.
Evidently, though, from what I hear, this is a significant increase in Al’s salary with a comenserate increase in staff compensation.
Someone tweeted me this morning that Al is now making money similar to head coaches in BCS conferences, a more-than-double salary increase.
I like that, but what I like more is that there are hightened protections in place for my beloved Temple University.
I hope Al stays here for a Joe Paterno-like run, but I live in a real world.
Others have come after him hard the past two seasons and, someday, someone is going to get him for the right offer.
Once that happens, though, I want Temple protected and this deal does that.
The school that hires Golden away from Temple will have to pay the school the kind of money West Virginia got when Rich Rodriguez left for Michigan.
That’s the best part of the deal and assures Temple will have the financial wherewithal to hire a big-name coach should Al leave.
Let’s hope Al settles in here and develops the kind of love for the school that Wayne Hardin, John Chaney and Harry Litwack had.
This school has a special mission and only very special people understand that.
For the historic-like turnaround Golden has already achieved here, he deserves to be compensated handsomely.
I hope he attacks the enormous task ahead to move the program forward with the same verve he has in working his magic so far.
Today was a great day for both Al Golden and Temple football, but there are greater days ahead.
It should be fun finding out what rewards those days bring to the Owls and their fans.
Temple has put its money where its mouth is … time for you to do the same and buy more season tickets:

Required summer fiction: Owls’ depth chart



Just a hunch, but this guy will be Villanova’s biggest nightmare on Sept. 3.

Not quite up there with the Harry Potter Series, but the best work of fiction this spring has been penned by Al Golden.
Or at least part fiction.
It’s called the 2010 Temple Football Depth Chart.
For something to while the time away in the “reading room” I like it.
There’s some humor in it and I like comedy.
There’s a strong purpose to it, mostly to light a fire under some of the more talented Owls.
That’s all OK because this is a rough draft and not the finished version.
It’s not this depth chart that needs to be taken seriously, it’s the one released in the pre-game notes on the day of the Villanova game that matters.
I have a feeling, except for positions like quarterback, running back and kicker, there will be a lot of tweaking to it before the Mayor’s Cup game.

OFFENSE
QB – Chester Stewart, Chris Coyer or Mike Gerardi
WR1 – Michael Campbell OR Hammond OR Deon Miller
WR 2 – Joey Jones OR Rod Streater followed by Haldeman
TE – Charlton OR Brown, then Alex Jackson, Cody Booth
RB – Bernard Pierce, Ahkeem Smith, Matt Brown
K – Brandon McManus
DEFENSE


DE – Adrian Robinson, Blueford
DE – Kadeem Custis, Johnson
DT – Big Mo Wilkinson, Paulhill
NT – Joseph, Jeff Whittingham OR Levi Brown
OLB – Tavir Whitehead, Quenten White OR Blaze Caponegro
MLB – Peanut Johnson, Marcus Green OR Johnson
OLB – Amara Kamara OR Jordan
CB – Marquise Liverpool OR Johnson, Nixon
CB – Jones, Griffin
FS – Jaquain Jarrett, Parker, Parker, Gildea
SS – Kevin Kroboth, Vaughn Carraway
P – Jeff Wathne or Cerrette

I think Evan Rodriguez, someone not even listed on the four-deep version, wins the TE job by Villanova. Gosh, I hope so because the ceiling of this guy’s talent is about as high as the Volcanic Ash cloud from Iceland. He looked pretty good to me in the Cherry and White game.
I think the staff is intrigued enough by the 6-6 size on one side that Miller gives and he grabs that WR1 job.
If Charlton starts and plays significant minutes at tight end against Villanova (say, half the game), I will be stunned out of my mind.
Who knows what happens at quarterback, but I think Golden got it right. Chester Stewart has been here for awhile and it was his job to win in the spring and he might have just done enough to win it.
He certainly did enough to get Charlton moved to tight end.
I like Amara Kamara at linebacker and I like the size and athleticsm that Custis brings to the other end spot. That should help Adrian Robinson a lot.
Imagine being Chris Whitney on opening day, if you will:
A nasty 6-foot-4, 265-pound Custis coming at you from one end and a speedy equally nasty Adrian Robinson coming at you from the other end and people like Big Mo, Jeff Whittingham and Levi Brown helping to collapse the pocket from the middle.
Call that novel War and (Whitney) Piece.
And that would come under the category of non-fiction.

Thoughts from Cherry and White Day 2010

Some questions answered, some answers questioned and otherwise random thoughts from Cherry and White Day 2010:

I think this Mike Gerardi kid bears watching. If he doesn’t have the “it factor”, he’s damn close to having it.

1) It’s hard to make a decision about quarterback _ I liked all three quarterbacks, but no one really stood out on this day. Chester Stewart aired it out on the last play of the first half, but it didn’t come close to a receiver. I like the fact that CS competed. I also like the fact that Chester Stewart had no interceptions all last season. I liked Mike Gerardi’s poise. I thought that Chris Coyer had too many passes dropped. Slightest, if any, edge to Stewart on this one day. Great to see Vaughn Charlton out there competing at tight end and showing the a positive attitude and leadership he always displays. Gerardi looks like he’s been there before. He looks like he expects to start. Everybody tells me he has no shot at playing, but it’s always those guys you have to keep an eye on. The same people who poo-poo Mike Gerardi said Matt Brown wasn’t going to do didly and he got 155 on Ohio on the MAC East title game. I think this Mike Gerardi kid bears watching. If he doesn’t have the “it factor”, he’s damn close to having it. That’s all I’m going to say on the subject. None of the three QBs did enough, but I’d have to rate Stewart’s deep ball the best and Gerardi’s poise the best based on this one day. Coyer probably blows them away in the elusiveness category, but everytime someone touched him, that was ruled a sack and that’s just not fair to a guy who can duck out of danger and make positive yardage.
2) Event really is too big for the Edberg-Olsen Complex _ It’s saying something when the best seats in the house are in the high-rise apartment complex across the street. It’s got to be moved to Ambler next year. Bring the field up to standards. They have a nice horticulture program up there anyway. Put those students to work. I didn’t go up on the deck because some day that thing is going to collapse below the weight of too many people and I don’t want to be there when it does. Another reason to move it to Ambler.
3) Thank God Bernard Pierce didn’t get hurt _ It says something that all three quarterbacks were wearing the orange (“don’t hit me”) jersey, yet it was open season on next year’s Heisman Trophy winner (hopefully). I say take the orange jerseys off the quarterbacks next year, too.
4) Vaughn Carraway can catch after all _ The most heralded pass receiving recruit in a number of years finally found the field and the ball with a real nice interception. Hopefully, that’s a portent of things to come.
5) Liked the contributions of big DT Levi Brown,   DE Adrian Robinson, WR Rod Streater, WR Delano Green, Pierce (of course) and the pride of Wall Township (N.J.) High, Blaze Caponegro (two interceptions on tipped balls), among so many. Brandon McManus, the best kicker in the MAC, nailed about a 51-yarder, which was a good sign particularly in a 24mph crosswind. Didn’t like that there were so many tipped balls, but that can be worked on in the coming days.
Overriding thought was that I can’t wait until Sept. 3.

Spinning Charlton’s move to tight end

“Everybody was blown away by his vertical stretch, by how soft his hands were, and how well he ran with the ball after the catch.”
_ Al Golden

Today’s operative word is spin.
It’s a form of propoganda making a move or position more sellable.
There have been a few famous “spin doctors” in the arts and media over the years.
My favorite was a guy named Mike Flaherty, played by Michael J. Fox, in the sitcom Spin City. Flaherty, the deputy Mayor, specialized in getting the mayor out of trouble by spinning an issue that otherwise wasn’t flattering.
I could only think of one word when I heard the quotes coming from Al Golden’s lips about Vaughn Chartlon’s move to tight end on Wednesday.
Spin.
“Everybody was blown away,” Golden told Owlscoop.com. “Everybody was blown away by his vertical stretch, by how soft his hands were, and how well he ran with the ball after the catch. So of all the things that you guys ask me every day, it’s probably the biggest news, probably since I’ve been here.”
Yeah, right.
Hmm.
Charlton has played no other position than quarterback since Pee-Wee ball, yet Golden gives a glowing report on the potential of Charlton as a pass-catching and route-running Division IA tight end.
Basically, Golden is telling us _ exaggerating just a little for effect, here _ that we might have had a John Mackey or a Pete Retzlaff right here under our noses for four years without realizing it.
If that’s not spin, I don’t know what is.
I’m not buying it.
Listen, I’m on board with the decision, whether it was Golden’s or Charlton’s. Vaughn is a great kid and a terrific team leader.
A lot of people I’ve talked to say it doesn’t make sense because they’ve been grooming him to be quarterback for five years and he deserves a chance.
I’ve seen enough to know that they could groom him for five more years and he’ll never be half the quarterback Adam DiMichele was or Henry Burris was or Brian Broomell was.
Temple needs a playmaking quarterback who can make good throws (often) under pressure. I don’t think Charlton ever responded to pressure quite the way, say, DiMichele did. I don’t think Charlton ever put enough points on the scoreboard.


I’m betting that the immensely talented Evan Rodriguez is better equipped to put up those kind of numbers, if properly used


Temple’s program has reached the point where it needs to go from one Adam DiMichele to another Adam DiMIchele. There should never have been a disastrous drop in talent at that position, particularly when you have a recruiter as accomplished as Golden.
What happened, I think, is that both Chester Stewart and Chris Coyer (and possibly even Mike Gerardi) have passed Charlton on the depth chart.
The move to tight end was pure spin, a way to lessen the impact of the fall to the bottom of the depth chart.
If Chartlon catches 60 passes for 1,000 yards and 12 touchdowns next season and blocks like Mike Ditka, I will admit I’m wrong.
I’m betting that the immensely talented Evan Rodriguez is better equipped to put up those kind of numbers, if properly used. Rodriguez’s backups are more likely to be named Matt Balasavage, Cody Booth and Alex Jackson than Vaughn Charlton.
And that’s no spin.

Has Cherry and White Day outgrown the E-O?

That’s me behind the railing trying to get a peak last year.

Watched a little bit of the North Carolina football spring day on ESPN last weekend.
I was interested in a quarterback that they kept bringing up as being a future star, Bryn Renner.
Virginia High school football fans will remember Renner being involved in quite a few battles with rival Oakton High and its star quarterback, Chris Coyer.
Experts put both quarterbacks pretty much on the same level and Coyer earned player of the year honors.
I’m sure any questions that North Carolina fans had about Renner’s arm or leadership skills were answered in the spring game. He had a productive day.
I’m wondering what questions will be answered about the Owls on Saturday in the 2 p.m. scrimmage at Chodoff Field.
Some I’m interested in, no particular order:
1) When will Coyer get to show his running skills?
I hope they allow the quarterbacks to get hit (I doubt it) because Coyer’s ability to make plays in the open field with his legs will separate him from the other three quarterbacks, in my humble opinion. All four quarterbacks can throw the ball. Owls need to be multi-dimensional at that position. The Catch-22 here is that you end up starting the same guy who started last year if all the Cherry and White game becomes is a glorified passing drill.

2) Has the Cherry and White Game gotten too big for the E-O?

My vote is yes because I arrived some two hours before last year’s game and could not find a spot in Lot 10. I had to park four blocks away at the Baptist Temple. If the game can’t be moved to Lincoln Financial Field, I vote for Ambler.
Or Northeast High.

3) Will we see an improved pass rush?

Not unless they take the orange jerseys off the quarterbacks (see No. 1).

4) How much action will Heisman Trophy candidate Bernard Pierce get?

My hunch is plenty, but not 40 carries. I’d say between 10-20 for C&W, shooting for 20-25 quality ones per game during the season.

5) Where is the best place to buy Temple gear?

Err, Cherry and White. You can’t buy good Temple stuff in any store not on campus, yet I get hundreds of comments from people throughout the year about “where’d you get that cool Temple (sweatshirt, T-Shirt, hat, etc.)?” I’d always say, truthfully, Cherry and White day. No other day compares when it comes to that stuff. Bring cash.

2 plus 2 equals 4 (p.m.) for Temple-Villanova


Blame Friday game on shore and Joe Banner, not in that order.

There’s this thing called The Shore and it’s a phenomena peculiar to Philadelphia that the town virtually empties out the weekend of Labor Day


So I’m driving on I-76 today and thinking how It’s too bad I don’t have a digital camera.
(When I get enough donations to buy a camera and a portable computer called a netbook, so I can take Temple Football Forever on the road with me and post daily news and photos on the Owls, I will.)
Back to the desire for a digital camera, though.
I’m driving by at 50 mph in a monsoon today on the Schuylkill Expressway and I see a Temple billboard that proclaims “Friday, Sept. 3” as the date of the home football opener with Villanova.
It meant only one thing. Temple’s “negotiations” with the Eagles over its preferred date, Sept. 2, fell through.
Then I put two and two together and come up with four.
Oddly enough, that’s the starting time of the game but it’s not how this mostly mathematical equation was solved.
Two plus two equals 4 p.m. basically because Sept. 2, the date Temple AD Bill Bradshaw long sought as primo time for the game was denied the Owls by the landlord Eagles, leaving 4 as the only logical time for the game.
Hmm.
Temple could have played on the Saturday of the Labor Day weekend, when no one would have been in town. There’s this thing called The Shore and it’s a phenomena peculiar to Philadelphia that the town virtually empties out the weekend of Labor Day, leaving only the homeless and poor behind. Philadelphia is unique because The Shore (capital T, capital S) is only 50 miles away and Philadelphians see this weekend as their abosolutely last chance to get away before a long, cold, winter. The magnetic attraction of that to a region of 6 million people cannot be minimized.
So Saturday was out.
The Eagles could have done the “community” a favor and moved their game to Sept. 3 and allowed Temple and Villanova to play on the date best suited for a big college crowd. The Eagles being the Eagles could have gotten their 70K on either date but, no, the Eagles had to put the screws to Temple and Villanova.
“We want to play Thursday night,” was basically what Joe Banner told Bradshaw.
“But, Joe, you’ll get your crowd either night….”
“No, we still want to play Thursday night. Good luck, though.”
Typical Eagles.
The Phillies were already scheduled for Friday night (7).
Since two crowds in excess of 40,000 (hopefully for Temple, definitely for Phils) would be showing up at the same time, the Owls reluctantly were forced to pick 4 p.m.
It’s a stroke of genius, in my mind.
The Temple and Villanova fans get to arrive, say, at 2 p.m. for tailgating, taking all of the tailgate spots used by Phillies fans.
Phillies fans arrive at about 4, then start frantically texting “WTF?” messages to their fellow 20-somethings.
If there’s a silver lining to this scheduling nightmare, that’s it.
Now let’s get a crowd large enough to steal all of their parking spaces.
Better yet, let’s get them into our game first by offering half-priced tickets for those who show Phils’ stubs.

March 20: The first day of spring (practice)


Temple fans want to see more sacks like this one.

I have a feeling the Owls are going to find a couple of reliable long-snappers, a quarterback who has moxie and becomes a weapon both with his arm and feet and a defense that can provide a relentless pass rush

Never let the facts get in the way of a good story, someone once said.
I’ve never believed that because I think the facts around the story are often more interesting than the story itself.
I’ll relent, though, when it comes to headlines.
Yesterday, not today, was the first full day of spring football practice at Temple University. It’s just a better headline when you combine the first day of spring with the first day of spring practice.
It was also the last full day of the men’s basketball season, the only other marquee sport at Temple University.
Coincidence?
No doubt.
An interesting fact?
Yes.
I’ve never hided that I consider Temple men’s basketball nothing more than a worthwhile distraction between the final day of the football season and the first day of spring practice, but I didn’t think the two would run so seemlessly as they did this year.
I often get grief from my Temple football friends on why I only attend two or three basketball games a year, but I tell them the same thing I write here.
I just don’t enjoy the sport as much as football.
I understand, though, that many of them do.
For me, though, it’s not even close.
I like the fact that a football field is split in two and that strategy is involved in both protecting your turf and probing into the enemy’s.
If you have better men and material, like the Union did in the Civil War, you are probably going to win the war. If you have a better Field Marshall, like the Nazi’s did with Rommel in the Sahara and the Confederates did with Johnson and Stewart at Bull Run, you are going to win your share of battles.
There’s some of that in basketball, but when a dude sticks a 35-footer three straight times down the court, that game is a little too skewed for my taste. So hat’s off to Fran Dunphy and crew, who did this university proud by winning three straight A-10 titles and 29 games this season. There are few people who do more for this university than Fran Dunphy. In fact, I can’t think of any. There are no two better ambassadors for this great university than Fran Dunphy and Al Golden.
As I write this, it is 10 in the morning on the Saturday on the first day of spring.
The birds are chirping, it’s going to be a 75-degree day, and my beloved Temple (Football) Owls are working to find better ways to defend their turf and grab as much of the bad guy turf as possible.
The particulars will unravel over the next month.
What we already know is that 17 of the 22 starters return from a 9-3 team and some of the redshirts who sat  last year may be better than a handful of the starters, let alone as replacements for the five departed.
Defensively, I see this team as perfectly suited to a 3-4, rather than the current 5-2 alignment. That way, you have two athletic 6-5 defensive ends (Mo Wilkerson and Kadeem Custis) coming at the quarterback with a future NFL tackle in Levi Brown playing nose guard and being a lock-down run-stopper. You can move Adrian Robinson to linebacker and just have him blitz on every passing down, but from all different gaps.  If I was a quarterback facing that, I’d run the other way.
Offensively, I’d like to see a quarterback who can make plays both running and passing. I think that quarterback is here.
On special teams, I’d like the see the long-snapping situation tighten up.
Fix all of those fixable items and you have a team with designs on much better than 9-3.
I have a feeling the Owls are going to find a couple of reliable long-snappers, a quarterback who has moxie and becomes a weapon both with his arm and feet and a defense that can provide a relentless pass rush.
Hope springs eternal, but this time the hope comes with a lot of supporting facts.