Why AG turned down East Carolina (and Cincy and Tenn.) …

I don’t mention coach Fran Dunphy on here because I’m not much of a hoops fan, but I admire the man a lot.
The thing I admire most about him is that he already is a Hall of Fame coach in my mind but he doesn’t drag Temple needlessly through speculation every time a big-time opening comes up.
Fran Dunphy is a Philly guy through and through and even if he wins the national championship with the Owls, he will likely remain the Temple head coach.
Temple will be his last head coaching job.
There is much to admire about that.
You can throw a Brinks’ truck worth of money at him and he will likely wave the Brinks’ truck by so he can get to his Suburu parked in the Liacouras Center lot.
Philly and family mean that much to him.Temple fans are comforted by that and they don’t take it for granted.
They trust Fran Dunphy. They have plenty of reasons to do so.
I must admit that I get uneasy with this yearly speculation that comes up surrounding Temple’s other high-profile coach, Al Golden.
Word comes tonight from multiple reliable sources that Al Golden has withdrawn his name for consideration for the East Carolina head football coaching job, reportedly telling Terry Holland to politely take his job and shove it.
Politely, of course. (Rick Stockstill will likely get that job now.)
It’s all part of The Plan.
I have to trust Al today because the one thing he said when he took the Temple job was that he had a plan to turn Temple’s football fortunes around and that it wouldn’t take long for Temple fans to discern that plan.
You’ve got to give the guy credit. He had a plan and it didn’t take any of us long to realize that it would work.
He is an East Coast recruiter without peer who has high schools from Boston to Washington, D.C. locked up. He can walk into any one of them today and be welcomed with open arms.
He would have to change his whole recruiting footprint if he went outside that corridor. Cincinnati, Tennessee and East Carolina are far outside that footprint.
His alma mater, Penn State, is not.

I have a feeling he’s got a similar plan for his own career.

My guess is that he’s had his eyes on the Penn State job all along.
Think about it.
What better way to get the attention of the people he wants to nudge than to have Temple … TEMPLE … beat Penn State in State College next year?
Golden told selected boosters at the bowl party that the Owls were “loaded” next year.
Loaded, with emphasis on loaded with talent.
Penn State people may not realize it, but Temple was a quarterback away from being in the game until the end with the Nittany Lions this season. I’m not talking about a Colt McCoy here. I’m talking about an Adam DiMichele, a guy who is capable of making 20 to 30 positive plays on his own.
Temple might have that guy next year.
With one swift Temple over Penn State blow, he would unsettle the Penn State fan base and hasten the departure of the legendary Joe Paterno and sell himself as his successor in the same day.
He would not get that chance at Cincy or at Tennessee or at East Carolina.
ESPN.com reported him as the leading candidate at Cincy before he withdrew his name from consideration for that job. My guess is that Golden, not Cincy, made that decision.
Same with Tennessee.
Do you really, honestly, think Louisiana Tech’s Derek Dooley is a better coach than Al Golden? The same Dooley who had a losing record in the past three years?
I didn’t think you did.
If Al Golden wanted that job, he probably could have gotten it.
He didn’t want Cincy.
He didn’t want Tennessee.
He didn’t want East Carolina.
He wants Temple.
It’s all part of The Plan.
Hopefully, The Plan evolves into Al Golden seeing Temple the way Fran Dunphy sees Temple but that’s up to Al to decide.
With no attractive jobs left, he’ll have another year to think about it.
What the Temple administration does behind the scenes and what he Owls do on the field will determine the future now.

Temple’s football family hurting today


By Mike Gibson
Once upon a time not so long ago, being a Temple football fan was like being a member of an exclusive club in the Dark Ages.
You’d meet, watch the plague spread, then hope that someday the university would hire a savior to find a cure for the football program we loved.
The group would be so small in selected seasons, maybe down to three or four cars in the tailgate section of Veterans Stadium.

DANIEL H. GLAMMER III
DANIEL H. III, suddenly January 11, 2010 of Jenkintown. Beloved son of Grace and the late Daniel H. Jr. Devoted and loving father of Victoria and Alexandra. Brother of Nancy Gagnon and Steven. Special friend of Colleen Berry. Uncle of Nicole, Elena and Annah. Dan was an avid Temple Owls Football fan. Relatives and friends are invited to the Viewing on Friday eve. 7 to 9 P.M. and on Saturday from 9:00 A.M. until time of Service at 10:00 A.M. at the JOSEPH J. McGOLDRICK FUNERAL HOME, 507 West Ave., Jenkintown. Interment Hillside Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, remembrances may be made to the Breathing Room Foundation, 120 S. York Rd., Suite 7, Hatboro, PA. 19040. Published in Philadelphia Inquirer & Philadelphia Daily News

We commiserated because we all knew what it meant to be a Temple football fan in those days. We all experienced similar pains.
It meant walking into a bar and asking for the Temple game to be turned on just one of the TVs and inevitably bracing for the bartender to laugh at you.
He might turn the Temple game on and he might not.
It was a 50-50 shot.
Then you’d brace for the smart-aleck comments from the patrons asking “who put the Temple game on? …”
Well, that exclusive club lost one of its most treasured members this week when Dan Glammer passed away at the all-too-young age of 46.
I first met Dan through the message boards discussing Temple football in the late part of the last century, then later at the tailgates.
When there were five (that’s 5) left at the Miami (Ohio) pre-game tailgate in 2005, Dan Glammer was one of those fans. I was another one.
Dan was smart, funny (enough to be an award-winning comedian) and kind.
The kindness will always stick with me.
When Temple was playing at Kent State two seasons ago, a rumor got around on the Internet that the game would be on at Chickie and Pete’s in South Philly and that they had some kind of special hookup that no other place had.
I was off work that night, so I headed down there.
I was five minutes from home when the cell rang in my car.
Nobody has my cell number, but Dan knew I wanted to see the game so he somehow found it.
“Mike, this is Dan. The game’s not on. It’s not on anywhere.”
“Thanks, Dan. You saved me a trip.”
A random, unsolicited, act of kindness and a much-appreciated one.
Dan didn’t have to do that.
He just did.
I saw him at the bowl game in D.C. and I remembered thinking I’ve never seen him look that happy.
Heck, until the unexplainable pick-6, I’ve never been that happy.
He was sitting (standing, really, the whole game like the rest of us) in the row in front of me.
He knew about the conniption I get every time Bernard Pierce is taken out of the game so, at one point, he turned around and said:
“Preps! Pierce is out. McPherson’s in.”
“GET HIM OUT!! GET HIM OUT!!” I yelled in the direction of Al Golden. “PUT THE FRANCHISE BACK IN …”
McPherson then ripped off a 12-yard gain.
Everybody was cheering, going crazy.
Dan was clapping and laughing when he turned around to say:
“Keep talking, Preps,” he said.
Those were, sadly, the last words he ever said to me.

Sign Dan’s guestbook

Temple delivers a record Philly TV audience

Bars in Philly, unlike Somers Point, were packed last Tuesday cheering on the Owls.
By Mike Gibson
A couple of days ago, I dashed off a note to Inquirer TV writer Mike Klein and asked him to get the ratings for Temple’s EagleBank Bowl football game with UCLA.
I thought they’d be high because Temple always did well on TV when Paul Palmer was going for the Heisman Trophy in 1986 and before that when Wayne Hardin put together a string of winning years.

My email to Mike Klein
From: Mike Gibson
To: mklein@phillynews.com

Date: Sun, Jan 3, 2010 at 9:20 PM
Subject: Ratings for Temple-UCLA football

Hi Mike,
I don’t have access to local Neilsen TV ratings, but you might so I thought I’d ask this question:
Could you please publish in your column the local Neilsen ratings for the Dec. 29th TU football game with UCLA?
I was in Washington, but my guess is that the game did very well.
Thanks,
Mike Gibson
Temple Football Forever

There always has been a lot of interest in a “winning” Temple team.
While the “hardcore” fan base delivered some impressive numbers at RFK Stadium, with 20,000 Temple fans making the trip in brutal cold, the “softcore” fan base also produced last Tuesday.
While there were reports all over the place that several watering holes inside Center City (the game was played during Happy Hour) were packed with people cheering on the Owls, there’s nothing like cold, hard numbers produced by the ratings folks at ESPN.
The numbers Klein found were even beyond my expectations and ran in his Inqlings column Tuesday.
I dashed off a similar email to Daily News’ columnist Dan Gross, a Temple grad, who wrote me back: “I’ll try to get you the numbers, Mike, but I don’t think I’ll put them in my column.”
Klein beat Gross to the punch.
Page under “Owls fly” and Klein’s numbers is really the best empirical data supporting the “latent” support and interest for Temple football in the Philadelphia area.

“It would serve the Big East right if a … competitive Temple team delivered its Philadelphia TV market to the MAC”
_Shelly Anderson
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
in a 2007 story


An estimated 140,000 viewers watched the game, which made it the most-watched ESPN bowl game in Philadelphia since 2007 (Penn State was in the Alamo Bowl then).
All of this proves a couple of points:
A winning Temple football team can deliver the fourth-largest market to any football conference in the country and there is a “softcore” group of fans just waiting to jump on the bandwagon and follow a Temple team that proves to be a consistent winner.
The bandwagon’s journey will get underway only with a convincing win over Villanova to start next season but there is enough evidence that there are thousands of people waiting to jump on this Owl Express once that happens.
Warm up those engines.

"So, other than the ending, how was the play, Mrs. Lincoln?"


The EBB’s MVPs (most valuable persons)=Temple’s fans


2010 Recruiting checklist:
1. Long-snapper
2. Pass rushing DE
3. Big-time JUCO QB

WASHINGTON, D.C. _ Walking out of RFK Stadium, I thought about this town just about 150 years ago.
Ford’s Theater, the place where Abraham Lincoln was shot, is only two blocks away from the Renaissance Marriott, the Temple team hotel.
I thought about the famous phrase born out of that tragedy.
“So, other than the ending, how did you like the play, Mrs. Lincoln?”
If we have any Temple fans named Mrs. Lincoln who care as much about the Owls winning as I do, she’d probably say the same thing about Tuesday’s EagleBank Bowl game with UCLA.
Liked both the play and the game, but the ending was, err, shot.
Lead?
Check. (Owls were leading, 21-20, 2 minutes, 29 seconds into the final act, err, quarter.)
Fans?

Hardin: ‘You always wanted to put your team in a position to go.’

“Cal wanted to exchange films of every game,” Hardin recalled. “Usually you just take the first one, one in the middle and the last one. So I said, ‘Find out which coaches on their staff want them?’ Turned out, it was the defensive coaches. OK. We spent night after night after night, digging and digging and digging. We came up with one or two things we had to do.
“We found out that if we pulled our guards up the middle, we’d end up with one of them going down the field untouched into the secondary. So did the back. Get the hell out of the way. There was no one to block. We had 21 points on the board before we even started. We probably would never have discovered that, had we not graded all the film. That’s how things work. You just don’t know. They did me a favor. We got into the defensive coach’s head.”

The Owls outrushed the Golden Bears, 300 yards to 23.

“It’s unbelievable,” Hardin went on. “The quarterback [Rich Campbell] was taught, which we knew, to read when he didn’t see anything [to] throw blindly into the flat to the fullback. I mean, game after game. The fullback was catching the ball and making big yards. So we developed a two-man [pass] rush, which we wouldn’t have done. We’d have one guy come up to meet the fullback, whichever way he went, 5 yards deep in the backfield. And eight guys would drop into coverage. So there’s nothing to read, except a lot of jerseys.

“The first time they do it, they completed it. I told Vince Hoch, the defensive coach, ‘We worked on this. If our kid can’t get to the guy, put [somebody else] in there.’ I had already told [linebacker] Steve Conjar that he was going to intercept one for a touchdown. The second time, he makes a tackle. The third time, the ball hits him in the hands and he drops it. He would’ve walked in.

“You always wanted to put your team in a position to go.”
Complete Mike Kern story here

Well, 20,000 of the 23,000 were from Temple, so check. Great job by our terrific fans, by the way. Loud and proud and everything I dreamed they would be.
In the seconds before Temple scored that second touchdown, the loud “Let’s Go Temple” cheer shook the old stadium so much I thought it was going to collapse.
Jonathan Tannenbaum, in his excellent blog Soft Pretzel Logic, wrote that the roar of the Temple fans after the first touchdown was “as loud I have heard for any” D.C. United soccer goal in that stadium.
D.C. United, by the way, has scored a lot of goals in that stadium.
Maybe three or four thousand.
So Temple’s fans deserve my MVP (most valuable persons).
Then the game, like the Mrs. Lincoln’s play, imploded.
I don’t care too much about theater, but I care a lot about the game, the team and the school involved, that’s probably why I walked around the stadium about 45 times before leaving Tuesday night.
“I thought you were still walking around the stadium,” my friend, Mark, said when I finally arrived at the team hotel.
Hell, if I didn’t realize I was in a supposed dangerous neighborhood (I couldn’t tell, but my pre-game briefing cautioned me), I’d probably still be walking around the stadium.
On the train down to D.C., I read a terrific article by Mike Kern on Temple’s last bowl game and how Wayne Hardin outsmarted Roger Theder, the then California coach.
Hardin said Cal asked for game films, then made a point to ask his assistants which Cal assistants wanted the films. He gave them three, then tailored the game plan to counter what the Cal assistants would see.

In the seconds before Temple scored that second touchdown, the loud “Let’s Go Temple” cheer shook the old stadium so much I thought it was going to collapse.

Pure genius.
Pure freaking genius.
I wasn’t surprised. Hardin outsmarted everybody, including Joe Paterno.

    Other thoughts walking around RFK:

  • On my 24th pass around the stadium, I wondered why it’s always TU messing up on center snaps and never another team.
  • On my 27th pass around the stadium, I wondered why Kee-ayre Griffin wasn’t out there at right cornerback (I saw him at the team hotel and he looked healthy and wasn’t limping).
  • On my 29th pass around the stadium, I wondered where was Jason Harper, who defined the term “warrior” all season and someone who can make yards after the catch and refuses to go down.
  • On my 32d pass around the stadium, I wondered what would have happened had their been a smooth transition of Adam DiMichele to a quarterback with similar skills and toughness and leadership.
    (There wasn’t.)
  • On my 37th pass, I wondered what Chester Stewart did wrong to lose his job over the last month.
  • On about my 44th pass around the stadium, with steam coming out of my ears (I swear it was from being mad TU lost, but it was probably just the cold), I thought about that Hardin story.

Could you imagine Al Golden intentionally deceiving a fellow member of the coaching fraternity so Temple could benefit?
Could you see Al Golden cutting Rick Neuheisel’s throat (I mean that figuratively, of course) to win a game?
I couldn’t.
Al Golden is a very good coach in every way and a great (and I mean GREAT) CEO/Ambassador of Temple football, but I’m not ready to say he’s a great game coach.
Or even a better-than-average one.
I will say that when I see Temple do all the little things (i.e., fix the kicking game) a good team needs to do routinely. I mean, snaps on punts are routine for just about everyone else.
Why not Temple?

Jonathan Tannenbaum, in his excellent blog Soft Pretzel Logic, wrote that the roar of the Temple fans after the first touchdown was “as loud I have heard for any” D.C. United soccer goal in that stadium.

From the Ball State game on, snapping on punts has been a needless adventure and the CEO needed to fix that long before now.
That’s what he needs to do before I can call him an above-average game-day coach.
Great game-day coach?
Who knows how long that will take, but I don’t think it will be long because Al is a smart guy. Remember, Hardin came to Temple as a head coach with prior experience from a then big-time Navy program. Golden, who was never a head coach before, is still learning on the job.
Hardin was a smart guy and great game coach and he’d do everything short of robbing a bank to win a big game for Temple. That’s how much Temple winning meant to him.
Afterward, Al Golden said he hopes the team learns from the experience.
I hope he doesn’t exclude himself from doing the same.

I prefer this version of the EagleBank Bowl


This is the way I thought it would play out …
I’m never going to use this blog to criticize the kids, but let’s just say I’m hopeful certain players who had prominent roles last night get diminished ones next year.
I’ve always said that last year should have been a better year, but this year’s gravvy and next year’s the year.
If the devil came to me with a contract before the Villanova game and said 9-4, I would have signed off on that.
(Now if he had said 7-5 with a bowl and a win over Villanova, I would have traded for that, but that’s another story.)
We’ll talk about the X’s and O’s some other time.
I’m excited to see a healthy Bernard Pierce for a full year.
I’m excited to see that we’ll have a Nate Smith or a an Ahkeem Smith or a Nahjee Gibson (no relation) as an option should he go down again.
I’m excited to finally get some balance in our offense.
I’m excited to see what a defensive front four that includes Mo Wilkerson at an end (yes, I’d move him to end) and Levi Brown and Kadeem Custis at tackles can bring.
Heck, I’d go with a 3-4, move Adrian Robinson to RUSH linebacker, put Brown on the nose and Custis and Big Mo at the ends and move Amara Kamara back to his natural linebacker position.
No X’s and O’s talk today.
Just looking ahead to our next BOWL game.
Villanova.

The EagleBank Bowl Survival Guide


Photos by Ratna
The Eagle Bank Bowl gambled and rolled the dice with weather.
Actually, it’s a gamble any outdoor Northeast bowl takes this time of year.
It could have won.
It could have lost.
I will call this year’s bowl, at least in terms of weather, a push.
The “average” high temperature for Washington, D.C. for Dec. 29th is 48 degrees.
The high on Tuesday is expected to be 16 degrees below that, or freezing.
Yikes.
It’s going to be cold.
It’s going to be damn cold.
It might be the coldest Temple football game I’ve ever attended and I’ve attended most over the last 30 years.
That’s the bad news.
The good news is that there won’t be a snowstorm.
So weather, at least in my mind, is a push.
You can play football in it and, if you are a smart fan, you can survive in it.
I consider myself a smart fan, so here’s my survival plan:

  • Two (2) T-shirts;
  • Two pairs of sweat pants;
  • Three (3) pairs of socks;
  • Two Temple sweatshirts, both hooded (I will wear the zippered one on top of the regular Cherry Temple one);
  • Ear Muffs;
  • One light pair of gloves to be worn under one heavy pair of gloves;
  • One heavy winter coat, to be worn on top of everything (also with a hood);

The all-time low D.C. temperature for Tuesday is minus-2 degrees.
Just be thankful you aren’t these girls:

If these girls can be there (and they will), so can you …

Temple’s fans need to respond in a big way


Graphics courtesy of Victory Engineer (I had nothing to do with the incorrect use of the word your, but the graphic is too good to leave it out).
Every morning for the past month or so, I’ve gotten up and wiped the sand from my eyes, stretched a little bit and sprinted to the door for the morning paper.
I quickly thumbed to the second sports page and checked the bowl pairings.
There it was.
I wasn’t dreaming after all.
Thirty years of being bowl-less will play mind games with a person’s psyche.
Temple’s football team is in a bowl game and the opponent, geez, is UCLA.
Damn.
It’s not in Idaho or Kansas, either.
It’s in D.C.
It’s within driving distance.
How the hell did we not win the Mid-American Conference (err, that would be no pass rush or blitz) and get the marquee matchup of all MAC matchups?
I pinched myself for good measure to see if that part wasn’t a dream, either.
I’m so pumped I would walk down to D.C. to see the Owls in a bowl game but, thanks to Amtrak, I don’t have to do that.


“I hate to say it but it’s doubtful that I will be going … I don’t want to go alone … secondly, I just can’t see myself sitting outside on a December night. … I can’t take the cold …”
alleged Temple fan Philly Brian on Owlscoop.com

After about 10 days of going through this routine, I logged onto a computer.
Sports message boards are the next stop on the technology train above sports talk radio. You can check the pulse of the sports community by reading these boards and you can even add a viewpoint or two without having to talk to a producer.
Most of the fans were like me, pumped and ready for the trip.
Then I came across a segment of the fan base that pretty much disgusts me.
The posting was entitled “The EagleBank Bowl is pretty much a made for TV game” and the poster went on to say that because “it’ll be too cold and I’m all alone I’ll be watching this game on TV.”
Cripes.
I’m going all by myself and it’ll be just as cold for me. Fifty percent or so of the people I know going to this game will be making the trip alone and I’m guessing it will be just as cold for them, too. I know at least four guys driving up to the game from Florida and my guess is that it will be colder for them than all of us.
It’s almost fitting that fate would place the Owls in the town of Obama because, for Temple, this matchup is all about hope.
Hope that Temple’s football program has arrived to the point it can beat a name BCS school.
Hope that Temple can prove to the nation its fans care.
We’ll find out both Tuesday. The Owls must win and they must prove to be a big-time draw.
Conferences are realigning as we speak and nothing would be a better 1-2 punch to the nation that Temple has arrived than winning the game on the field and in the stands. It’ll be on national TV. This is a dress rehearsal for the big time in more ways than one.

“Yes, Virginia, there is an EagleBank Bowl. And yes, Temple will play UCLA there on Dec. 29.
Is it just another meaningless bowl? Yes… Will it be the most beautiful football game I’ve ever witnessed? Yes.”
_Todd Stanford, The Daily Item, Dec. 23d, 2009
(Temple grad)

The guy, any guy, who pretends to be a Temple fan and can’t even get off his ass to get on a train or a Greyhound Bus or thumb a ride to get down there is really not a Temple fan at all.
This is a time for all Temple fans to answer the Clarion call.
The Temple fan base isn’t big enough that we can afford to have even one of the “hardcore base” sit at home and watch the game on TV and I don’t care how cold it is. I’ve always said and I think I’m right that Temple has a hardcore base of 15K and a softcore group of 20K.
In D.C., the entire hardcore base is required to be there and, on top of that, an urgent appeal is being made to many of the softcore fans as well.
In my mind, Temple has two magic numbers to reach to impress people across the nation on Tuesday.
They must draw more than 28,786 (what Navy and Wake Forest drew last year) and they must have more points than UCLA at the end.
I know the football team can hold up its part of the bargain.
The time has come for the fans to do the same.

T minus 1 week: Are you ready for some BOWL football?


I want to see a crowd this big at RFK Tuesday night, wearing all Cherry and White.


Free tickets

ESPN’s Harry Mayes (left) will give away free trips (transportation and tickets) to the Eagle Bank Bowl. Listen at 12:45 and call in to 97.5 The Fan
Tuesday and Wednesday

By Mike Gibson

I had to laugh when I read in the Atlantic City Press this week that “this UCLA team might be better than the Cal team Temple faced in the Garden State Bowl.”
It was written by someone who did nothing to support her claim other than throw that opinion out there.
I wondered if she was going to use one fact to back it up but, instead, she went onto the next random baseless thought.
First of all, I respect this UCLA team.
I’ve read up on this UCLA team.
To paraphrase Lloyd Bensten, I knew Cal 1979 and you, UCLA 2009, are no Cal 1979.
This UCLA team is good, but the Cal team the Owls beat in the Garden State Bowl was better.
That Cal team was 25 points away from being unbeaten prior to facing Temple.
That’s not many points.
This UCLA team is 83 points away from an unbeaten season.
That Cal team beat three teams with six or more wins.
That Cal team lost to then No. 1 USC (and eventual Rose Bowl champ) by just 10 points.
This UCLA team while good, doesn’t have those kinds of credentials.
Still, this is a huge challenge for the Owls and the best team they will face since the Penn State game. That didn’t go well because the Owls got atrocious quarterback play in that game. Other than Vaughn Charlton hitting James Nixon in the hands for what should have been a 70-yard touchdown, they got no (zero, nada) plays from the quaterback position in that game. Heck, even against Eastern Michigan (Eastern Michigan, for cripes sake) they were 1 for 9 on third downs. That all comes back to the quarterback position and making plays.
You’ve got to get more from your quarterback to win games against a quality team.
I think these Owls will have to get exceptional quarterback play to beat this team.

Cal Bears 1979
9/8 @ *Arizona State (6-6) W 17 9
9/15 @ *Arizona (6-5-1) W 10 7
9/22 vs. San Jose State (6-4-1) W 13 10
9/29 vs. Michigan (8-4) L 10 14
10/6 @ *Oregon (6-5) L 14 19
10/13 vs. *Oregon State (1-10) W 45 0
10/20 @ *UCLA (5-6) L 27 28
10/27 vs. *Southern California (11-0-1) L 14 24
11/3 vs. *Washington (9-3) L 24 28
11/10 @ *Washington State (3-8) W 45 13
11/17 @ *Stanford (5-5-1) W 21 14
12/15 vs. Temple (10-2) L 17 28 @ East Rutherford, NJ Garden State Bowl
6-6-0
UCLA Bruins 2009
Sep. 5 San Diego St. W 33-14
Sep. 12 at Tennessee W 19-15
Sep. 19 Kansas State W 23-9
Oct. 3 at Stanford L 16-24
Oct. 10 Oregon L 10-24
Oct. 17 California L 26-45
Oct. 24 at Arizona L 13-27
Oct. 31 at Oregon State L 19-26
Nov. 7 Washington W 24-23
Nov. 14 at Wash. St. W 43-7
Nov. 21 Arizona State W 23-13
Nov. 28 at USC L 7-28
Dec. 29 vs. Temple 4:30pm

They have before.

I think Chester Stewart gave them exceptional quarterback play in the Akron game when he and Bernard Pierce helped put up 56 points.
Stewart’s handoffs established Pierce as a big-time threat, then he played off the fear of Pierce with play-action passes all over the field to Temple’s other playmakers.
Make no mistake about it.
Temple’s got other playmakers.
James Nixon. Joey Jones. Jason Harper. Evan Rodriguez. Steve Manieri. Michael Campbell. Delano Green.
All these guys (with the possible exception of Manieri, sorry Steve) can do special things with the ball after the catch if the Owls are able to complete the intermediate and long passes.
They’ll need something like that. Not the 56 points, but that kind of QB play to win this game. Spread the ball around and hit the play-action passes. Keep moving the ball around the field, not just relying on Pierce. Don’t use Pierce on the first two downs and put yourself in situations where everybody in the stadium knows you are going to throw the ball on third.
These are simple, basic football idioms that offensive coordinator Matt Rhule proved he could master at Akron.
The Akron game gave Rhule a workable template of an offensive game plan. The Owls used it effectively in a 47-13 win over Kent State, but were forced away from it when Pierce got injured.
I’d like to see Rhule go back with the very same game plan he used against Akron. By establishing Pierce, then spreading the ball around, you make Pierce that much more effective when you go back to him.
But to say this UCLA team is or “might be” better than that California team is pulling something out of your backside that has no resemblance to the facts.
That Cal team had six wins.
This UCLA team has six wins.
That Temple team had nine wins.
This Temple team has nine wins.
The similarities with this game and that one ends right there.
The opportunity for Temple to gain respect nationally with a win on the field and a good showing in the stands is the same and that’s important enough.

Nova’s Talley: Temple was best team we faced all year

Not an empty seat in the background … of the Garden State Bowl.
Dec. 29th is the most important date in Temple sports history.
Not just Temple football.
Temple sports, period.
Not because of what the football team might do that day, but because of what YOU might do.
Yeah, you.
If you ever cared about Temple University or care about the future of Temple sports, you will be in the stands on Tuesday, Dec. 29th.
We all can’t be Bill Cosby and donate millions to the university.
We all can’t be Dennis Alter and write out a $15 million check to build the best business school in the nation.


Andy Talley with his daughter, Gina.

Enemy/friend Quote of The Day


“Make no mistake about it. We were lucky … lucky … to beat Temple. Let’s not fool ourselves.”
_ national championship coach and person Andy Talley, Villanova coach, in a CAA conference call
and ….
“I knew Temple had a very special team. We thought they would be the best team we saw all year. In hindsight they were.”
_ Talley from post-game press conference after 23-21 win over 14-0 Montana

But we all can bring $30 or $50 to the Liacouras Center today and walk away with ducats in hand for the game on Dec. 29th.
If we work, and 90 percent of us do, we all can take a personal day that day or trade that day for another day.
We can all buy an Amtrak ticket.
If we can’t afford that, we can all get to a Greyhound Bus station.
We can all drive down I-95 for two hours.
We all can do that.
And we all should.
Imagine the reaction of the nation watching IF all they see is a packed RFK Stadium (it holds 46,000 for football under its new configuration) wearing mostly Cherry and White?
It sure would open up a lot of doors to the university’s sports teams that were previously closed.
The Big East, for example, might extend an all-sports invitation on, say, Dec. 30th.
That’s how much of an impact a huge Temple crowd would have.
The football Owls would also have their pick of bowls next year because Owl fans have proven they can and will travel.
Today, Dec. 18th, is pretty important, too.
It’s the day the tickets for the Eagle Bank Bowl have arrived at the Liacouras Center.
Ticket office workers are busy ripping them apart and sorting them for mailing.
I will be there sometime this afternoon.
If I have to wait in line to get my two ducats (I’m buying one for myself and donating one back to the student pile), it will be a great day.
If I walk into RFK Stadium and see 46,000 Temple fans, that will be the greatest day ever.
These kids and this university deserves it.
Beating UCLA would be the icing on this delicious cake.

Coach Golden tells Cincy to pound sand



No better time to turn the two Josephs and John Haley loose on the QB than now.
John Haley Photo by Ryan Porter, courtesy Porterhouse Productions

Enemy Quote of Day
“I hear Temple runs the ball a lot. … They’re like 23rd in the country in rushing, I hope they run the ball every play. I’ll be waiting.”
_UCLA linebacker Reggie Carter in today’s Los Angeles Times


Somewhere between the time coach Al Golden told Cincinnati to pound sand (well, sort of) and now, Temple’s football team first practiced at the Eagles’ facility for two days last week to get away from the inclement weather.
“The Eagles were good enough to let us do that,” Golden said last week at the bowl party.
Hopefully, defensive coordinator Mark D’Onofrio rifled through Sean McDermott’s drawers on the way out and stole the book that the late Jimmy Johnson wrote on blitzing.
If the Owls are serious about winning and not just making a good showing on Dec. 29, they will blitz UCLA from the opening introductions until the closing gun. Coach D’Onofrio had a reputation as an aggressive, crazy, no-holds-barred linebacker at PSU. I like that trait in my linebackers and my defensive coordinators. This year, though, for some reason I don’t understand, D’Onofrio has orchestrated a conservative, bend-but-don’t-break approach on defense.
UCLA has a very capable quarterback, freshman Kevin Prince, who is battling a shoulder injury right now.
Go get him and put him down hard and often.
Bring violence to the football.
People who read this blog know my philosophy of defensive football is a mind meld of Johnson’s.
If you can’t get to the quarterback with four, send five. If you can’t get to him with six, send seven. If you can’t get to him with seven, send eight.
Blitz early and often to send a message to UCLA offensive coordinator Norm Chow that we’re not staying back in our base defense and getting picked apart like we did against good quarterbacks from Villanova, Miami and Ohio.
Surely Chow, a smart guy, will be dissecting Temple film and come to the conclusion that the Owls like to sit back in coverage rather than come after the quarterback.
What he won’t see is a whole lot of blitzing.
Even though rush end Adrian Robinson leads the MAC in sacks, he’ll need all the help he can get against UCLA.
I’ll stop only at sending eight, because I believe Dominique Harris, Marquis Liverpool and Kee-Ayre Griffin have the talent to keep anything that breaks in front of them.
I believe a blitzing scheme is perfectly suited to the personnel Temple currently employs on defense.
The Owls have terrific run-stopping linebackers in Peanut Joseph, Alex Joseph and John Haley specifically. But those guys also have the speed and the nastiness necessary in chasing down a quarterback and either making the tackle, stripping the ball or forcing an interception.
They are not great at pass coverage, so why not sic these dogs on the quarterback instead?
That’s what I’m talking about.
Hopefully, D’Onofrio smells meat and goes in for the kill on Prince, changing the Owls’ scheme to where nine guys line up at scrimmage and either fake the blitz or go for the kill on every passing down.
I vote for going for the kill.
Think about it.

D’Onofrio had a reputation as an aggressive, crazy, no-holds-barred linebacker at PSU. I like that trait in my linebackers and my defensive coordinators. This year, though, for some reason I don’t understand, D’Onofrio has orchestrated a conservative, bend-but-don’t-break approach on defense

Over your years of watching football, what decides games more than any other factor?
Turnover ratio.
You can hope the other team fumbles or throws the ball between the two numbers on your jerseys or you can force them to do it.
Nothing puts fear in a quarterback’s eyes and the ball up for grabs more than a collapsing pocket.
Nothing collapses the pocket like a blitz.
“I’ve tried (throwing) but I’m not at the stage where it’s really comfortable,” Prince said.
The whole idea is making Prince feel uncomfortable. His stats are the best of any UCLA quarterback (157 completions in 277 attempts for 1,827 yards, six touchdowns and seven interceptions). There’s a huge dropoff in his backup, Kevin Craft (60 for 107 for 722 yards, two touchdowns and three interceptions).
The game plan shouldn’t be that complicated to develop and put into practice the next couple of weeks.
It’s one word.
Blitz.
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