When playing Temple, pray

By Mike Gibson
The following story appeared in Sports Illustrated after Temple’s 13th-straight win in 1974.
Written by Ray Kennedy, it was entitled, When playing Temple, Pray.
It might not be long before the folks on the Owls’ schedule adopt that motto once again.
The comparisons between the way Wayne Hardin built a program that won at the time was a national-best 14 straight games _ only a missed chip shot field goal at the buzzer prevented them from winning 15 or more straight games _ and the way Al Golden is building the program now are eerily similar.
Here are some of the quotes from that SI story:

Forget all that old business about desire, dedication and do or die. Temple ‘s Wayne Hardin has hit on a new formula that seems as simple as it is surefire. Take one heavy dose of loneliness. Mix well with a dash of rejection and disillusionment. Stir in a few assorted longings—for a clean pair of socks, say, a cold beer or a faraway girl friend—and presto! You’ve got a 13-game winning streak.

Or ….

“You don’t have to go far away to grow up. You can live on campus like I did. There won’t be any parents here bugging you. And whenever you want to you can shoot home for a good meal, hit dad for a couple of bucks and, what was very important for me, drop off a bag of laundry. Your parents have raised you for 18 years and they love you, and they deserve to see you play. You run off somewhere where nobody knows you, and that won’t be possible.” Then, eyes narrowing and voice lowering, he will plant the seed. “You’ll get homesick, too. And believe me that’s a baaad sickness.”

Hardin’s formula, and apparently Golden’s, is based on simple geography: Draw a 90-mile circle around Philadelphia and keep that talent mostly home, with occasional excursions elsewhere.
It worked before.
It now appears to be Golden’s working template, too.

Click on the above image for Temple tickets

"How’s Temple going to do this year?"

By Mike Gibson
One of my New York friends, a guy who loves the Yankees named Frank, asked me what is turning into a yearly question the other day.
He usually asks “How’s Temple going to do” but this year phrased it differently.
“How many wins is Temple going to have this year?” Frank asked.
“Seven,” I said.
“SEVEN?” he asked, incredulously. “They haven’t had seven wins total in the last seven years combined!”
(That’s not quite true but it’s what Frank and so many fans believe.)
“Seven,” I said again. “Check back with me in December.”
Now Frank is a very good sports fan, a Giants’ fan as well as a Yankee fanatic.
Strangely, he’s adopted Temple football over the years and has become a closet Owl follower. He went to Pace University and his wife went to Temple.
He pretty much knows everything about every baseball team.
He’ll tell me how many homers Ryan Howard, one of his fantasy players, needs to hit this week so that his team can advance.
On the front porch of his summer place near mine in the Poconos he has a sign that says “Mickey Mantle Way.”
A good, solid, sports fan with impeccable credentials. Yet he shook his head when I said seven.
I meant eight, but I said seven because I didn’t want to hear him follow me in his golf cart yelling while I was jogging and trying to listen to Mike and the Mad Dog at the same time.
Eight, I’m saying now.
I’d love to get greedy and have nine, 10 or 11, but I’ll settle for eight and consider seven OK.
As I turned the bend and rounded the road in the direction of the Blue Ridge Country Club, I thought Frank was pretty typical of the informed sports fan around the country, the kind of guy who just can’t picture Temple winning seven games.
Well, for the first time in nearly a generation, some informed fans and pundits are picking Temple to win seven games. One ESPN insider wrote as much. Athlon’s College football preview also predicted the Owls to win seven games.
Bright, intelligent, objective, people.
They could have chose any team to win seven games.
They chose Temple.
And they don’t see the world through Cherry and White-colored glasses.
You really have to know college football to pick the Owls to win seven games. In fact, you’d really have to be a hardcore college football junkie.

    Here are my simple reasons:

  • 1. Temple really won five games last year. The loss to Big East co-champ Connecticut was a well-documented travesty. Only some UConn fans really believe the myth perpetuated by some that Bruce Francis was juggling the ball. In fact, MAC officials used the side angle those same UConn fans claim showed Francis juggled it to support their apology to the Owls saying their officials got it wrong.
    The MAC officials viewed the play from every conceivable angle, including the Hartford TV station reverse angle, and came to the inescapable conclusion that BF had both the ball and possession. In fact, the ball clung to Francis’ hands so snugly that some claimed he must have had a sticky, glue-like, substance on those gloves.
    Bobble my ass.
    Period, end of story.
  • 2. Temple played the second half of the season without its MVP, quarterback Adam DiMichele. He’s back and better than ever. Check out the scrolling quote of the day on the sidebar of this blog. With DiMichele, the Owls beat UConn and later won three straight games, including a one-touchdown win over a Miami team that beat Syracuse, which beat Louisville (who also, by the way, beat UConn but that’s another travesty for another day). Temple led, 24-7, and physically manhandled Miami before the Redhawks came back to make the score respectable.
    You really have to know
    college football
    to pick the Owls
    to win seven games.
    In fact,
    you’d really have to be
    a hardcore college football
    junkie.
  • 3. Temple won those five games with just 64 scholarship players. This class brings the Owls up to NCAA norms.
  • 4. Temple recruited the best class in the MAC for the third straight year. It’s going to show up on the field. It has to.
  • 5. Temple is now strong in areas where it was weak last season (running back, offensive line) and stronger in areas where it was strongest last season. Remarkably, over the last few days, the Owls picked up a BC recruit, Eric Reynolds, who was considered the No. 1 high school running back in Pennsylvania last season. He might not be good enough to start and I’m serious because in Joe Jones, a kid from Florida who had to sit out a year with an injury, the Owls may have a future pro.
  • 6. Temple had the No. 1 overall defense in the MAC last season. Temple had the No. 1 red zone defense in the country last season. No. 1. Everybody is back from that defense.

I told Frank seven wins because he’s a doubting Thomas for now.
Much like the rest of the unwashed college football country.
That’s OK, though.
It’s going to make those of us who don’t doubt look all that much better once we get a helluva Christmas present under that tree.
Two tickets to a bowl game.
It’s going to happen.
At Temple.

Temple-UConn now a training film

Happy Birthday to Temple’s favorite Yankee Doodle Dandy, Al Golden, July 4, 1969



By Mike Gibson
One of the surprising things about my cabin near the lake in the Poconos is the people I meet.
One of my good friends over the years, who shall remain nameless, was the supervisor of officials for what used to be known as Division IAA.
That’s the division that includes Delaware and Villanova and the like.
Every summer he regales me of stories about going to Lehigh and supervising his officials.
Entertaining, funny, stuff.
In turn, I regale him about my years of following Temple football.
Stuff funny to him, not so funny to me.
The guy is from Boston, so he knows Jack Cramer, the official who screwed Temple football in last year’s game.
The day after, he saw me jogging by his house.
“Mike, I saw the film, you guys got screwed,” my friend said. “The incredible thing is that I know Jack. He’s really a nice guy, but a Boston guy. If things are even, he’s going to give the New England team a break.”
“Tell me about it,” I said.
“I saw it from both sides on Hartford TV,” he said. “The kid (Bruce Francis) had possession and the ball clearly inbounds.”
“I knew that,” I said, “but thanks anyway.”
Now, I’m told by another friend who happens to be an official, that the end of the game against UConn is showing up in their pre-season briefings.
“Mike, I got to tell you, you are a training film for BCS now,” he said. “We’re training the replay guys. A situation like yours, we’re saying overturn the play.”
The MAC, he said, sent the game film in to the officials upon request.
“The MAC guys (officials) said the play happened too fast to call on the field,” he said. “They said something like that should have been caught. We agree. We’re telling our officials, including Jack, that was enough visual evidence to overturn. It’s a big part of their training now.”
Geez, thanks, I said.
I’m sure Bruce Francis would be thrilled but we plan on putting the game away Sept. 6 by the third quarter.
Or at least the first couple of minutes of the final quarter.
“Good luck,” he said.
“I don’t think we’ll need it,” I said. “There will be 30,000 angry full-throtted Temple fans who will make sure the officials, both on the field and the replay booth, know they can’t do that again.”
It’s up to every Temple fan or alum or any person who cares about Temple or Philadelphia to make my prediction come true.

We’re back … at least some of us are

By Mike Gibson
This is about as good a time as ever to resume posts on Temple Football Forever.
We’ve taken a hiatus since the Cherry and White game because, quite frankly, there hasn’t been much news about the program since then.

Much doesn’t mean none, though, and we are pleased to note that Adrian Robinson, a Temple-bound linebacker, was the first Owl to ever earn an MVP at the prestigious Big 33 game.
Tonight, Al Golden appeared on the radio to drum up more interest.
Late last December, I wrote a post Golden needing to build some walls of trust with his Temple fans.
AG has spent the months since making two west coast plane trips seeking the UCLA job doing just that.
He could have rested on a significant recruiting class, but he worked tirelessly to add some needed recruits after the Feb. signing date, including someone, Kee-Ayre Griffin, who I feel has a 50-50 chance to be a dynamite opening-day starting tailback. If Griffin doesn’t earn the job, it will be because Joe Jones went through the summer completely healthy.

Bring back Burma Shave

I was thinking about the crisis in Myanmar today and I got sidetracked.
Suddenly, I thought about Burma.
Burma Shave, to be specific.
Somebody came up a terrific idea on one of the Temple message boards around the time of the Pennsylvania primary.
They saw all of the political signs for Obama and Hillary and Dougherty and Farnese on lawns all over the tri-state area and the guy said, “Wouldn’t it be great to have signs that say simply, ‘Temple Football’ and stick it right there on our front lawns?”
Yes it would.
It’s that kind of out-of-the-box thinking that we all need to brainstorm in the few months we have to the opener.
The mission: Fill Lincoln Financial Field with as many fans as we can.
Each of us has to do our part.
Since I didn’t have or couldn’t find a sign that said “Temple Football” I placed my “Let’s Go Temple” cardboard sign on a stick and planted it on my lawn.
It’s still there.
You could probably google map my house and see it, if you knew where I lived.
This Myanmar thing, though, came straight out of the sky.
Or at least off the front pages of Yahoo News.
Myanmar used to be known as Burma.
When I was a kid, there’d be Burma Shave signs on the sign of the road.
Funny, clever, poetry designed to have you buy the product.
Or at least think about it.
I’m not a poet, but something along the lines of justice and how it will be served on Sept. 9 could be a good place to start.
There’s no justice
People say
Justice prevails
Say others;
We’ll find out on Sept. 6
Temple football

Wouldn’t something along those lines look great on the road to the shore this summer?

"Get your work done"

I’ve never been as big a fan of Cherry and White Days as my fellow Owl fans.
During the leanest of years, the Cherry team and the White team would both look good and there would be the usual optimism abounding.
I always looked at this through the Prism of two colors.
Cherry and White.
That is, whatever good was coming at the expense of something bad.
Player X would make a good move and score a touchdown because player Y missed a tackle.
My friend, Chief J, would be the pessimist.
“Another losing season,” he would say.
I’d take the skeptical approach.
“Get back to me when we do this against somebody else,” I said.
I would love, for example, us to scrimmage a Rutgers or a Villanova so I could put the spring game in some kind of context.
Right now, the football context is limited.
The best part about the day is the fellowship among Owl fans who haven’t been together since November.
Sure, some players looked good today and that’s really the biggest positive to come out of a spring game.
Former Owls’ coach Bruce Arians used to preach something to the team before every practice.
“Get your work done today,” he said, “and you’ll do good things Saturday.”
That’s what Cherry and White and what this whole month was all about.
That’s what the month of August will be about and the months leading up to August.
Get your work done.
I’ll be a lot more excited about the trip to Army, especially to see a 100 percent Joe Jones and a 100 percent Adam DiMichele and in a meaningful game for the first time in a long time.
I promise.

Temple-UConn II: Get your popcorn ready

By Mike Gibson
Last year, it was Wayne Hardin’s shoe leather.
This year, it’s Fran Duffy’s video artistry.
Duffy is about 60 years Hardin’s junior but his work will help pack the Linc, much like Hardin’s work did.



Fran Duffy


Duffy’s brilliant work is this video (above, click once or twice on the center of the icon). The two minutes has everything.
Drama.
Pathos.
Conspiracy. See Big East.
Motive. See Big East replay official.
Incredulity. See Big East replay official turn blind eye.
Justice expected.
Justice denied.
With all due respect to coach Hardin’s tireless efforts _ stopping in every TV station, answering every radio and newspaper request for stories on his guarantee of filling Lincoln Financial Field, this ought to put even more fannies in the seats than Hardin’s record crowd did a year ago.
Justice.
Every Temple fan who was outraged at the injustice done in East Hartford last year should make plans to come to the home opener at Lincoln Financial Field.
Even those Temple fans who weren’t outraged (and who might that be?) should be there, too, because they are going to see a football team playing with a fire and determination fueled by a monumental injustice
done to them a year ago.
I can’t see how UConn can match that emotion.
It’s going to be fun to watch.
As former Owl wide receiver Phil Goodman once said: “Get your popcorn ready. It’s going to be a show.”
Or was that Terrell Owens?
It doesn’t matter.
Last year it was about Justice with a capital J.
This year, it’s about retribution with a capital R.

Temple announces 2008 schedule

Temple fans were smiling after three straight wins last year
Season tickets: Call 215-204-8499 or visit http://www.owlstix.com.



By Mike Gibson
First-time reporters used to ask Wayne Hardin what kind of offense he ran at Temple.
That usually came after three hours of scratching their heads in the press box trying to figure it out.
Hardin’s offense was a little Houston Veer, a little triple option, a little pro set.
You would likely see anything, from a shovel pass, to a delayed draw to a throwback pass and everything in between.
When teams expected the Owls to go here, he went there.
Hardin had a stock answer for those reporters.
“It’s what I call a smorgasboard offense,” he would say. “You know, like the food on a smorgasboard, a little of this, a little of that and a little of everything.”
That’s how I would describe the 2008 Temple football schedule released today.
It’s got a little bit of everything to whet the palette of Owls’ fans.
Want revenge?
You’ve got it when UConn comes to town on Sept. 9.
How about a win over an in-state rival?
Then make the trip to Happy Valley to see the Adam DiMichele Owls take on Penn State.
In the mood to win a championship?
Then go to any of the MAC games, home or away.
Maybe even the Owls will carry the non-BCS banner into some big January bowl game, much like Hawaii did a year ago.
We can only hope.

Revisting the Garden State Bowl

Coach Wayne Hardin and the Owls hoist bowl trophy
By Mike Gibson
Got a note the other day from Kevin Duckett, the former Temple halfback for the 10-2 Garden State Bowl team.
He was responding to the adjective I used that best described his running style.
“Nobody’s ever called me a slippery halfback before,” Duckett wrote. “Thanks for remembering my playing days.”
I thought about Kevin Duckett and that 1979 team a lot in the last couple of days. There’s a whole generation of Temple fans who don’t understand just how good that team was or how close it was to finishing 12-0 against the 18th toughest schedule in the country.

    Here are just a couple of the many highlights:

  • A systematic dissection of West Virginia in the opener at Mountaineer Field, 38-16, turning what had been a howling sellout mob of 52,956 in the first quarter into complete silence resembling a library for the final three quarters;
  • Kicking the living crap out of a bowl-bound Syracuse team, 49-17, that had future NFLers in wide receiver Art Monk, running back Joe Morris and quarterback Bill Hurley.
  • A 10-9 loss to a top 10 Pitt team.
  • Leading, 7-6, at halftime on the road against a top 20 Penn State team before falling, 22-7.
    Just two losses, one by a single point.
    So close to perfection at football’s highest level.
    So much so that I went into the library and found the AP story on the Garden State Bowl win over a good California team.
    It follows here:

    EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP)- Perhaps they should change the terminology to the “Wild, Wild East” and the “Mild, Mild West.” The Owls of Temple University struck another blow for much-maligned Eastern football Saturday with a decisive 28-17 victory over the University of California in the second annual Garden State Bowl.
    It was Cal’s worst setback of the season- the Golden Bears lost to third-ranked Southern California by only 24-14- and gave the East four triumphs in six games against the Pacific-10 Conference this season.

    “The East-West thing added fuel to the fire,” Temple running back Mark Bright conceded. “On the way to the game, I. was reading a West Coast paper in which their coach compared us to Washington State. I left the paper on the bus.”
    The Owls didn’t leave much else on the bus en route to their first postseason appearance in 45 years. They scored on their first three possessions, including two touchdown runs by Kevin Duckett, and then rammed the ball down Cal’s throat with an impressive six-minute clinching touchdown drive in the final period after blowing most of an early 21-0 advantage.
    Cal Coach Roger Theder had made some remarks about Temple in recent weeks that were interpreted as less than complimentary. But, Theder said Saturday, “I never said anything about Temple except that they were a good football team. We knew we had our work cut out for us. If this is Eastern football, then it’s pretty good.”
    Temple’s Wayne Hardin agreed with that assessment.
    “Our kids carried a banner they’ve never carried before,” he said. “People have looked down on us in the past, but I felt today we could represent Eastern football. We couldn’t prove Eastern football was great, but we proved it’s not bad, either. There are four Eastern teams in bowl games and I hope we started them outright.”
    Duckett capped drives of 67 and 50 yards with scoring runs of 8 and 4 yards and Bryan Broomell flipped a 7-yard touchdown pass to Wiley Pitts as the 20th-ranked Owls stormed to a 21-0 first-period lead over the penalty-plagued Golden Bears.
    After California climbed to within 21-17, Broomell clinched the victory with a 5-yard touchdown pass to Gerald Lucear, capping a 78-yard march with 6:47 remaining.
    California’s 11 regular-season opponents had managed only a total of 20 first-period points, but Temple even had a chance to score again when Guy Peters recovered a fumble by Paul Jones at the Cal 27-yard-line with 25 seconds left in the opening quarter.
    The Owls reached the 9-yard-line before they were thrown back and Ron Fioravanti’s 32-yard field-goal attempt sailed wide. That gave the Bears some momentum and they dominated the second period after Ron Hill blocked Casey Murphy’s punt at the 11 less than five minutes into the period.
    Two plays later, Rich Campbell lobbed a 12-yard touchdown pass to Matt Bouza, and five minutes later he fired a 14-yard TD pass to Gerald Rose. But Cal’s other scoring after that came on Mick Luckhurst’s 34-yard field goal at 2:10 of the final period.
    The victory enabled Temple to finish its season with, a 10-2 mark, the most triumphs in the school’s history. Cal wound up 6-6 and took its worst setback after suffering its five regular season defeats by a total of 24 points.
    The sunny, 40-degree weather helped attract 55,493 fans to 76,000-seat Giants Stadium. That satisfied bowl officials who were disappointed in last year’s turnout of 30,332 who saw Arizona State defeat Rutgers 34-18 in the 1978 inaugural. Each team will receive at least $225,000 compared to last year’s $166,000 payoff.
    With Campbell hitting his first three passes for 44 yards, Cal marched from its 20 to the Temple 32 before Luckhurst missed a 49-yard field goal try. It was all Temple for the rest of the period as Cal turned into the Bad News Bears.
    The Owls went 67 yards in 10 plays for their first touchdown, including a 17-yard pass from Broomell to Lucear and a 14-yard inside reverse by Duckett, who scored on the same play with 5:43 gone.
    It was 14-0 less than 4 minutes later after a 50-yard drive that included a 23-yard scramble by Broomell and a 15-yard run by Mark Bright, who carried 19 times for 112 yards despite being shaken up twice. Bright was named the game’s outstanding player.
    The key play on Temple’s third touchdown drive, which covered 53 yards in eight plays, was a 19-yard pass from Broomell to Lucear.
    After Luckhurst’s field goal sliced the Temple lead to four points, the Owls ground out 78 yards in 14 plays and ate up almost six minutes before Broomell’s second touchdown pass.
    Campbell, who finished with 25 completions in 38 attempts for 241 yards, rallied Cal in the second period but threw incomplete passes from the Temple 8- and 29-yard lines in the final three minutes of the game.


    Duckett was the slippery halfback, a guy who you’d get a hand on for one second and then you’d find yourself with two empty hands the next.
    The little bit I’ve seen of current Owl Joe Jones reminds me a lot of Kevin Duckett.
    As Bill Parcells might say, that’s a good thing, not a bad thing.
    Duckett had a role to play, but so did everybody else. Brian Broomell was a quarterback who led the nation in passing efficiency. Mark Bright was a hard-charging, old-style, between-the-tackles, fullback.
    All were from the Philadelphia area. Duckett, Northeast High. Bright, William Tennent. Broomell, Sterling.
    Joe Paterno called the Temple offensive line the best he faced as a coach.
    The defense was intimidating.
    I responded to Kevin Duckett thusly:
    “You were pretty slippery on that 76-yard touchdown run at Penn State,” I said.
    As he was throughout that magical season.
    On the eve of a current Temple football team that promises to give this generation of fans a whole set of new memories, Duckett and that team deserves to be remembered.