Kareem Ali Really Temple Made

Colin Thompson and Kareem Ali are the newest Owls.

Colin Thompson and Kareem Ali are the newest Owls.

Any time I get off the SEPTA Regional rail at Temple University station, which is quite often, I get to see an anonymous person with a painted Cherry and White face with glasses staring at me with the words “Temple Made” above his head.

Temple football now boasts of  ultimate “Temple Made” person soon to be on its roster, Kareem Ali. According to this great story by Matt Vender, Ali was conceived at Temple. He’s the first documented person to be literally Temple Made–though I’m sure there are a few undocumented ones.

Now he’s going to do his part to make Temple football a Made Man in the college football world.

When Al Golden was at Temple, he had a binder on how to build a program from the ground up and one of the chapters in it was recruiting. “Trust the film,” Golden would always say.

Golden was not bashful about his philosophy of recruiting. He believed that the key of going from the worst program in major college football to winning a non-BCS conference title like the MAC was getting a whole bunch of team leaders, captains of their high school teams from winning programs, then reaching up and grabbing as many as five guys every year who were offered by BCS programs. Golden never got a chance to win the MAC, but I believe he was only a year or two away when he left to go to Miami (Fla.)

Golden had a great school to sell, Temple, and he was a great salesman who was able to lure guys like Kee-Ayre Griffin away from Boston College and Adrian Robinson away from Pitt. Those guys helped fuel three consecutive winning seasons at Temple. When I dashed off an email congratulating Al on his first recruiting class, Al dashed one back: “Mike, we’re not done yet. We’re waiting on a guy from St. Peter’s Prep who could be our best recruit. Wish us luck.”

Griffin was that guy, the last recruit of Golden’s first-ever class and the first of five good recruiting chapters.

It now appears that Matt Rhule has memorized that chapter.

One day after getting Kareem Ali to de-commit from Maryland (Big 10), he got Colin Thompson to transfer from Florida (SEC).

I had been somewhat concerned last week that the Owls offered a guy who had only been offered by Duquesne, Coastal Carolina and St. Francis of Loretto but the recent additions of Ali and Thompson put the Owls back on the right recruiting track. You are going to need a lot of guys like Ali and Thompson to win an AAC title and, if they can convince guys like Shareef Miller to come on board, it won’t be long before the Owls are hoisting a trophy soon.

Mix those three guys with a couple more similar players, stir in a few high school captains from winning programs, trust the film, always call a quarterback sneak on fourth and three inches, bake and watch a championship team rise. At least that’s the fervent hope.

Temple Football: Just How Good Is Recruiting?

Shareef Miller, Temple football,

Adding Shareef Miller could be the domino that moves Temple football recruiting from good to great

Social media is a great tool to follow college football recruiting and, if you have been following twitter in the past few days, there has been a significant buzz regarding Temple football.

Some of the top recruits not only in the region are seriously talking about committing to the Owls and if that gets done, head coach Matt Rhule will be in better position to do what he was  brought in to do—win games.

Because for all the buzz surrounding Rhule’s second recruiting class, it was still ranked behind Steve Addazio’s 2012 class nationally and the second-best recruiting class in Temple history. It was still ranked No. 4 in the AAC—impressive for a 2-10 school but maybe not good enough to get the job done.

If some the people mentioning Temple on their twitter feeds—most notably George Washington High School’s Shareef Miller—make an early commitment to the school, they can be the Pied Piper leading other four- and five-star recruits to the Philadelphia school.

I’ve always thought that Temple could become the new U (like Miami of Florida became), enticing urban talent to stay home and build something new and exciting, just like the Florida kids did for the Hurricanes.

But it has got to turn from talk in the newspaper article here into reality.

Plus, if you go from a national championship staff at Florida (offensive coordinator Steve Addazio, defensive coordinator Chuck Heater, quarterbacks’ coach Scot Loeffler)  to guys Rhule hired from Tennessee Chattanooga  (Marcus Satterfield)  and Eastern Michigan (Phil Snow), the game day credibility just doesn’t measure up. We all saw what happened on game day last year and it was not pretty.

Daz had his faults, but no one with a shred of credibility can say his 2011 staff was less qualified than Rhule’s 2014 staff.

I’ll never forget what John Palumbo told his father after Daz’s first spring camp: “Dad, I thought Golden was good but these guys from Florida are big-time SEC coaches and it is not even close.”

Until Matt Rhule wins on a consistent basis, it will stay that far apart. Getting some four- and five-star recruits in here might begin to make a difference but until these guys sign on the dotted line, it’s just talk.

The earlier talk the talk becomes walk the walk the better. All it takes is one guy. He might already be here, too.

Lew Katz: Winner and Still Champion

Yankee Stadium's tribute          Sunday to Lewis Katz, part owner of the YES Network.

Yankee Stadium’s tribute Sunday to Lewis Katz, part owner of the YES Network.

For someone I never met, I felt I knew Lew Katz very well.

At least well enough to call him Lew.

Four days after Dr. Peter Chodoff sat in his folding chair at Lincoln Financial Field and said to me, “Mike, I think you have a first-class blog” I got the same message in an email from Lew Katz: “Mike, I think you have a first-class blog. Keep up the good work and go Owls—Lew.”

Now I don’t know if that was just a heckuva coincidence or Dr. Pete and Lew talked, but I could not have been more flattered.

If there were ever two champions of Temple football during the darkest of dark times, it was Pete and Lew.

I guess you could add the late  great Howard Gittis, who, as Board of Trustees’ chairman, thwarted every effort by then President David Adamany to drop football at Temple University.

Gittis, thankfully, was Adamany’s boss. When Gittis said jump, Adamany said: “How High?”

Gittis said he was not dropping football on his watch and fortunately he had allies in Katz and Chodoff. If he had not had those allies, Temple University would be NYU–a university in a big city without football.

That was only one of two emails I ever received from Lew Katz. The other one was steering me in the right direction toward my coverage of Temple joining the Big East on March 7, 2012. He then said he knew I worked at The Inquirer and asked me for my thoughts on how to improve the paper. I told him you cannot do wrong by going local, local, local and he said he felt the same way. He wasn’t very active on Facebook (and probably had too much else to do), but he did extend a friend request that I eagerly accepted.  I am proud to have been one of his 351 Facebook friends.  I’m sure he had 10x more “real”  friends.

I then invited him to join our tailgates and he never did, but I knew he would eventually. I know he was proud of the way the Temple tailgate scene exploded during the Al Golden and Steve Addazio years. When he said he was looking forward to “kicking Villanova’s ass” on the football field with the Villanova president in attendance, I could not have been prouder of a fellow TU graduate.

Lew Katz “got” Temple, the same way John Chaney, Wayne Hardin, Skip Wilson, Pete Chodoff and Bruce Arians “got” Temple.

Our in-person meeting was only a matter of time and time ran out on Saturday night/Sunday morning when he died in a tragic plane crash.

It was my loss, and more importantly, Temple’s. RIP, Lew.

 

A True Temple Football Hall of Famer

click here to read more of Dave Edwards' obit.

In the past couple of years, Wayne Hardin deservedly made the college football Hall of Fame and it took him three ballots to do so. This year, Paul Palmer was up for the third time and he missed out but I’m certain he will get in before long.

If there were a Hall of Fame for college football fans, Dave “Ed” Edwards, who preferred to be known as NJ Schmitty, would be a first-ballot selection. It’s easy to be a fan of Notre Dame, Penn State and Alabama. Those are what I refer to as front-runners.

A photo of coach Hardin  NJ Schmitty emailed to me. Coach Hardin hated ties and eschewed the extra point on the final play in a 31-30 loss to Penn State, saying a tie is like "kissing your sister." Here, Wes Sornisky reminds him of that when he kicked the game-tying FG in a 17-17 tie at Cincinnati.

A photo of coach Hardin NJ Schmitty emailed to me. Coach Hardin hated ties and eschewed the extra point on the final play in a 31-30 loss to Penn State, saying a tie is like “kissing your sister.” Here, Wes Sornisky reminds him of that when he kicked the game-tying FG in a 17-17 tie at Cincinnati.

I’d call NJ Schmitty a “back-burner” because he followed mostly losing Temple football teams as a devoted fan for 35-plus years but Schmitty suffered the indignity with a relentless sense of humor. The thing that separated Schmitty from most of the rest of us was that Temple was his “adopted” team, not of his own blood. He was a Susquehanna College  (now University) graduate and could have easily adopted nearby Penn State as his college team, but he took Temple and loved it as one of his own.

He was a frequent poster on Owlscoop.com and Owlsdaily.com and never got caught up in any heavy arguments, instead preferring to find the humor in the posts of others. He was the originator of the Owlscoop Hall of Fame and that is captured here for perpetuity.  (Thanks, Ikers.)

Many of you have met Schmitty. I have had the distinct pleasure of his company and hospitality at many Temple games. For those of you who have not met him, you surely know who he is because of a large oversized TEMPLE ‘][‘ on top of an old Chevy conversion van could not be missed at any Temple home games and you could hear the deep and hearty laughter coming from his tailgate at every game, whether the Owls were 9-4 or 2-10.

I was stunned to hear of Schmitty’s passing in the last few days. I didn’t know he was sick, but he will be missed more than he will ever know. The only time I ever called him Dave he scolded me. “It’s Schmitty, Mike,” he said.

RIP, Schmitty.

“P.J., I gotta say these are the greatest helmets ever”

National editor for Rantsports.com saw our helmet story here and asked us to write a version to go national. If story does well in shares and likes, there will be much more national Temple football coverage in the fall on Rant.

National editor for Rantsports.com saw our helmet story here and asked us to write a version to go national. If story does well in shares and likes, there will be much more national Temple football coverage in the fall on Rant. So please AFTER CLICKING ON THE PHOTO OF P.J/KYLE “share” and “like” on facebook and twitter. thanks.

The Temple (Football) Brand

This ad appeared on "Owlsports.com" on Monday morning, illustrating the fact that while we all know and love the Temple ][, it doesn't mean crap to a copy writer for Under Armour or the outside Temple public.

This ad appeared on “Owlsports.com” on Monday morning, illustrating  that while we all know and love the Temple ][, it doesn’t mean crap to a copy writer for Under Armour or the outside Temple public.

To me, Al Golden had it right when he restored the Temple football brand to the program at the beginning of his second year as head coach.

At the MAC Media Day in 2007 this is what Al said:

“There are several reasons for the change,” Golden said. “The first is for our current team to discover our tradition. The 2007 uniform 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 one of the most recognizable helmets 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.”

Golden stayed for five mostly wonderful years but the brand did not because some bald-headed bastard changed it back to the Temple T and then skipped town.


“When I was growing up in New Jersey,
Temple’s helmets were unique.
It was one of the most recognizable
helmets in the East, let alone the country.
Somewhere along the way that got lost,
so I wanted to bring it back …”
_ Al Golden

An ad that appeared on “Owlsports.com”  on Monday morning, May 12, illustrated the need to put the name  “Temple” back in the helmets. A copy writer for Under Armour confused the Temple ][ with the Texas Tech T (see photo at the top of this story) and nobody from Temple caught the mistake before it appeared on “Temple” website. While we all know and love the Temple ][, I have long felt that it doesn’t mean a hill of beans to fans from Texas or Tulane or Tulsa. That’s why Wayne Hardin put TEMPLE on the helmets and why Golden felt it was important to put it back.

Matt Rhule, in my mind, had the right idea in experimenting with a number of attractive helmet combinations but this one won the day by a good margin for me:

To me, this would be the perfect helmet to stick with this season ... marrying the school brand ][ with the football's brand.

To me, this would be the perfect helmet to stick with this season … marrying the school brand ][ with the football’s brand.

To me, the beauty of that helmet is that both promotes the SCHOOL brand and says what the brand stands for, and for that, Matt Rhule may have stumbled upon a “King Solomon-Like” solution that restores the Temple helmets to the national prominence they had under both Al Golden and Wayne Hardin. After all, those were three pretty smart guys: King Solomon, Al Golden and Wayne Hardin.
That kind of Karma might have a positive effect on the won/loss record, too.