Great practices Usually Mean Great Results

Being a good listener is a real talent and if you listen to these Matt Rhule press conferences, you’ll learn a lot.

The guy, unlike Andy Reid, actually says things that mean something. Unlike Chip Kelly, he is not a smart-ass.

That said, there are a couple of takeaways from this past press conference and that is the Temple Owls have practiced well. Anyone who has played football will tell you that you are more likely to play the way you practice. If that’s the case, the way the Owls practiced this week has been a good sign. Not only did Matt Rhule say they have practiced well, Tyler Matakevich went on Channel 6 on Tuesday and called it a “great practice.” The other takeaway is that several banged-up Owls will return, but valuable center Kyle Friend will be out for  “a long, long time.” I take that to mean Dec. 5 or the bowl game.

When the Owls take the field on Saturday (7 p.m., CBS Sports Network) against South Florida, the way they have practiced will mean something. This will represent the first chance Temple has to have a sniff at a title since 1967 (Mid-Atlantic East title) and good practices the six days of the week leading up to game day are how it’s done.

Good practices this week mean that the Owls know what they have done for the 364 days leading up to this one mean. The Owls, not South Florida, are the ones who have YouTube videos showing them sprinting in the snow at the E-O. If you do that, then what exactly is Saturday for?

While South Florida will be a formidable foe, they just are another team in the way for the Owls to accomplish the goal they have set out to do. South Florida has a great team with a great tailback in Marlon Mack, but the Owls have experience stopping a better offensive line with a greater tailback in C.J. Prosise.

Hearing that they have practiced well and focused well does not ensure a win, but it certainly does not hurt.

More Temple Football Records Could Go Down

The last (and only) time Temple had a chance to go 9-1 this happened.

The last time Temple had a chance to go 9-1 this happened.

Somewhere, H. Shindle Wingert and Horace Butterworth are smiling.

Depending upon your beliefs, they are floating up on a cloud looking down smiling or decaying skeletons under a load of dirt looking up with a fixed grin.

That’s because, when it comes to football team records at Temple University, they are going to be the only coaches who will still have bragging rights over current head football coach Matt Rhule at the end of this 2015 season.

Horace Butterworth

Horace Butterworth

If the Owls finish strong, they will have the most wins and, perhaps, the fewest losses of any team in Temple football history. They can accomplish one—most wins—by still losing another game,  if they win the Dec. 5 AAC championship game. To accomplish both, they will have to win out and that is the preferable option right now.

Needs two passing, two rushing, touchdowns for records.

Needs two passing, two rushing, touchdowns for records.

Still, the Owls cannot win out without the laser-type focus they have spent on each and every game this season. The hashtags #LeaveNoDoubt and #What’sNext has served them well and, if they follow that mindset, all they should be thinking about is the next game, Saturday, 7 p.m. (CBS Sports Network) at beautiful but at least half-empty Raymond James Stadium against South Florida.

Because the next win will mark the first time the Owls have ever been 9-1 since 1973. The 1979 team went into State College and was a 3.5-point favorite over a Penn State team that would eventually

H. Shindle Wingert

H. Shindle Wingert

finish 8-4. They led, 7-6, at halftime on a 64-yard touchdown run by a slippery halfback named Kevin Duckett. Things fell apart in the second half and the Owls left that stadium 8-2.

In terms of team records, the Owls are already the first team in Temple history to have gone 7-0. Being the first team  to go 9-1 in more than 30 years would be especially sweet because it would clinch the AAC East, which would be the first title of any kind since the Owls won the MAC East in 1967.

While the Owls have bigger goals than that, following the what’s next and leave no doubt processes have delivered some ancillary rewards that they can revel in when the season is over. As far as individual awards, quarterback P.J. Walker is only two touchdown passes away from tying the school record held by “Smiling” Hank (better known as Henry) Burris and two rushing touchdowns from tying Burris’ school record.

That’s fitting because the first time I saw P.J., I said his style of play reminds me more of Henry Burris than any other Temple quarterback and that’s a high compliment indeed.

Harry Shindle Wingert, who went 2-0-1 in 1905, and Horace Butterworth, who went 4-0-2 two years later, can have their perfect seasons if the Owls are able to leave Florida with that historically elusive 9-1 mark.

5 FBS Head Coaches Who Should Have Never Left First Jobs

If Randy Edsall had to do it all over again, he'd probably stay at UConn.

If Randy Edsall had to do it all over again, he’d probably stay at UConn.

Someone made a comment the other day that Matt Rhule could be the Joe Paterno of Temple, creating his own legacy.

Maybe, but I would settle for him being the Ken Niumatalolo of Temple.

newattendance

Niumatalolo has had it right all along. Every year at about this time, suitors from numerous P5 schools ask Niumatalolo’s agent for his interest in moving on up and he always says  “thanks, but no thanks” and realizes that while the money is greener on the P5 side of the college football fence, the grass certainly is not. Niumatalolo is happy in his situation at Navy and has remained there for years and will be there for years to come chiefly because he knows what it takes to win there.

Niumatalolo knows the Navy landscape better than anyone and Rhule has spent nine years memorizing every blade of grass in the Temple landscape.

Being a fan of a G5 team means bracing yourself every year for “talk” of a P5 team poaching your head coach. Smug P5 fans just assume that they can throw enough money and have any G5 coach they want. Niumatalolo has been one of the few exceptions. I have a feeling Rhule is as well, though I’d like to see a stronger proclamation than “I don”t know what the future holds.”

They both have enough money and know from the experience of their colleagues that more money does not necessarily mean more happiness. In many cases, the opposite is true.

If either one leaves, the same thing that happened to these guys can happen to them:

MOBILE, AL - JANUARY 6: Head coach Darrell Hazell of the Kent State Golden Flashes watches the referee while they discuss a penalty during their game against the Arkansas State Red Wolves on January 6, 2013 at Ladd-Peebles Stadium in Mobile, Alabama. At halftime Arkansas State leads Kent State 14-10.(Photo by Michael Chang/Getty Images)

  1. Darrell Hazell, Kent State

The jury might be still out for Darrell Hazell, but it certainly is in final hours of deliberations. Hazell went 11-1 at Kent State before moving onto Purdue. The Boilermakers were just cooked, 48-14, by an Illinois team coming off a 39-0 loss to Penn State. Boilermaker fans were full of hope for Hazell, who followed the 22-27 Danny Hope. Since Hazell is 6-27, any hope Purdue fans had is behind them now.

  1. Randy Edsall, UConnConnecticut v North Carolina

Randy Edsall had the Huskies in the 2010 Fiesta Bowl and his success in Connecticut convinced the state to build a new 40,000-seat stadium in East Hartford, 30 miles from the school. Edsall had that stadium full and won two Big East championships, even beating Notre Dame once, before heading South to what he called his “dream job” in Maryland. That turned into a nightmare and he was fired this year.

Temple v Penn State

  1. Al Golden, Temple

Al Golden came to Temple with a binder on how to build a program from the ground up, applied those principles to the moribund Owls and, after a 1-11 first year, had the Owls in their first bowl game in 30 years. He finished his career 29-26 in his last 55 games. For that kind of success, he could have had a job for life at a grateful Temple. For going 32-25 at Miami, he now finds himself out on the street.

Ball State Cardinals v Buffalo Bulls

  1. Turner Gill, Buffalo

They would have built a statue for Turner Gill had he remained at Buffalo after the 2009 season because that was the season where Gill delivered the Bulls a long-sought-after MAC title. His 2008 season was also good, winning eight games and getting Buffalo to a bowl.  Gill went off to Kansas, where he flopped, and now is trying to hit the reset button on his career at FCS Liberty.

Western Michigan v Ball State

  1. Brady Hoke, San Diego State

Some guys leave perfect jobs once, but Hoke might be one of those rare examples of guys who left perfect jobs twice. Hoke was the right guy for alma mater Ball State, posting a 12-0 regular season in 2008. He made essentially a lateral move to San Diego State, where posted a 9-4 record in 2010, getting him a Michigan job that proved to be over his head.

Tomorrow: Closing in on some Temple records

From Zero to 94 in One Play

Err, make that 2015

Err, make that 2015

Maybe the worst thing that might have happened for Temple in the short term last night against SMU was scoring on the second play of scrimmage because, maybe, the Owls thought this was going to be too easy.

It might also turn out to be the best thing in the, err, long run—the longest in Temple history by a guy who might be the single most talented back in the program. Jager Gardner went from zero to 94 yards in just one play. He had zero yards for the season before that play and finished with 116 yards on just six carries.

At that point, I thought Jagermeister might have remained in the game in order to establish a rhythm, but it became apparent that head coach Matt Rhule had a plan to rotate the running backs. It’s nice to know, though, if something happens, the Owls at at least three—maybe four—deep at an important position.



Love to see the Owls
in a 5-2 with
two-time Pennsylvania
heavyweight wrestling
champion Averee Robinson
lined up over the center
as the nose guard
and having tackles
Matt Ioannidis and
Hershey Walton flanking
him with Sharif Finch
and Praise Martin-Oguike
at the ends.

Somehow, though, I think Gardner is going to be The Guy after Jahad Thomas finishes as The Guy and he showed flashes of that ability on that play. Even though Gardner has appeared in other games, it was for a carry here and there and never enough to establish a rhythm. Maybe next week will be that week in order to give Thomas’ injury more of a rest before Memphis.

As far as the rest of the game, the Owls are going to have to tighten up on defense. Special teams, as well as they’ve played all season, deserve a mulligan for that free kick return. Great job by Tyler Mayes on the fake punt.

After watching the film, the problem on defense appears to be that the Owls had chances to knock down long passes and simply did not even attempt to do it—they allowed that play to Will Fuller to repeat itself. Also, too many three-man rushes. Love to see the Owls in a 5-2 with two-time Pennsylvania heavyweight wrestling champion Averee Robinson lined up over the center as the nose guard and having tackles Matt Ioannidis and Hershey Walton flanking him with Sharif Finch and Praise Martin-Oguike at the ends (Nate D. Smith is hurt). To me, that personnel grouping is best suited to both stop the run and cause havoc in any passing game without blitzing. We’ve seen the 5-2 before, just not enough of it.

Other than that, any time you drop 60 and some people call it escaping with a win is a good time.

Temple-SMU Preview: Next Man Up

The Owls’ biggest opponent tonight will be a hangover from this.

mean

The biggest moment in Temple football history is now over, but not the season, and the carrot at the end of this season is the possibility of an even bigger moment.

That moment will come tonight at SMU (8 p.m., ESPN2) for a handful of players who will be receiving significant playing time for the first time in their Temple careers. One of those players no doubt will be Brendan McGowan, who will be starting for the injured Kyle Friend at center. Another will be the speedy Ryquell Armstead and the equally elusive, if not as speedy, Jager Gardner who will be subbing for Jahad Thomas. Head coach Matt Rhule said Thomas will be available, but with tougher opponents coming up, it might be wise to give those injured ribs one more week of rest.

Sub Maryland for Buffalo and Navy for UMass and this is the league the Owls should be in ... unfortunately, greed has trumped common sense.

Sub Maryland for Buffalo and Navy for UMass and WVA for Army and this is the league the Owls should be in … unfortunately, greed has trumped common sense.

There could be more playing time for a number of backups, like corner Nate Hairston. Suffice it to say, before heading out to the local bar for a game watch or at home in front of the HDTV, have a program handy.

SMU has been gosh awful this season and is coming off a 40-31 loss to perhaps the another bad AAC team (Tulsa). The Mustangs also lost to East Carolina, 49-23. The Owls handled ECU by double-digits two weeks ago.

That should not translate to a 49-23 win or better for two reasons: One, the Owls just do not possess the explosive offense of an ECU and you’ve got to figure there’s a heartbreak hangover coming. Still,  quarterback P.J. Walker is getting better  every week and there is going to be one week where Robby Anderson breaks out and puts three touchdowns on the board.

I think it is this one. Owls, 34-10.

South Florida should be a little tougher in a week and Memphis even more so in two. The focus now should be on the next men up.

Temple did not update the

Temple did not update the “official” depth chart in these game notes for SMU, but you can cross Kyle Friend and Kip Patton off that list and probably one or two others.

Attendance: We’re Here to Cheer for Temple

The only thing that would have made this show better is video of the four PI calls against Temple and the hosts breaking each one down. Hopefully, the intro video gets updated next week.

Other than Matt Rhule trying to jar the team out of their heart-breaking-induced slumber and the number of injuries a war like the one against Notre Dame is bound to produce, there was one other important takeaway from the Matt Rhule Weekly.

Rhule said that while Notre Dame brought a lot of fans that it was “a Temple crowd” and he was right. I would estimate 55-45, Temple fans, and that was confirmed by close observation of the replay on ESPN U on Monday night. More than that, though, the noise was about 85-15, Temple. Several times, Kirk Herbstreit said that Notre Dame is going to have to fight through the crowd noise for Temple. Not once did Herbstreit said that Temple had to do the same. From a crowd standpoint, Temple won the day—from the 9 a.m. ESPN GameDay show, through the tailgate, through the night. It was remarkable feat of endurance.

attendance

This was a home crowd for Temple, just like the Penn State game was a home crowd for the Owls. As impressive as those fans were those two games, they were even more so for the Homecoming Game against Tulane when a crowd in excess of 35,000 nearly completely filled the lower bowl. Tulane might have brought 100 to 200 of those fans, tops.

In fact, the Temple fan experience for the Tulane game was the single best home fan experience I ever had for a Temple game. The three or four waves were impressive, but that paled in comparison to the several very loud renditions of “T for Temple U” that were song by just about every fan after every Temple touchdown. Since the score of that game was 49-10, there was plenty of singing.

In my lifetime, Temple attendance will probably never get any better than this and I’m inhaling this like the downwind scent of a good cigar or burning fall leaves.

Right now, Temple leads the AAC in attendance with an average of 51,252. Memphis (44,381) is second and it looks like the Owls will finish No. 1 in AAC attendance. If anything, they should parlay that, plus TV ratings, into a Power 5 invite. They average more fans than many of their own former Eastern rivals, including Rutgers (48,722), Maryland (46,405), Syracuse (31,533) and Boston College (30,483).

That brings us to what one of the team’s mottos is: What’s Next? While we like to focus on SMU and USF, when the team returns from a couple of business trips, they will be 9-1 and deserve a crowd in excess of 45,000 for probably the most important game of the year, Memphis.

Nothing would help the Owls beat Memphis more than that kind of crowd singing T for Temple U at the top of their lungs. That is what is needed in three weeks after the Owls do their business one week at a time.

Tomorrow: Game Preview With Depth Charts

Saturday: Game Analysis

Dick Butkus Award is a Complete Joke

Left it all on the field, as usual.

Left it all on the field, as usual.

bednarik

If the Dick Butkus Award selection committee got points for honesty, probably all of them would admit to skipping the Notre Dame vs. Temple football game on Saturday night. The award is supposed to go to the nation’s best linebacker.

One of the linebackers in that game had 13 tackles and an interception and is the nation’s leading active career tackler and the only player in the FBS to lead his team in tackles for all eight games. Another had 10 tackles and no interceptions, is not the FBS career leader in tackles nor has led his team in tackles in each and every game.

lombardi

The guy with 13 tackles and an interception, Temple’s Tyler Matakevich, was left off the list of Dick Butkus Award semifinalists released by the committee on Monday. The guy with the 10 tackles, Notre Dame’s Jaylon Smith, was on it. There were 10 linebackers on that semifinal list and not to include Matakevich should be enough evidence to get every member of that committee fired.

The argument extends beyond that single game and the comparison with that single foe. It is supposed to be an award based on this single season of performance in the college football realm alone, not on where the guy projects in the NFL draft. On their criteria, it is hard for the committee to make a case for any of the 10 being better than Matakevich.

lott

Along with Smith, the following are the semifinalists:  Kendall Beckwith and Deion Jones of LSU, Su’a Cravens of USC, Kyler Frackrell of Utah State, Leonard Floyd of Georgia,   Blake Martinez of Stanford, Raekwon McMillan of Ohio State, Antonio Missison of Florida and Reggie Ragland of Alabama.

For the season—and that’s what this award is based on—Matakevich has 78 tackles, four sacks and five interceptions for the 7-1 Owls and has led a defense that is ranked No. 9 nationally in scoring defense (15.8 ppg.). He has more sacks and more interceptions than anyone on that list and only one player has more tackles.

Certainly, it cannot be because Matakevich plays for a Group of Five team because he has reserved his two best games against Power 5 teams—a 27-10 win over a 6-2 Penn State team and a 24-20 loss to No. 8 Notre Dame. Plus, Frackwell–wit his measly 53 tackles and no interceptions by comparison–is on the list and he’s on G5 team. If the Dick Butkus Committee is going exclude Group of 5 linebackers, it should say so in the criteria. Otherwise, this award is a complete farce.

In almost every category across the board, No. 8 ranks No. 1.

In almost every category across the board, No. 8 ranks No. 1.

The hard numbers suggest none of these linebackers rate on a par with Matakevich, let alone deserve to jump over him. Craven has 50 tackles and two interceptions. Beckwith and Jones are tied for the LSU team lead with 51 tackles and only Jones has interceptions (two).  Frackwell has 53 tackles and no interceptions.  Floyd no interceptions and 44 tackles.  Martinez has 91 tackles, but only one interception. McMillan has 74 tackles and no interceptions and there is a poll on one Ohio State website questioning whether he is even the best linebacker on the Buckeyes, let alone one of the top 10 in the nation. Missison has 60 tackles and no interceptions and Ragland has 71 tackles and no interceptions.

No one has made the kind of impact in the nation and on his own team as Matakevich and the Butkus Award committee should be ashamed to leave this young man off a final list of 10. There can be no valid reasons for this sloppy work, just excuses.

TV Ratings Should Woo P5 Suitors to TU

Temple was a winner both at the box office an on TV.

Temple was a winner both at the box office an on TV.

If it is possible to win in a loss, that’s exactly what Temple football did for the university in a prime time game against Notre Dame on Saturday night.

The scoreboard numbers gave the Irish a 24 and the Owls a 20, but the ratings in that nearly four-hour, real-life drama made Temple the big winner. Notre Dame has appeared on prime-time Saturday night television in Philadelphia 93 other times and in some big games against inter-sectional foes like Penn State and USC. During none of those times did the Fighting Irish  capture anywhere near the ratings as they did against Temple. In fact, the Temple vs. Notre Dame was the No. 1-rated TV game ever in the history of Philadelphia college football-watching.

Since Notre Dame has been on so much without nearly that many sets tuned in, it doesn’t take much of an imagination to know the variable in this case was Temple. The Owls showed they can deliver the nation’s fourth-largest TV market to any possible Power 5 suitors. Philadelphia is the largest current media market without a Power 5 team.

It was also the highest-rated college football game of the week and beat by 26 percent the ratings in the same Week 9 slot a year ago which featured Penn State, the second-most popular team on Philadelphia TV sets, against No. 1 Ohio State.

What this all means is that, one of the Power 5 conferences decides to expand, the fact that Temple has proven it can deliver the nation’s last major market should get at least the ACC and the Big 12 knocking on AD Pat Kraft’s door.