Sad news: Shane Artim has passed away

Shane with the Poklembas at the glorious Navy game tailgate.
Photos (except for Rendell) by Joni D. Stutman, CST ’82

For the second time in this calendar year, it is my sad duty to report that a treasured member of our core fan base has passed at the all-too-young age of 46.
Shane Artim has gone too soon this time. Back in January, it was Dan Glammer.
News comes from fellow tailgater and D.C. alumnus and board member Michael Britton. Details to follow in the next couple of days. Right now, no details or arrangements have been released.
Both Artim and Glammer stuck around long enough to have the time of their young lives in the bowl game.
They will miss so many more great moments in Temple football history in the next few years.
If you look on Shane’s Facebook page, Dan Glammer is right there.
Not surprising, since both were the same age, Temple grads and rabid (I mean, rabid) Temple football fans.
If all Temple grads followed Temple football like Shane Artim did, we’d never have any problems. There would be a waiting list of 175,000 alumni alone to get into the largest stadium in the MAC.
Unfortunately, too few are like Shane was.
For Artim, a leading member of Temple’s D.C. Alumni group, going bowling in his adopted hometown was an extra-special treat.
He got to see Temple play a bowl game in his “second” hometown and played host to many of us who hadn’t been to that beautiful city since we were kids.
Everyone who tailgates knows who Shane Artim, a 1987 Temple grad,  is.
All you have to do is look at the photos accompanying this story for the familiar friendly face.
This was a guy who had no qualms about walking up to anyone in the lot and talking Temple football.
To me, that’s the beauty of our tailgates.
There are no cliques. Everyone talks to everyone else.
From Adrian Robinson’s dad to regular fans like Ted DeLapp, the Temple football tailgate group is a tight one and growing into the high thousands with every game.
Shane was, like me, someone who started out in the newspaper business.
Unlike me, he wasn’t willing to settle for the meager pay and benefits that come with the business so he struck out on more lucrative ventures.
He worked in government, was a legislative liaison and community activist, and even got his photo taken with Gov. Ed Rendell.
He even tried his hand at some comedy. (I got the idea he was more of a fan of comedy than someone who was funny himself.)
I would see Shane for a home game or two every year and he always had some good questions to ask.
I tried to answer them the best I could. He was a genuinely good guy.
Even though Lot K figures to be packed come Sept. 3, looking around the parking lot for Shane and realizing he won’t be there will make it seem empty.
Click on Shane’s photo and then SLIDESHOW to find a photo tribute:

Some great photos of Temple fan Shane Artim, enjoying the people and events, mostly tailgating, surrounding Temple football.
Photos by Joni D. Stutman, CST ’82

Marketing Temple-Villanova football

Three weeks to the start of the season and only about 15,000 tickets have been sold for the Villanova game.
Time to panic, right?
No.
Relax, we’ll get our 37,000.
It says so right here.
I’m a firm believer in the Tom Sawyer school of marketing.
You know, it was Sawyer, through the talented pen of Mark Twain, who made an otherwise dreadful chore, painting a fence, look like it was the thing to do.
Not like going to the Temple vs. Villanova football game is a dreadful chore.
I’ve been looking forward to it for 330-plus days.
So has the Temple football hardcore fan base which, if you go by the EagleBank Bowl and the Kent State game to close out the season last year, is now 20,000. (Temple traveled 20K fans to D.C. for the bowl game and drew 21K at home for Kent State in the final regular-season game.)
We’ll get the hardcore 20,000, whether the game is played at 5 p.m. on Friday or midnight on Friday (it’s 5 p.m.).
That said, the “chore” right now is to get to my magical figure of 37K (Al Golden wants 45K and that’s fine, too) by adding both the hardcore and soft core Villanova fan base and our own soft core fan base.
Evidence points to the “hardcore” Villanova fan base as being around only 5,000. You need only look at the last three playoff games in Radnor for those figures. Add in a couple of more thousand “softcore” Villanova fans just on the novelty of winning the national championship alone and we’re right where we were last year.
The challenge comes in getting the “softcore” Temple fans to postpone by only a few hours a trip to the shore on the last weekend of the summer.
Chore yes, impossible no.
Need an idea?
Look no further than Tom Sawyer for one.
Make the thing so appealing that it’s a “can’t-miss” deal.
Say this is fun (it is), this is what everyone is going to do, that all the students are coming (15K did last year, fudge the figure upward and say 20K are expected this year) for the free food and drink and camaraderie (many are) and this is a happening like no other sports event in this town for years. Students are going to be saying, “Geez, 20,000 of my fellow students are coming, I don’t want to be one of the few kids left out. Get me my ticket now.” It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Mix in the primer of Bernard Pierce’s Hunt for Heisman campaign and, walla, you have a walk-up crowd of people asking for an opportunity to pain this fence.
Just like Tom’s friend, Ben, did in the Adventures of Tom Sawyer.

TU-RU series deal signed and sealed

About the coolest-looking season tickets ever.
Photo by Owlified

Not surprisingly, all the Temple coaches are pretty good guys and down-to-earth people.
I got that impression yesterday when Mark D’Onofrio, the assistant head coach and defensive coordinator, walked up to me and extended his hand at McFadden’s during the annual season ticket-holders’ party.

“I’m Mark D’Onofrio,” he said.

“I’m Mike Gibson,” I said.

He probably knew I knew who he was, and he might have known who I was, but the pleasantries were both sincere and appreciated.

I then mentioned to D’Onofrio you could have held yesterday’s season ticket holder party in a phone booth five years ago.

“That’s what makes this so rewarding for me,” I told him, because I knew how it used to be.

I then asked D’Onofrio to put Chris Whitney on his ass early and often.


This is my favorite photo of Adrian Robinson because it shows how much he cared about beating UCLA. I think he will have many more happy moments than sad ones this year. His sack at Navy was shown on the big screen at McFadden’s.

He laughed, but had no discernible reaction. I didn’t expect him to anyway.

At least, my fervent hope is that the seed for the defensive game plan against Villanova has been planted. Heck, that was my game plan last year. If Whitney is sacked nine or more times, I guarantee a convincing Temple win. If they let him sit back and dink and dunk, like last year, it’ll be too close for comfort. How they get to nine or more sacks is D’Onofrio’s call. What’s important is pulling out all the stops to get there, including linebacker, safety and cornerback blitzes if necessary.

I thought the party was packed last season, but it looked like the big room at McFadden’s was at least three times as crowded yesterday.

The party spilled over into the large outside area and that was packed, too.

That brings me to the big news.

Some Temple people in the know mentioned to me that season tickets have tripled in the past year.

Since season tickets were 3,190 sold last year, I’m guessing we’re approaching 10K in season tickets alone right now.
The tickets themselves were pretty amazing. In past years, they’d put a rubber band around some pretty bland-looking tickets and stick it in an envelope.
When I went up to the table to get mine, I thought there must have been a mistake. It looked like a cool poster (see Owlified’s photo), but no tickets. Then I saw the scanned code at the bottom and realized they were my season tickets.
Wow.
Pretty sweet.

“We have three games to open the season and we’re looking to average at least 25 thousand for those three games,” Temple AD Bill Bradshaw said.

That’s attainable and realistic.

I’m sticking to my prediction of 37K for the Villanova game. It’ll take some doing, but that’s attainable, too.

Win Villanova and you are talking 25K for each of the Central Michigan and UConn games.

Some great Temple video was shown, including Adrian Robinson’s sack of Navy quarterback Ricky Dobbs on the last play of that game and the ensuing Temple celebration, both on the field and in the locker room.

Great stuff.

Dobbs must have had maybe one second from the time he took the snap until the time AR cut him down. It was the most impressive and important sack of the season and great to see that moment on the video again.

    The other big news:

  • Rutgers has been signed to a home-and-home for four games starting in 2015. Bradshaw mentioned that the deal was signed “today” meaning Monday. So what was rumored is now official.
  • The Penn State series has been extended by five games.
  • Coach Al Golden reported “no academic issues” with any of his players, meaning all will be eligible for the Villanova game and the ensuing season.
  • Golden said that “we’ll work toward getting Wayne Hardin in the college football Hall of Fame, where he deserves to be.” Couldn’t hurt to have college football’s hottest young coach pursuing this issue.
  • Hardin, who was there, said that “he doesn’t care” whether he gets in, but many of his former players do. I told coach to just look at the teams he put in the top 20 (Navy No. 2 in 1962 and Temple No. 17 in 1979) and neither has sniffed a ranking anywhere near as high since. For that alone (and many other accomplishments), he deserves induction.

It’s not too late to join the party … not the one at McFadden’s, but the one at the Linc. Click on logo to join the season ticket crowd:

Temple picked to win MAC title

Teddy Roosevelt once said to walk softly and have a big stick.
I thought a lot about Teddy while walking out of the Temple-Villanova football game last year.

2010 MAC FOOTBALL PRESEASON POLL

EAST DIVISION
1. TEMPLE (17) 137
2. Ohio (3) 116
3. Kent State 94
4. Bowling Green 74
5. Miami 53
6. Buffalo 48
7. Akron 38

WEST DIVISION
1. Northern Illinois (15) 115
2. Central Michigan (3) 183
3. Western Michigan (2) 77
4. Toledo 75
5. Ball State 50
6. Eastern Michigan 20

Marathon MAC Championship Game Winner
Temple 11, Northern Illinois 5, Ohio 1 (three voters did not choose a winner for MAC Championship)

The trash talking, particularly from the Temple side of the field, on some Villanova message boards was pretty alarming to me.
Hell, nobody knew more than me that Temple should pound Villanova in football.
I picked 34-13.
Should have, would have, if Bernard Pierce carried the ball oh, say, 30 more times than the paltry six touches he had.
I was thinking of that walking out of the Villanova game last year, too.
But more than that, I was thinking about how all the Temple trash talking came back to bite those fans in the ass.
I say talk all the trash you want AFTER the game.
Don’t say a word before it.
I’m writing this because I recently read a tweet from a Temple fan I respect saying, “all this trash talking is really getting me excited for the Villanova game.”
We all know we’re carrying more than a big stick into this game.
We’re carrying an H-Bomb (Heisman bomb).
That, and a great defense and a quarterback who can finally make more positive plays than negative ones, should be enough.
If you want to trash talk before the game, bring a banner that reads, “Big 5 champs.”
Otherwise, keep quiet until your Temple Owls make a victory lap with the Mayor’s Cup in tow.

Hunt for the Heisman bumper stickers available

Breaking news:

… As of July 27, we have received no (zero) orders for bumper stickers, so if you order one today, there’s a good chance you’ll get the free Bernard Pierce for Heisman one that goes to the first nine orders …full details below


If this happens, it could not happen to a nicer young man. Stay healthy, happy and humble, Bernard.
Support Temple Football Forever (and be the envy of the tailgate) by purchasing this simple bumper sticker, three inches high and 10 inches wide:

One low price ($20), two great ways to pay:
1) Any contribution of $20 or more via paypal (click over donate below) on or after July 6, 2010 will receive one. Please be sure to include address.
Or …..
2) Mail $20 check and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to:
Mike Gibson
P.O. Box 243
Quakertown, PA 18951

First nine (9) contributions of $20 will not only receive that bumper sticker (it’s a little blurry but in an artsy way), but this one for free in honor of Bernard Pierce’s Heisman campaign kickoff (also 3 inches high, 10 inches wide). The Pierce bumper sticker is very sharp:


I am currently the only person in America to have this sticker on my bumper. You can be one of 10. Allow two weeks for delivery. As always, thanks for supporting the only online site exclusively dedicated to Temple football.

The Paul Palmer Comic Book story

Time being as fleeting as it is, I didn’t realize that 1986 was so long ago until I tried to find the Paul Palmer Comic book I lost.

It’s the one the Temple SID department mailed to 1,050 Heisman Trophy voters back in 1986. I got a Heisman ballot because I was the Calkins’ Newspapers college football writer that year and had stories on the sport regularly published in the Bucks County Courier Times, the Doylestown Intelligencer and the Burlington County Times.
The old comic book is somewhere, tattered I fear, in the middle of a whole bunch of Temple-related junk that I never really had a chance to categorize.
In those days, I was in the middle of apartment-hopping in Doylestown and just threw most of my stuff into my storage room.
It might be still there, but I can’t find it. All I did was find a pretty well intact media guide from that year. You can see the cover photo and page two photo of Palmer in a post somewhere below this one entitled “Where’s my Bernard Pierce comic book?”
Well, the Paul Palmer comic book story is relevant today because the campaign for the Heisman WITH POTENTIAL HEISMAN VOTERS is something, I believe, the university should be doing today.
Scott Walcoff, from the school’s promotion department, is handling the back end of this campaign (for potential ticket-buyers) rather brilliantly with a Hunt of the Heisman billboard strategically placed at locations within a mile of Lincoln Financial Field.
The billboard states simply “Hunt for the Heisman” with the words below “you are 1 mile from history” and directs folks to owlstix.com for ticket information.

Support Temple Football Forever (and be the envy of the tailgate) by purchasing this simple bumper sticker, three inches high and 10 inches wide:

One low price ($20), two great ways to pay:
1) Any contribution of $20 or more via paypal (click over donate below) on or after July 6, 2010 will receive one. Please be sure to include address.
2) Mail $20 check and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to:
Mike Gibson
P.O. Box 243
Quakertown, PA 18951

First nine (9) contributions of $20 will not only receive that bumper sticker, but this one for free in honor of Bernard Pierce’s Heisman campaign kickoff (also 3 inches high, 10 inches wide):


I am currently the only person in America to have that one on my bumper sticker. You can be one of 10. Allow two weeks for delivery. As always, thanks for supporting the only online site exclusively dedicated to Temple football.

Heady, smart, stuff.
Not enough, though, is being done from the front end, which, to me, is targeting the voters themselves.
That’s where the comic book or something like it comes into play.
Back in 1986, Temple football information director Mike Kaine, working under SID Al Shrier, came up with the idea of mailing the comics with Paul Palmer on the cover and 16-pages of illustrated Paul Palmer information to the 1,050 voters.
“How much did it cost?” Kaine told a newspaper reporter back then. “I have no idea.
“It cost a lot, but the promotions department covered all the costs. We came up with the idea, wrote it, paid an illustrator and made the mailings. It was a significant investment.”
It was critically acclaimed, too.
Last year, a Spokane (Wash.) newspaper called it one of the top five Heisman campaigns of all time, lumping it with a Vanderbilt quarterback’s video that came with a bag of popcorn and Notre Dame’s changing of the pronunciation of Joe “Theesman’s” name to Joe Theisman (he spells it that way, but pronounces it the other) to rhyme with Heisman.
I could find only one negative comment on the campaign and that was a writer from the Los Angeles Times.
“What is Temple trying to do?” he wrote. “Insult our intelligence? We’re writers. We can read.”
He missed the point of the whole thing, which was to get Paul Palmer’s name out there to the people who mattered the most, the Heisman voters.
Would that writer even mentioned Palmer’s name if Temple didn’t do something so eye-catching?
No.
It doesn’t have to be another comic book, but that wouldn’t be a bad idea.
Scott Walcoff started this ball rolling with a terrific billboard campaign. Make modified bumper stickers out of those billboards and mail one to each of the 1,050 Heisman voters.
If cost is an issue, have the Owl Club raise the money.
Do something innovative.
Bernard Pierce deserves a Heisman launch that targets both fans and voters.

Beating Penn State would mean the world to TU

Beating Villanova is one million times more important than beating Penn State. It’s imperative. It’s a demand, not a request. You cannot lose to Villanova again and retain any hometown credibility for the program.

At the risk of getting ahead of ourselves, I will take a moment to do just that.
Let’s talk about, say, the Penn State game three months from today.
(Let me just say before going any further, beating Villanova is one million times more important than beating Penn State. It’s imperative. It’s a demand, not a request. You cannot lose to Villanova again and retain any hometown credibility for the program.)
Still, I’ve fast-forwarded myself to Beaver Stadium (great name, by the way, just sayin’), sitting with 110,000 of my fellow college football fans, 5,000 of whom may be rooting for the Owls against Penn State on Sept. 25.
Making that 250-mile trip has been usually as futile a project for Owl fans as trying to end World Hunger or getting the Republicans to pass a Health Care bill with a public option.
It’s been that way since the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor.
That’s the last year Temple won.
Maybe not so much this year.
Temple’s got a little more than a puncher’s chance this year.
You know it.
I know it.
The rest of those 105,000-plus fans don’t know it, though.
Most of the Penn State fans in the Philadelphia area give lip service to the Temple program.
Geez, Al Golden is doing a great job there.”
“Being in the MAC has done wonders for Temple.”
“Al’s building a nice resume there.”
When I mention that it’s only a matter of time before Temple pulls a Central Michigan and beats the highest-profile college football program in its state, I get a whole different reaction.
“Whoa. Let’s not get crazy.”
“It’s never going to happen.”
“Temple is never going to beat Penn State.”
Never say never.
It may not be this year.
It may not be next year, but it’s not impossible.
This isn’t your father’s Temple team, unless your father played for Wayne Hardin. This is a real good team.
Real good might be one way to put it.
Loaded might be another.
Beating Penn State, especially if the Nittany Lions went on to win the Big 10, would rocket the Owls toward greatness.
Beating Penn State would immediately legitimize Temple football not only in its own town but in the state and the nation and would be a boost of immeasurable proportions in terms of prestige and gate receipts. Temple students, faculty and alumni would be puffing up their chests so much for the next 12 months, you’d think all of them looked like The Incredible Hulk. By my calculations, that’s 250,000 living alumni, 33,000 full-time students and 12,300 full-time employees. Those are a lot of chests. And 90 percent of them live here or damn close to here.
They might have to shut down North Broad Street, like they did when the basketball team won at North Carolina, 82-66, in 1988.
With all due respect to Villanova, none of the above happens with a win over the Wildcats.
I know a lot of Temple fans think it’s possible. In fact, I don’t know of a single Temple football player who doesn’t believe in the delicious thought.
I think it’s a good thing that I can’t find a single Penn State fan who thinks it’s possible.
I hope their football team approaches Sept. 25th the same way.
Click on logo below to read my interview with Linebacker U.:

Temple and Rutgers close to a 2-for-2 deal

Rivalries are a beautiful thing.
I’m old enough to know when Temple and Delaware were rivals.
One of my fondest days was spent in Newark, Del., when Temple beat Delaware, 31-8, in front of a still-record and still-stunned crowd of 23,619.
An even fonder day was Temple’s 45-0 win in Newark on another beautiful Saturday. The hot dogs in that post-game tailgate tasted like Filet Mignon.
Temple even got grief from the local media by scheduling Delaware.
“I believe in scheduling Delaware … and then beating the crap out of them,” was the way Wayne Hardin was quoted in response.
I loved it.
Could you imagine Al Golden saying that about any opponent?
“Temple’s program is a big-time song and dance,” Delaware coach Tubby Raymond said.
Ouch.
Now that’s a rivalry.
That’s what I’m talkin’ about.
Hardin must’ve really enjoyed it because he beat Raymond seven of the last nine times he faced him on the football field. Hardin could talk the talk, but one of the most admirable things about him (of many) is that he backed that up by walking the walk.
Penn State is a rival but, to be one, you’ve got to prove that you can beat one.
Temple’s proven that against Rutgers numerous times and the proximity of the schools combined with an animosity factor qualifies this as a real rivalry.
You’ve got to have a little animosity to stir the rivalry pot and, in Rutgers, there’s some of that.

That’s why the news today of a 2-for-2 deal (twice in Philadelphia, twice in Piscataway) is terrific for me.
Since Delaware, Rutgers has always been Temple’s biggest rival.
With the Big East expulsion backdrop, there’s plenty of animosity.
This is something Rutgers wanted five years ago, but approached Temple with a 3-for-2 deal.
Temple, I’m told, said no dice.
“We want to play you, but it’s 2-for-2 or nothing,” was Temple’s response.
So, for five years, it’s been nothing.
Temple would have been very happy waiting until Kingdom Come with the nothing and Rutgers’ brass finally realized that the extra game demand did not make sense if it meant the schools would never play again.
Rutgers finally gave in last week.
I’m amused when I hear from my Rutgers friends (and I have a few) demanding that Temple give Rutgers an extra home game “because Temple is a MAC school.”
Dude, you are the reason we’re a MAC school.
If you supported us, Virginia Tech and Pitt would have joined in and blocked the Big East expulsion.
So there’s some animosity there.
There’s no animosity, for me at least, against Buffalo, Kent State and the fake Miami.
The only discordant note is that this series won’t start until 2015. Al Golden will be 45 years old and working on a Wayne Hardin-like legacy in Philadelphia (I hope).
By then, I hope he talks the Hardin talk and walks the Hardin walk.

Where is my Bernard Pierce comic book?

Page 2 of the 1986 Temple football media guide.

More than anything else, the Heisman Trophy is the byproduct of an excellent and deserving candidate playing under the right circumstances with just the right level of promotion.
Temple’s Paul Palmer certainly was that back in 1986.

The Owls’ Bernard Pierce, who broke all of Palmer’s freshman rushing records last year, certainly is that now.
People told Palmer he could not make a serious run for the trophy because he played at Temple.
Because he didn’t listen and the people closest to him didn’t listen, he was at the New York Athletic Club on the day Vinny Testaverde got the trophy finishing as the deserving runner up. Palmer wore a neat brown suit with an Owl lapel pin and he was as deserving of the recognition as was Testaverde.

Not bad at all.
It was a great day for Palmer and for Temple University.
The only advantage the Palmer of 1986 had over the Pierce of 2010 is that Palmer played against what was then the No. 10 toughest schedule in the country and helped the Owls of Bruce Arians finish 6-5 against that schedule, beating the likes of Virginia Tech and East Carolina.
Yet Pierce will be on the field against Big East contender Connecticut and Big 10 contender Penn State, so he will have those kinds of chances, too.

What I’d like to see the university do for Pierce right now is nudge him toward the Heisman the way the SID office nudged Palmer. Get him into the conversation now, not after he rolls up, say, 514 yards and seven touchdowns against Villanova.
Back in 1986, the SID office put out a 16-page comic book with Palmer depicted as Superman and mailed the book to all 1,016 Heisman voters. The comic depicted Palmer’s meteoric rise from a small under-recruited tailback from Maryland to the big man on campus in a major metropolis, complete with stats and supporing facts. Back then, the SID office put Palmer on the cover of the 1986 Media Guide with the caption “Heisman Trophy candidate Paul Palmer” and the headline: Temple: the Philadelphia Team America’s Watching.
Page Two included quotes from Don Nehlen, Joe Paterno, Dick MacPherson and others touting Palmer’s ball-toting ability.
Clever stuff.
The only promotion I’ve heard for Pierce is a free schedule magnet.
As Derrick Coleman once said, “Whoopty-damn-do.”
I don’t see the same level of promotion right now for Pierce a couple of months before the season, but maybe the school is working with a couple of illustrators in New York City.
Maybe.
Hopefully.
Then again, maybe not.
Don’t give me any grief about this not being in the budget. Budget smudget. Do you know how much having a serious candidate for the Heisman Trophy does for the university’s coffers in terms of attendance, TV revenue, etc.? This is a gold mine. Gold. The 49ers (the gold-miners, not the football team) didn’t walk away from Sutter’s Mill because they didn’t have the money for a pan.
That’s why I’d like to see the university set the table for what I expect to be a terrific year for Pierce and the Owls by mounting a serious campaign now. Bang the drums hard. Set off smoke signals.
Do something.
If Pierce leads to the Owls to an upset win or two and helps them dominate the MAC, he will be right there in the conversation  up until December.
If he does it after the kind of campaign Al Shrier’s excellent SID office ran leading up to Palmer’s senior season, he might have to start shopping for brown suits.

Temple isn’t ignoring Bernard, as proven by these billboards about to go up at Interstate locations exactly one mile from the stadium. I would just like to see them just as go hard after the Heisman voters right now, too, but that’s more the job of the SID office than the promotions department.
You can be part of history, too. It’s the price of a Temple football season ticket. Buy one now by clicking below: