Deja Vu All Over Again

SCOTUS judge Potter Stewart said “I know obscenity when when I see it” and this is obscenity.

Like many of my tailgate buddies for many years, I met a couple of future good friends in front of Veterans Stadium one day long before Temple Football Forever was ever conceived or before I even wore Temple swag to the games.

I was wearing an “Upper Bucks YMCA” sweatshirt and they were from Upper Black Eddy, which I only knew as the Upper Bucks’ home of then National League baseball President Bill White. (I knew Bill because he was one of our biggest local celebrities and I worked for the local newspaper at the time.)

My newest friend at that time pointed to the sweatshirt, I explained the connection (I lived in Quakertown at the time), talked a little Bill White and The Riegelsville Inn and we became fast Temple tailgate buddies for maybe 30 years now, if not more.

The last year Temple played at The Vet, both of us would point to the stadium going up across the street and say: “We need to get into that stadium next year.” We did.

I only remember this story because he said his wife said something last week: “This reminds me of the Ron Dickerson Years.”

Hmm, I thought. This season sounds and feels very Ron Dickersonish. She might have had a point. I looked it up and found a gem of a tweet from a guy named Hayden.

I’m sure Hayden means “following the week 3 win, not loss” but his point is well-taken here.

Just by crunching the numbers, a Temple football season hasn’t been THIS BAD since Ron Dickerson was the head coach.

This is even worse than the 20-game losing streak Bobby Wallace left Temple first-year head coach Al Golden, who by some miracle, was able to beat a Bowling Green team in his first year that dropped a 70-burger on Wallace in consecutive years.

Stevie Wonder could see the 1-11 Owls improve in that first year under Golden. Superman with X-ray vision cannot see the 2-6 Owls improve in this second year under Stan Drayton. They were 3-9 last year. It will now take a miracle to achieve a third-straight 3-9 season. You fire a 3-9 coach and pay off $6 million of his contract to go forward and not sideways.

Right now, this is going backward.

This is almost a carbon copy of the 1994 Temple season and that’s historically bad.

Who to blame?

x

Certainly not the players. They returned 15 starters from a team that was competitive in many more games in 2022 than 2023. They hired a defensive coach who has no idea how to stop a modern offense after having a defensive coach who was competent enough to be hired by the Philadelphia Eagles.

Do you think Everett Withers has a chance to be hired by the Philadelphia Eagles next season?

I think even the Rockledge Eagles might pass on his services if he became available.

The 1994 season was one where Dickerson resigned on the spot following a 53-52 loss to Pitt, only to renege on the resignation a couple of days later. Temple had a 4th and 2 at midfield at Pitt Stadium only to go for it, give the Panthers a short field and see them score a last-second touchdown. Had the Owls merely punted there, Pitt would have had to go the length of the field with 52 seconds left no timeouts.

A lot of people are blaming the NIL and transfer portal for Drayton’s failures this season but I’m not buying it. This season is the result of a bad hire in a key spot. Thirty-four points against UTSA and 26 points against Tulsa should have been enough to win if the defense just performed to last year’s level.

That’s flipping a horrid 2-6 to a representative 4-4.

The fact that Drayton hasn’t fired Withers in this off week is a clear signal he’s willing to go down with the ship rather than plug the holes to save it. That message is received loud and clear not only by Temple fans but his players, the staff and the administration who have to be wondering what the hell is going on here.

Unfortunately, that means we all go down with the ship and if it reminds you of the time you spent shivering in a raft looking at an iceberg 29 years ago before being fished out of the sea then you are correct.

Major props to Mrs. Winkel for pointing out that cold hard fact and to a guy named Hayden Bandel for providing the receipts.

Monday: Navy Week

Helmet change now would be Golden Rhule

The new Western Michigan helmet. I don’t remember what the old one looked like.

Temple helmet records:
T (one year each of Wallace and Golden): 1-22
T (during Berndt and Dickerson): 19-80;
T (during Addazio): 13-11;
Cartoon Owl (seven years under Wallace): 19-60
TEMPLE (final four years of Golden): 26-23
TEMPLE (all of Hardin and Arians): 107-91-3
Total: TEMPLE=133 wins, 114 losses, 3 ties
T=33 wins, 113 losses

Thought it kind of odd that, in the middle of recruiting season, new Western Michigan coach P.J. Fleck introduced a new helmet.
I thought new coaches were in a full-out sprint to firm up and add to recruiting classes and didn’t have time to address a pursuit as trivial (by comparison) as helmets.
Now they do.
I hope Matt Rhule does.
An established tradition at Temple is that a new helmet is solely the call of a new head coach.
Wayne Hardin changed the helmet from the stupid Owl to TEMPLE and the Owls won like never before. Bruce Arians wisely kept the TEMPLE and had the Owls go 6-5 (twice) against a Top 10 national schedule. Try picturing current-day Temple going 6-5 twice against a SEC schedule. That’s pretty much what Arians did.
Jerry Berndt changed the TEMPLE helmet to the T and the Owls promptly went 1-10. Bad Karma.

“The 2007 helmet brings us back to the most successful TEAM period in the history of Temple football.”
_Al Golden

The T took TEMPLE through some awful Ron Dickerson and Bobby Wallace years. Heck, Wallace even changed the helmet to the comedic (joke on us) cartoon Owl for awhile, before ending his tenure with the T.
Al Golden changed all that with some good coaching … and good Karma.
The winning Temple teams that Al Golden remembered had the word TEMPLE on the helmet and he mentioned branding as the reason he changed back to the TEMPLE helmet after his first season.
“There are several reasons for the change,” Golden said. “The first is for our current team to discover our tradition. The 2007 helmet brings us back to the most successful TEAM period in the history of Temple Football; a time that produced a 10-game winner and a final Top 20 ranking in both polls. The second reason is quite simply branding. When I was growing up in New Jersey, Temple’s helmets were unique. It was the most recognizable helmet in the East, let alone the country. Somewhere along the way that got lost, so I wanted to bring it back. The last reason has to do with our overall football operation. Our goal is to be first in every endeavor that we believe impacts our football team. We now feel like we have the best uniform, not only in the MAC, but on the East Coast. We have our brand back and it is here to stay.”

The greatest helmet in the history of college football, IMHO.

The move was universally applauded, especially by ex-Temple players.
I thought that was great and made TEMPLE stand out from other Ts on other helmets, like Tennessee and Tulane.
We all know and love our Temple ‘][‘ but, really, how many non-Temple people located in Idaho or Montana or Washington or even Tennessee can tell that’s a Temple ‘][‘ right away?
Not many, I’d venture to say.
In the grand scheme of things, a helmet change is not all that important but, considering the amount of winning TEMPLE did under the TEMPLE brand and losing under the T brand, I think it’s called for now.
The attitude inside the helmet is much more important than the lettering on the outside, but I’m proud of being from TEMPLE and I think both the T and the TEMPLE branding should be a consideration when designing the new helmet.

There is a King Solomon-like solution here and I hope that Rhule has the wisdom to see it:

Split the baby in half.
Put TEMPLE on one side and the ‘][‘ on the other.
That way you have the branding concerns by marketing taken care of and you salute the greatest helmet era in TEMPLE history by putting it on the other half of the helmet. Heck, having TEMPLE on the other side of the helmet enhances and not detracts, from the ‘][‘ brand because of the constant reminder of what the ‘][‘ stands for on every tackle, interception or touchdown.
You leave no doubt as to what school the T stands for and you have the most unique and best helmet in college football.
Then keep it that way for a long, long time.

Temple Helmet Records

Temple T
Cartoon Owl
TEMPLE
One year Golden=1-11
7 years Wallace=19-60
Hardin (13 years)=80-52-3
One year Wallace=0-11
Arians (5 years)=27-39
Berndt and Dickerson=19-80
Golden=26-23
Two years Addazio=13-11
Total=33 wins, 113 losses
Total=19 wins, 60 losses
Total=107 wins, 91 losses, 3 ties