Bulletin Board material or cold reality?

After seeing the above video, Temple football players could be excused for feeling like Mike Schmidt, who once said:

“Philadelphia is the only city where you can experience the thrill of victory and the agony of reading about it the next day.”

Plenty of bulletin board material is one way to look at it. The Owls were somewhat impressive in a loss to Coastal Carolina, an elite Group of Five team, and even more impressive against Utah State but most of the prediction sites–like the above one–aren’t buying the Owls on being for real.

At least not yet. They will if Temple beats Army.

Temple is expecting its biggest home crowd by quite a bit for the Thursday night game and hopefully they will make a lot of noise supporting the Owls.

Watching the celebration in the Owls’ locker room on Saturday, I got the distinct impression that the team is buying into what Stan Drayton and staff are selling but we won’t be sure until about 10:30 p.m. tomorrow night (Lincoln Financial Field, 7:30 p.m., ESPN).

Are they fired up enough to show the doubters they are wrong or were the prognosticators right to call the Owls a bad football team?

“Is Temple actually like normal bad on offense compared to like atrocious with (Evan) Simon instead of (Forrest) Brock?” Kyle Hunter said here.

“Temple, to me, is still a bad football team,” Gary Segars said.

“I do think there’s a potential letdown effect for Temple coming off a win,” Parker Fleming said.

Them’s fighting words to a team that has pride and hopefully Temple will have it. Letdown? How is a team that finally got a taste of winning going to have a letdown over a team that is favored and going on the road?

The weather should be good for a big Temple home crowd.

Make no mistake it going to be a daunting task, but an argument can be made that Army is not as good as Coastal Carolina and maybe even less explosive than Utah State. Really, who did Army beat? They beat FAU, which got blown out by UCONN. (It’s worth nothing that UCONN lost to Utah State at home last year.) Army also beat Rice (which got blown out by Sam Houston) and FCS Lehigh.

Coastal and Utah State would have probably beaten all three Army foes.

Our low/risk high/reward bets this week. Betting that Everett Withers didn’t burn any midnight oil worrying about the Army offense and also that Temple’s offense is for real with Evan Simon at the helm.

It all comes down to Everett Withers, though, and his film study on how to plug the gaps against a triple option that were all too apparent in the 38-11 loss to Navy. There is a way to stop the triple option and that’s to put a nose tackle over the center, take away the fullback dive, and force the pitch outside where Temple’s superior athletes can string the play from sideline to sideline. Eight men in the box and trust your corners to single the wide receivers and break up a rare pass or two. Sell out to stop the run at the point of attack.

Does Withers have the courage or sense to tweak the defensive scheme to stop what the opponent does best or does he stick with the Temple base defense?

Temple’s most athletic defensive player, end Diwan Black, is back for this game and, like Jordan Magee in the Navy game last year, has a chance to make a difference chasing those ballcarriers.

Black will have plenty of help, though, in that Pro Football Focus rates safety Andreas Keaton as the best tackler in all of college football. In corners Torrey Richardson and Jaylen Lewis, they can gamble singling the wide receivers and play eight in the box to not only stop the run but disrupt things in the Army backfield.

Not many teams are disrespected after hanging a 45-burger on another squad but Temple has been and maybe the Owls use it to their advantage.

Nobody will doubt Temple again if it beats Army and that has to be a powerful motivator.

Friday: Temple-Army Analysis

Warner/Simon: How A is Unlike B

Evan Simon has come a long way since being sacked by Layton Jordan here.

Just like election polls, nothing is decided yet but the early trends are pointing in one direction:

Evan Simon might just be an upgrade at quarterback over E.J. Warner.

Like that other thing, nobody saw this coming back in June when the only evidence we had was that one was a record-setting passer at Temple and the other was a guy who had seven interceptions against only four touchdowns on the FBS level.

While the other election night is more than a month away, the election night between Warner and Simon is in four nights (ESPN, 7:30 p.m., Lincoln Financial Field). Simon’s popularity is soaring with Temple fans after throwing five touchdowns and running for another in a 45-29 win over Utah State on Saturday.

That popularity will be under a microscope on Thursday night, as several thousand more Prodigal Son Temple fans return to Lincoln Financial Field buoyed by that win.

Evan Simon threw five TD passes and ran for another. (Photo courtesy Zamani Feelings)

We have a real A and B comparison and if I’m reading the returns right, about 10:30 p.m. on Thursday we will find out who the better quarterback for Temple is.

That’s because we can compare what Warner did against Army vs. what Simon will do against Army.

The No. 1 benchmark is the win.

If Simon gets Temple a win against the unbeaten Cadets, it’s a landslide. That’s the No. 1 job of a quarterback. If you put up gaudy stats and lose, it doesn’t prove much.

Still, even without a win these are the numbers Simon needs to surpass to get the vote of the swing fans: 28 for 43 completions, 235 yards, two interceptions, two touchdown passes. That’s what Warner had against Army in a 37-14 loss.

Same defense, two different quarterbacks.

A Temple win and good TV ratings wouldn’t hurt the Owls’ national perception on Thursday night.

It’s an apples-to-apples comparison the likes we have not seen so far.

Our feelings about Warner were always this. He was the perfect guy for Danny Langsdorf’s system of short drops, quick releases, short passes. But he had this annoying habit of throwing Pick 6s in close games that cost Temple wins. Had Warner not thrown a Pick 6 against Rutgers in 2022, Temple wins that game, 14-9. Had Warner not thrown a Pick 6 against South Florida last year, Temple wins that game, 22-20. That was the same South Florida team that beat Syracuse, 55-0, in a bowl game a few weeks later.

Warner’s size contributed to both those disasters as his vision was obstructed in both cases.

Simon doesn’t have the same problem.

All he has to do Thursday night to win this election is go 29-for-42 with 236 yards, 1 INT and 3TD passes. One more yard, one less pick, one more TD pass.

Or complete one or two passes for a couple of yards and get Temple a win.

Polls close on or about 10:30 p.m. Thursday night.

Wednesday: Temple-Army Preview

Friday: Temple-Army Analysis

Temple’s key: Don’t look back

Nothing would be easier after Temple’s 45-29 win over visiting Utah State on Saturday to look back and wonder what might have been.

No use crying over spilled milk. Saturday’s win represented a cleanup in aisle four. Those first three bottles of milk aren’t for sale anymore.

Let’s go over the easy part first.

It would be easy to dwell on what would have happened if Evan Simon quarterbacked the Owls from the jump instead of Forrest Brock.

Here’s what we know about the two of them.

One turns the ball over.

The other doesn’t.

On top of that, one had a five-touchdown passing game and that was only hours ago. The other has never had one, including high school.

That was the easy part.

Here’s the hard part.

Even with Evan as the starting quarterback in those first three games, the Temple Owls are probably in the same place as they are now.

One win, three losses, with almost the entire AAC schedule ahead. Without Brock’s three turnovers at Oklahoma, maybe the Owls lose that game 21-3 or, at best, 21-10. Without Brock’s two more turnovers at Navy, the Owls probably lose that game, 24-11, instead of 38-11.

That’s why it makes no sense to look back, only ahead. There are at least five more winnable games left on the schedule. Army (Thursday, 7:30 p.m., ESPN) does not appear to be one of them but the Owls will be playing with house money in five days.

All the pressure will be on unbeaten Army and nothing will be expected of Temple. Sometimes, good things happen under those circumstances and maybe Temple can see what it did wrong against Navy in the triple option and correct those defensive shifts against Army.

Either way, there are way more winnable games left than Army and that’s where the Owls can build of the performance against a good but not great Utah State team.

Maddox Trujillo hit a 64-yard field goal–the longest in the 21-year history of Lincoln Financial Field and in Temple history–and that got the halftime locker room juiced.

After that, Temple outscored Utah State, 28-8. That’s even a more dominating stretch than Utah could have against their in-state rivals a week ago.

That’s something to build on as is Simon’s five touchdown passes. P.J. Walker was the last Temple quarterback who had five touchdown passes in a single game and he went on to become XFL MVP and started several NFL games.

Temple has plenty of room to improve. On passing downs, it needs to blitz more with linebacker D.J. Woodbury but that’s another story for another time.

Temple has plenty of offensive firepower, including an accomplished Big 10 running back (Antwain Littleton), the best running back in all of JUCO football last year (Torrez Worthy) and the best high school running back in Florida two years ago (Joquez Smith, Tampa Jesuit). They have a stacked tight end room as three TEs caught touchdown passes Saturday. Their best TE from last year, Reese Clark, returns from an injury soon. They have a great receiver in Dante Wright and a very good one in Antonio Jones. Last year’s leading receiver, Zae Baines, makes his first appearance on Thursday night.

Simon seems like the right kind of gunpower for those weapons.

Looking back won’t do them any good. Looking ahead could unlock a season not a single person saw coming seven days ago.

Monday: How A is Unlike B

Thursday: Army Preview

Friday: Army Analysis

The next logical step: A win

The complete Saturday TV sked. Temple is up against the end of the Rice-Army game.

Anything other than being able to compete with a good Coastal Carolina team would have been reason for major distress for Temple football.

The next logical step is a win.

Stan Drayton promised to these Bruce Arians’ players that he would “get this thing back to where you guys are used to seeing it” and Saturday is his chance to deliver on the promise. Give the ball to Antwain Littleton, follow it with play-action fakes to Littleton and make explosive downfield plays in the passing game with Evan Simon hitting Dante Wright and Antonio Jones. On defense, blitzing with linebacker D.J. Woodbury on passing downs and plenty of sacks by Latrell Jean, Tre Thomas and company and getting a pick or two by Andreas Keaton should be enough to win the game.

That’s something that has been hard to come by for Temple in Stan Drayton’s three seasons as he is now 6-21.

Drayton came to Temple and promised–in my presence on Cherry and White Day–to the Bruce Arians’ alumni that he would “get this thing back to the way you guys are used to seeing it.”

He’s running out of time, unless he meant that AFTER 10 years of 3-9 seasons he would get it back to the good old days.

As the lady said in that famous tik tock video, “ain’t nobody got time for that.”

Even in Arians’ worst times, those guys never saw something like this. Arians faced three top 10 schedules, going 6-5 in two of them. Drayton faced the 121st, 129th and now 131st schedules and fared worse.

Now it’s time to win (2 p.m., Saturday, Lincoln Financial Field, ESPN+).

Utah State is not terrible, but it is nowhere near as good as Coastal Carolina. Several Utah State starters are out. The two best Temple players who are out are edge rusher Diwan Black and wide receiver Zae Baines. Those are two areas where Temple is deep. Owls should be able to survive those losses.

Temple held Oklahoma to 1-for-12 on third downs but threw that effort away when the offense turned the ball over four times. That game might have been much more competitive had it been turnover free. Maybe closer to 21-3 than 51-3 but we will never know.

The Owls, though, took a step forward by competing in a 28-20 loss to a very good team.

For some reason only known to Drayton, he stuck with a turnover machine in Forrest Brock against Navy and he played like Forrest Gump and the Owls lost 38-11.

We will never know what happened if Evan Simon had started against Navy but suspect it would have been a much closer game if he did.

Now it looks like Simon will start against Utah State.

Our low/risk, high/reward picks this week.

Simon has started and won big games before in the Big 10. He deserves a shot to build on his Coastal Carolina performance.

We suspect that if he manages the game, and Antwain Littleton (not Joquez Smith nor E.J. Wilson) gets the carries, Temple will be able to establish a balanced attack and be able to fake it to Littleton and get explosive downfield plays in the passing game to guys like Antonio Jones and Dante Wright.

That’s the next step.

Do the Owls go forward, sideways or backward?

Drayton promised but hasn’t delivered.

He knows what he has to do now.

Late Saturday Night: Game Analysis

Temple enters “must-win” phase of season

Temple spends a lot of money on football but has gotten little in return.

As a Temple fan you have to ask yourself, “does the season end with a loss?”

At this point, the answer for Saturday’s 2 p.m. game with visiting Utah State (2 p.m., ESPN+) has to be a resounding yes.

Simply, to save Stan Drayton’s job anything other 6-6 season puts his team outside top 80 teams in the country. Since there are only 134 teams, that’s less than mediocre.

After four-straight losing years, Temple will be at a crossroads if that becomes five-straight losing seasons.

Unacceptable.

Maybe acceptable for some lesser schools but certainly not acceptable for a school as large and prestigious as Temple University.

The defense must increase risk (blitzing on passing downs) to generate turnovers. That’s the key over the last nine games.

So while the math is challenging after 0-3, it’s almost impossible after 0-4. Losing the first three games means you have to go 6-3 over the last nine to reach a bowl game which is doable in a watered-down AAC. Losing the first four games, though, means 6-2 over the last eight and that is highly unlikely.

Utah State has to be a win.

Like Temple at Oklahoma, Utah State had a blowout loss to an elite team (USC, 48-0). Utah State also struggled to beat Robert Morris, trailing at the half and leading only 20-14 going into the fourth quarter. Robert Morris then lost to Edinboro, which lost to Kutztown. Utah State scored 16 points in the fourth to win going away, 36-14.

If Temple lets the likes of Utah State beat it, an argument can be made by new President John Fry about Temple even being in the football business. Does Edinboro give Utah State a better game than Temple? Does Kutztown?

If so, Temple is spending a lot of money and getting nothing in return on the investment.

The way to turn it around is to start forcing turnovers and the way to do that is to bring more people that they can block on passing downs, which means getting to the quarterback, strip sacks, fumbles and forced interceptions.

The defense Everett Withers has played the last two seasons is essentially a “bend and break” defense. It needs to be more attacking than it ever has been to up that -40 turnover margin Drayton has had in his nearly three years here.

Withers might not want to change his scheme, but Drayton is still the CEO and a strong leader puts his foot down and dictates policy.

Or the organization gets another leader. Drayton doesn’t have nine games left to make that decision.

He’s got one and it’s coming up in five days.

Friday: Utah State Preview

Better, but not good enough

Three games into the season, we know this about the 2024 Temple football Owls:

They giveth but they don’t taketh away.

Job 1:21 pretty much describes Stan Drayton’s team over not just three losing games but over the last 15 games.

The Lord giveth but also taketh. On the other hand, Drayton’s football teams only giveth and that was on full display in a 28-20 home loss to a good Coastal Carolina team.

Temple gives turnovers but doesn’t take them away.

Better than the first two games, but not good enough.

Drayton, like Job, is probably too good a man to deserve this fate but seems to be resigned to building a team that turns the ball over a lot but almost never steals it from the bad guys.

Temple was 134th and dead last in both turnover margin and also dead last in forcing turnovers a year ago.

This year is 2023 redux in that Temple hasn’t forced a single turnover but has given it away nine times.

This trend cannot continue or Temple is on the way to another 3-9 season.

Probably worse.

The problems are pretty identifiable. On offense, the line is not giving the quarterback enough time to throw the ball and he’s forced into fumbles or interceptions.

That was again on full display in Evan Simon’s Pick 6. Simon tried to get rid of the ball fast enough, but the rush was on him and his arm was hit, resulting in an interception return for a touchdown.

On defense, Everett Withers plays a “vanilla” system that gives up yardage but is not designed to take the football away.

Temple Football Forever merch is on sale at the Linc (we get no royalties but would love to see a TFF jersey for sale). (Photo courtesy of proud Central Bucks East grad Victory Engineer).

Weird because take away the two takeaways the Owls coughed up deep in their own territory and had Maddox Trujillo made both his field goals (he made one), Temple wins the game, 23-14.

That doesn’t work in a sport that puts a premium on turnovers. Look at the NFL stats. Teams that win the turnover battle over the last decade have won 86 percent of NFL games. Could not find a similar stat across 134 FBS teams (that number has fluctuated over the last decade).

Still, football is not rocket science. If Temple starts taking it away more than giving it, the Owls have a legitimate shot at salvaging the season.

A couple of things can change those dynamics but the Temple brass has to be willing to change. On defense, send more guys that they can block on passing downs, getting to the quarterback and forcing both strip fumbles in the backfield and interceptions caused getting rid of the ball under pressure.

On offense, forget about E.J. Wilson and make Antwain Littleton the featured back, running downhill to create more makeable second and third down options.

Langsdorf has shown he’s willing to change the scheme to fit his players.

Withers is obviously unwilling to do that.

That leaves CEO Drayton to step in and make necessary decisions moving forward.

OC Danny Landsdorf has proven to be more flexible and might be talked into a run/first, pass/second offense, particularly with a game manager like Simon at the helm. A third-and-3 swing pass to Dante Wright would definitely work better than a third-and-7 Pick 6.

Either way, Drayton is the CEO and has to put his foot down.

In this case, two feet.

Otherwise, like Job, a higher power will come in and give the bad guys more than Temple is willing to take away.

At the end of the season, Drayton will not be blaming that higher power, only himself for not making the hard CEO calls he has to make starting now.

Monday: The Road Forward

Friday: Utah State Preview

Temple-Coastal: Hope is never a good plan

We’ve gone from national laughing stock to nationally respected and back to national laughing stock.

Having planned most of my fall Saturdays over the last 40 or so years around Temple football, the last couple of years opened my eyes to the big wide world out there.

My first moneyline picks for the year. I hope I lose just on the Temple game but I doubt it.

So, too, apparently for most Temple fans.

Several of the last few games my usual crew was hit or miss with tailgating. After walking to the end of Lot K and learning a couple of times we weren’t setting up, decision time.

Do I really need to go to every game or does the team need to earn my trust?

I chose the latter.

The plan now is this: Temple wins, I go to the next game. Temple loses, I split the baby and eliminate the travel time, watch the game on TV and hope.

Hope is never a good plan.

My gut feeling on Temple hosting Coastal Carolina (2 p.m. Saturday, ESPN+) is Temple puts up a fight early, then starts doing “Temple-like” things like fumbling, throwing interceptions, getting called for illegal shifts and illegal formations and eventually loses, 37-17.

What do is the BEST I can HOPE for?

A Maddox Trujillo 43-yard field goal as time expires for a 20-17 win.

Coastal Carolina, which didn’t have a FBS program in 2016 when the Owls won their last championship, is 2-0 and Temple is 0-2.

Coastal fans visit the best stadium in the AAC Saturday while Temple fans get to return the favor in this 21,000-seat stadium next year.

Among those wins was a spanking of a well-coached (Rich Rodriguez) Jacksonville State team. Jacksonville State had no illegal formations and illegal shifts in that loss. Temple had plenty of both in a 38-11 loss at Navy.

Stan Drayton apologists will be the first to point out that NIL and the transfer portal have worked against him but there have been other factors that have caused Temple to lose that cannot be ignored.

Illegal shifts, illegal formations, personal fouls on offensive linemen have nothing to do with the NIL and transfer portal. Nor does sticking with a starting quarterback who keeps giving the ball to another team. For some reason, those things have hurt Temple more than they have hurt the bad guys and that is something the administration should investigate sooner than later.

An “X-factor” type situation in Temple’s favor this week could be a quarterback change. Forrest Brock has been a turnover machine in the two losses and could be replaced by Evan Simon, who is more of a game manager. Brock is in “concussion protocol” and is a game-time decision. My vote is to give him a long rest and give Simon a chance to be Lou Gehrig to Brock’s Wally Pipp.

There’s a chance that if Simon does start, eliminates the turnovers and moves the team, Trujillo gets his chance to be a hero.

If so, I HOPE so see everyone next week against Utah State.

That’s the plan.

Watch the game on TV between 2-5, win, then go on a bike ride between 5:30 and 7 blaring “T For Temple U” from my bluetooth speakers. Then I put aside next Saturday for Utah State and good Temple friends.

With a Stan Drayton-coached team, that’s not worked quite the way I had hoped the last two seasons. He only has a couple of games to change this dynamic around.

For my sake and, more importantly, his.

Late Saturday Night: Coastal-Temple Game Analysis

Three immediate cures to what ails Temple

You can learn a lot about a football problem by reading a play-by-play sheet.

Certainly, a lot more than walking around a locker room and listening to post-game platitudes or excuses from a head coach.

Admitting mistakes is the first step to fixing them and you couldn’t find many admissions from Temple head football coach Stan Drayton in the post-game press conference after a 38-11 loss at Navy on Saturday.

Thirty-five rushing yards won’t cut it against anyone.

Not worth delving into every Drayton word but what he essentially said was that they were going to have to find players who had the right mindset to be out there.

Little was said about the coaches but, after looking at the play-by-play, sheet, that’s probably where the emphasis should have been. All week long, Drayton said “getting off to a good start” was priority No. 1.

What did the Owls do on the first drive?

Quarterback Forrest Brock throws 3 yards behind the line of scrimmage, a catch by Dante Wright. Then E.J. Wilson rushes for 0 yards and Brock throws a 9-yard pass to Antonio Jones, which was complete but short by 3 yards. Just a bad scheme all around for a coaching staff that supposedly put a high priority on getting off to a fast start.

Got to throw the ball past the sticks, not behind them, on that first drive.

Worse was the penalties.

On the drive that resulted in a safety, offensive lineman Wisdom Quarshie was penalized for unnecessary roughness.

Joquez Smith was called for offensive pass interference on Temple’s next drive.

An illegal formation penalty ended Temple’s drive right after that one.

The next drive featured a false start.

The next one was ended by an offensive holding.

You can learn a lot about a football problem by reading a play-by-play sheet.

Certainly, a lot more than walking around a locker room and listening to post-game platitudes or excuses from a head coach.
“Hey, it’s on us coaches when we line you up in an illegal formation but it’s on you guys not to draw unnecessary roughness penalties.”

No penalties on the next drive but the one after that featured an illegal formation.

By then, the score was 22-0 and the game was pretty much over.

The No. 1 fix has to be to eliminate the penalties, particularly the illegal formation and illegal shifts. That doesn’t speak well for the staff and begs the question “what does this team do during the week?” Do they even practice?

No. 2, REPLACE THE QUARTERBACK! Either Evan Simon or Tyler Douglas but a message has to be sent to the rest of the team that seven turnovers in two games is unacceptable.

Brock isn’t cutting it and sending him out there is sending a message that while offensive linemen who miss a block are pulled or defensive backs that blow a call are pulled, nothing happens to a quarterback who keeps giving the football to another team.

The team has to rally around another quarterback. Accountability should matter for the coaches and the players. A quarterback being exempt from accountability is a recipe for disaster.

No. 3, on defense, the tackling was abysmal and, when that happened in the Bruce Arians era, he made the team hit the field the next morning and put the pads on for the hardest-hitting practice he ever coached. The Owls became a great tackling team the rest of the year. Maybe putting the pads on for the four practices prior to Coastal Carolina would have a similar impact.

Many problems were on display against Navy. Business as usual won’t solve them. Shaking up the troops with extended practices to fix the penalties and hitting might not, but it certainly couldn’t hurt.

Friday: Coastal Carolina Preview

The Stan Drayton farewell tour has begun

As far as Group of Five days go in this new configuration of college football, it was a pretty good day for a few schools.

Northern Illinois went into Notre Dame and upset the Irish, its second win over a Power 4 team in as many years.

Drayton after Mathis’ fumbles. He apparently isn’t as upset over Brock’s fumbles.

Bowling Green, a 35.5-point underdog, hung with Penn State and lost by a touchdown, 34-27.

USF, a team Temple beat 54-28 two years ago, hung with Alabama for the second-straight year.

As good as those days were for those schools, that’s how bad Saturday was for Temple in a 38-11 loss at Navy.

The thing all of the above schools have in common with Temple is similar resources. BG, USF and NIU have pretty much the same challenges with the transfer portal and NIL money as Temple does.

The difference is that they don’t cry about it, they turn what meager bread they have into loaves and fishes by mastering the transfer portal the way Howie Roseman has mastered the NFL draft. Simply put, what Scot Loeffler has done at Bowling Green is to scour the Power 4 guys in the transfer portal who were on the cusp of starting at that level but stuck behind all conference players. Thomas Hammock has done the same at NIU. They can’t offer NIL money but can offer those guys starting spots. So could Temple if the CEO in charge was willing to take the same approach.

Stan Drayton?

He’s stuck back in a football mindset of the 1980s, when he was an assistant coach and Penn and Villanova. Back then, the way to fill areas of need was get a guy or two at the JUCO level. Now, faced with significant portal losses, JUCO was and is a crutch for old-school coaches like Drayton and DC Everett Withers.

That was last century. This is this one.

New school guys like Loeffler, Hammock and USF’s Alex Golesh think outside the box.

Bowling Green, NIU and USF have improvised and adjusted.

Temple’s 1980s mindset will at best cost Drayton his job and at worst cost the school its football program.

Temple has 10 games left and there doesn’t appear to be any hope for Drayton to keep his job so these 10 games will be the beginning of a farewell tour that was entirely of his own making.

Take his handling of the quarterback situation as Exhibit A. Only two weeks ago, Drayton was saying that his three quarterbacks were locked in a competition so close that he couldn’t name the starter and then on the Monday before the Oklahoma game said there was a definite “1-2-3” hierarchy but that was for him to know and the press to find out. Before that, he said it was a three-horse race that was pretty much a dead heat.

The best comment I saw on the Temple fan message boards came a couple of days ago when someone posted: “If this was a three-horse race, all three horses need to be put down.”

Now starter Forrest Brock has gotten the most rope of any human being since Thomas Knight, who was executed in 2014 after spending 40 years on death row.

You’ve got to wonder what it will take for Drayton to pull the plug on a guy who had three turnovers in his first game and four more in his second game.

Twenty turnovers?

Thirty?

Eighty-seven?

Have to wonder how Dwan Mathis is feeling after seeing one of his successors has seven turnovers after two games while he was pulled after only two. That was Drayton’s first year and he was full of vim and vigor. Now he appears to be a beaten man.

Competent coaches don’t wait that long to make a change but someone who is resigned to his eventual fate might.

A new anti-football President comes on board on Nov. 1.

For Temple fans, all that is left is to hope a coaching change in a couple of months isn’t the worst thing that could happen to their beloved program.

Monday: Some possible solutions

Friday: Coastal Carolina Preview

Temple Football Forever Returns on Saturday

Did not see a point in discussing Temple football anymore when it rolls out a JUCO-level quarterback who got beat 55-0 and 51-3 in his last two games so shut this site down for a few days while steaming over the current state of the program.

What was our theme on this site for the last nine months?

Bring in a big-time quarterback.

UL Monroe did that without spending a dime, bringing Oklahoma backup General Booty to Louisiana. What did Booty do? Go 10-for-14 with a touchdown and no INTs or fumbles in a 30-14 win.

Temple settled for not only a subpar quarterback room but the worst quarterback room among the 134 FBS teams. It’s no coincidence that after Week One, the New York Times ranked Georgia No. 1 and Temple No. 134.

What did Temple’s Forrest Brock do? Go 11-for-25 with two INTs and a fumble in a 51-3 loss.

Still, the show must go on and, while we won’t be doing a preview on the Navy game, we will be doing an analysis of the game and it will be up on this site late Saturday.

A couple of questions should be answered by then:

One, will Temple quarterback Forrest Brock be able to win a game against a G5 school?

Two, will coach Stan Drayton’s final 10 games be the start of his farewell tour at Temple?

The answers are inextricably tied to those two questions.

Stay tuned.

Saturday: Navy Game Analysis