"Get your work done"

I’ve never been as big a fan of Cherry and White Days as my fellow Owl fans.
During the leanest of years, the Cherry team and the White team would both look good and there would be the usual optimism abounding.
I always looked at this through the Prism of two colors.
Cherry and White.
That is, whatever good was coming at the expense of something bad.
Player X would make a good move and score a touchdown because player Y missed a tackle.
My friend, Chief J, would be the pessimist.
“Another losing season,” he would say.
I’d take the skeptical approach.
“Get back to me when we do this against somebody else,” I said.
I would love, for example, us to scrimmage a Rutgers or a Villanova so I could put the spring game in some kind of context.
Right now, the football context is limited.
The best part about the day is the fellowship among Owl fans who haven’t been together since November.
Sure, some players looked good today and that’s really the biggest positive to come out of a spring game.
Former Owls’ coach Bruce Arians used to preach something to the team before every practice.
“Get your work done today,” he said, “and you’ll do good things Saturday.”
That’s what Cherry and White and what this whole month was all about.
That’s what the month of August will be about and the months leading up to August.
Get your work done.
I’ll be a lot more excited about the trip to Army, especially to see a 100 percent Joe Jones and a 100 percent Adam DiMichele and in a meaningful game for the first time in a long time.
I promise.

Temple-UConn II: Get your popcorn ready

By Mike Gibson
Last year, it was Wayne Hardin’s shoe leather.
This year, it’s Fran Duffy’s video artistry.
Duffy is about 60 years Hardin’s junior but his work will help pack the Linc, much like Hardin’s work did.



Fran Duffy


Duffy’s brilliant work is this video (above, click once or twice on the center of the icon). The two minutes has everything.
Drama.
Pathos.
Conspiracy. See Big East.
Motive. See Big East replay official.
Incredulity. See Big East replay official turn blind eye.
Justice expected.
Justice denied.
With all due respect to coach Hardin’s tireless efforts _ stopping in every TV station, answering every radio and newspaper request for stories on his guarantee of filling Lincoln Financial Field, this ought to put even more fannies in the seats than Hardin’s record crowd did a year ago.
Justice.
Every Temple fan who was outraged at the injustice done in East Hartford last year should make plans to come to the home opener at Lincoln Financial Field.
Even those Temple fans who weren’t outraged (and who might that be?) should be there, too, because they are going to see a football team playing with a fire and determination fueled by a monumental injustice
done to them a year ago.
I can’t see how UConn can match that emotion.
It’s going to be fun to watch.
As former Owl wide receiver Phil Goodman once said: “Get your popcorn ready. It’s going to be a show.”
Or was that Terrell Owens?
It doesn’t matter.
Last year it was about Justice with a capital J.
This year, it’s about retribution with a capital R.

Temple announces 2008 schedule

Temple fans were smiling after three straight wins last year
Season tickets: Call 215-204-8499 or visit http://www.owlstix.com.



By Mike Gibson
First-time reporters used to ask Wayne Hardin what kind of offense he ran at Temple.
That usually came after three hours of scratching their heads in the press box trying to figure it out.
Hardin’s offense was a little Houston Veer, a little triple option, a little pro set.
You would likely see anything, from a shovel pass, to a delayed draw to a throwback pass and everything in between.
When teams expected the Owls to go here, he went there.
Hardin had a stock answer for those reporters.
“It’s what I call a smorgasboard offense,” he would say. “You know, like the food on a smorgasboard, a little of this, a little of that and a little of everything.”
That’s how I would describe the 2008 Temple football schedule released today.
It’s got a little bit of everything to whet the palette of Owls’ fans.
Want revenge?
You’ve got it when UConn comes to town on Sept. 9.
How about a win over an in-state rival?
Then make the trip to Happy Valley to see the Adam DiMichele Owls take on Penn State.
In the mood to win a championship?
Then go to any of the MAC games, home or away.
Maybe even the Owls will carry the non-BCS banner into some big January bowl game, much like Hawaii did a year ago.
We can only hope.

Revisting the Garden State Bowl

Coach Wayne Hardin and the Owls hoist bowl trophy
By Mike Gibson
Got a note the other day from Kevin Duckett, the former Temple halfback for the 10-2 Garden State Bowl team.
He was responding to the adjective I used that best described his running style.
“Nobody’s ever called me a slippery halfback before,” Duckett wrote. “Thanks for remembering my playing days.”
I thought about Kevin Duckett and that 1979 team a lot in the last couple of days. There’s a whole generation of Temple fans who don’t understand just how good that team was or how close it was to finishing 12-0 against the 18th toughest schedule in the country.

    Here are just a couple of the many highlights:

  • A systematic dissection of West Virginia in the opener at Mountaineer Field, 38-16, turning what had been a howling sellout mob of 52,956 in the first quarter into complete silence resembling a library for the final three quarters;
  • Kicking the living crap out of a bowl-bound Syracuse team, 49-17, that had future NFLers in wide receiver Art Monk, running back Joe Morris and quarterback Bill Hurley.
  • A 10-9 loss to a top 10 Pitt team.
  • Leading, 7-6, at halftime on the road against a top 20 Penn State team before falling, 22-7.
    Just two losses, one by a single point.
    So close to perfection at football’s highest level.
    So much so that I went into the library and found the AP story on the Garden State Bowl win over a good California team.
    It follows here:

    EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP)- Perhaps they should change the terminology to the “Wild, Wild East” and the “Mild, Mild West.” The Owls of Temple University struck another blow for much-maligned Eastern football Saturday with a decisive 28-17 victory over the University of California in the second annual Garden State Bowl.
    It was Cal’s worst setback of the season- the Golden Bears lost to third-ranked Southern California by only 24-14- and gave the East four triumphs in six games against the Pacific-10 Conference this season.

    “The East-West thing added fuel to the fire,” Temple running back Mark Bright conceded. “On the way to the game, I. was reading a West Coast paper in which their coach compared us to Washington State. I left the paper on the bus.”
    The Owls didn’t leave much else on the bus en route to their first postseason appearance in 45 years. They scored on their first three possessions, including two touchdown runs by Kevin Duckett, and then rammed the ball down Cal’s throat with an impressive six-minute clinching touchdown drive in the final period after blowing most of an early 21-0 advantage.
    Cal Coach Roger Theder had made some remarks about Temple in recent weeks that were interpreted as less than complimentary. But, Theder said Saturday, “I never said anything about Temple except that they were a good football team. We knew we had our work cut out for us. If this is Eastern football, then it’s pretty good.”
    Temple’s Wayne Hardin agreed with that assessment.
    “Our kids carried a banner they’ve never carried before,” he said. “People have looked down on us in the past, but I felt today we could represent Eastern football. We couldn’t prove Eastern football was great, but we proved it’s not bad, either. There are four Eastern teams in bowl games and I hope we started them outright.”
    Duckett capped drives of 67 and 50 yards with scoring runs of 8 and 4 yards and Bryan Broomell flipped a 7-yard touchdown pass to Wiley Pitts as the 20th-ranked Owls stormed to a 21-0 first-period lead over the penalty-plagued Golden Bears.
    After California climbed to within 21-17, Broomell clinched the victory with a 5-yard touchdown pass to Gerald Lucear, capping a 78-yard march with 6:47 remaining.
    California’s 11 regular-season opponents had managed only a total of 20 first-period points, but Temple even had a chance to score again when Guy Peters recovered a fumble by Paul Jones at the Cal 27-yard-line with 25 seconds left in the opening quarter.
    The Owls reached the 9-yard-line before they were thrown back and Ron Fioravanti’s 32-yard field-goal attempt sailed wide. That gave the Bears some momentum and they dominated the second period after Ron Hill blocked Casey Murphy’s punt at the 11 less than five minutes into the period.
    Two plays later, Rich Campbell lobbed a 12-yard touchdown pass to Matt Bouza, and five minutes later he fired a 14-yard TD pass to Gerald Rose. But Cal’s other scoring after that came on Mick Luckhurst’s 34-yard field goal at 2:10 of the final period.
    The victory enabled Temple to finish its season with, a 10-2 mark, the most triumphs in the school’s history. Cal wound up 6-6 and took its worst setback after suffering its five regular season defeats by a total of 24 points.
    The sunny, 40-degree weather helped attract 55,493 fans to 76,000-seat Giants Stadium. That satisfied bowl officials who were disappointed in last year’s turnout of 30,332 who saw Arizona State defeat Rutgers 34-18 in the 1978 inaugural. Each team will receive at least $225,000 compared to last year’s $166,000 payoff.
    With Campbell hitting his first three passes for 44 yards, Cal marched from its 20 to the Temple 32 before Luckhurst missed a 49-yard field goal try. It was all Temple for the rest of the period as Cal turned into the Bad News Bears.
    The Owls went 67 yards in 10 plays for their first touchdown, including a 17-yard pass from Broomell to Lucear and a 14-yard inside reverse by Duckett, who scored on the same play with 5:43 gone.
    It was 14-0 less than 4 minutes later after a 50-yard drive that included a 23-yard scramble by Broomell and a 15-yard run by Mark Bright, who carried 19 times for 112 yards despite being shaken up twice. Bright was named the game’s outstanding player.
    The key play on Temple’s third touchdown drive, which covered 53 yards in eight plays, was a 19-yard pass from Broomell to Lucear.
    After Luckhurst’s field goal sliced the Temple lead to four points, the Owls ground out 78 yards in 14 plays and ate up almost six minutes before Broomell’s second touchdown pass.
    Campbell, who finished with 25 completions in 38 attempts for 241 yards, rallied Cal in the second period but threw incomplete passes from the Temple 8- and 29-yard lines in the final three minutes of the game.


    Duckett was the slippery halfback, a guy who you’d get a hand on for one second and then you’d find yourself with two empty hands the next.
    The little bit I’ve seen of current Owl Joe Jones reminds me a lot of Kevin Duckett.
    As Bill Parcells might say, that’s a good thing, not a bad thing.
    Duckett had a role to play, but so did everybody else. Brian Broomell was a quarterback who led the nation in passing efficiency. Mark Bright was a hard-charging, old-style, between-the-tackles, fullback.
    All were from the Philadelphia area. Duckett, Northeast High. Bright, William Tennent. Broomell, Sterling.
    Joe Paterno called the Temple offensive line the best he faced as a coach.
    The defense was intimidating.
    I responded to Kevin Duckett thusly:
    “You were pretty slippery on that 76-yard touchdown run at Penn State,” I said.
    As he was throughout that magical season.
    On the eve of a current Temple football team that promises to give this generation of fans a whole set of new memories, Duckett and that team deserves to be remembered.

Rachel Eschenbach has thrown down the gauntlet

By Mike Gibson
Fitting that a Temple University fencer has thrown down the gauntlet in response to Lewis Katz’s challenge.
Tell the New Jersey Nets’ majority owner and 1963 Temple grad how to increase fan support for Temple’s athletic teams, specifically basketball and football, and win $5,000 of Katz’s hard-earned cash.
Rachel Eschenbach (pictured, we think) is a Temple fencer and she won the prize for some excellent suggestions.
She formulated a point system, rewarding students for attendance at athletic events.
Excellent suggestions, but we’re not really sure if they are the right ones to put football fans in the seats.
Surely, there are even some better football-specific ideas out there.
In the spirit of what Rachel does for fun and sport, we say:
ON GUARD!!
TOUCHE!!
You take the sword now and keep brainstorming.
Just because Katz’s $5,000 is not available anymore doesn’t mean each one of us can’t make a meaningful contribution to put some fannies in the seats at Lincoln Financial Field this fall.
Football quarterback Colin Clancy won second place for suggesting a class and structuring it to brainstorm further ideas.
Another player, former football kicker Cap Poklemba, showed what just one man can do in drumming up both support and enthusiasm at football games by acting like a one-man raving lunatic. He single-handedly aroused a theretofore moribund fan base into a whooping, involved mob bent for blood in the final three home games of the season.
With apologies to Rachel Eschenbach, Poklemba demonstrated that one man can make a huge difference.
We are many men and, in Rachel’s case, women.
I’m taking Rachel’s sword and pointing it at you now.
“You da man.”
At least when it comes to meaningful ideas to transform an empty stadium into a full one.
Our brain power and kicking around of ideas can make a difference, like Rachel’s ideas undoubtedly will and like Cap’s enthusiasm undoutedly did.
Now it’s up to you.
Take a few hours or days and come back to this story and post your ideas in the comments section here. We’ll publish them as quick as possible and won’t pass any judgments, negative or positive.
Before football season tickets go on sale, we’ll pass all the suggestions on to both athletic director Bill Bradshaw and the hard-working guys in the ticket office.
Remember, nothing too crazy like offering $1,000 cash bonuses for successful field goals (although Cap could use the extra dough).
Something that would not cost much, but entice enough students, grads and Temple people to make the Linc a house of horrors for Owl foes.
Rachel took pen to paper and came away with 5K.
Her’s is a good idea, but just one.
This project needs many more.

Going where the players are ….


By Mike Gibson
The old folks are fond of saying it.
Back in the day.
You know, back in the day we did this, back in the day we did that.
Well, back in the day the map of where the football players are was strikingly different than it appears now.
About 40 years or so ago, there was a heavy concentration of players in Pennsylvania and Texas and a smattering of players everywhere else.
The shift has occurred now.
Pennsylvania still has a lot of nice Division IA football players but even though the size of the state is roughly the same as Florida, that state has about three times as many players.
Why?
One reason is, duh, the weather.
Kids can do the kind of rigorous outdoor workouts there all season that maybe snow days or very cold days prohibit.
Another is spring ball.
Yes, Florida high schools have spring football.
They have another season perfecting their game while Pennsylvania football players are playing basketball, baseball or lacrosse.
It makes a difference. The latest charts available are from 2002, but the statewide patterns of NFL players and what state they played their high school ball in has been pretty much the same.
The warm-weather states of Florida and California are where the players are at.
In this class of 26 football players at Temple University, Al Golden has stayed true to his recruiting footprint of Pennsylvania and New Jersey, while grabbing a couple of players from Florida.
Here’s the breakdown:

  • Pennsylvania (12);
  • New Jersy (4);
  • Florida, Maryland (2);
  • New York, Georgia, Texas, D.C., Va., Conn. (6).


You’ve got to like the approach.
Golden is getting players the big schools want, like Vaughn Carraway, James Nixon and Tony Cornelius, just to name a few. Still, he’s trusting his gut and film on players like Alex Jackson and Quentin White.
It’s a gut based on years of watching film.
Back in the day, Wayne Hardin had the same kind of gut recruiting for Temple University.
That turned out pretty good.
I trusted Hardin then and I’m going to trust Golden now.

Don’t forget the other guys

By Mike Gibson
Inside of the Edberg-Olson Hall Football Complex, Al Golden was talking about the 26 guys who just signed to become football players at Temple University.
It’s a great class, perhaps the best of three good ones Golden brought to North Broad Street.
In the middle of it all, Golden took time to look outside.
“I’m looking right now and there’s 70-75 guys out there right now,” he said. “This is their day off.”
The calendar says spring ball begins in March.
Reality said it began the Monday after the Western Michigan game.
Go to the E-O on any day and you’ll see plenty of Owls working out on their own.
The media came to learn about the new class, but mostly what they saw was the culture changing outside.
Joe Jones is part of that culture. He’s a three-star running back who’s rehabbing an injury.
Don’t count him out of the competition for starting running back.
“Joey Jones is someone everyone in this room has a lot of respect for,” Golden said. “He’s a great kid. He’s done a great job in the classroom. He wants to be here. You can’t say enough about that.”
Golden is slowly molding his team with 18 high school team captains among the current 26 on top of the 20-plus Golden signed in the first two classes.
“I really say this is our second recruiting class,” Golden said. “It’s hard to say that we had a first recruiting class. We had six weeks.”
It’s obvious that Golden is building a house of brick. It’s becoming so nice he might want to live in it awhile once it’s done.
“I am here,” he said, when asked about speculation about him. “My heart’s here. My family’s here. This is where I want to be. Let’s not put the carraige before the horse here. We won four games. Four and a half.
“I voted with my feet. What do you say to that?”
So, too, did the 70-75 guys practicing right outside.
This might have been a day to discuss the new guys but core guys were right outside on that field.
Don’t forget those guys, too.

Meet the 2008 Owls

By Mike Gibson
It’s this time of year that Al Golden checks the plug in fax machine at the Edberg-Olson Hall Football Complex and makes sure the tray is filled with paper.
Heck, if necessary, he’ll bring in a backup fax machine or two just in case.
Fortunately, all the other work has been done and the fax machine should be humming on Wednesday with commitments in the form of signed letters-of-intents from your newest Temple Owls.
If there’s a theme this season, it’s that playmakers make plays and there is an abundance of playmakers in this current class.
These are the guys likely to fax their letter-of-intents Wednesday. The good news is that they are have a long history of making winning football plays. The better news that, with the exception of one or two players at the MOST, all of these guys will be in uniform by summer practice.
It is by OBJECTIVE accounts, especially the one published by Scout.com, the No. 1 class by a lot in the Mid-American Conference.
That’s the third straight year Golden has pulled in a class rated No. 1 by either Scout.com, Rivals.com, collegefootballnews.com, all three (last year), just both or just one.
If you don’t think that’s going to translate into results on the field of play sooner than later, you are just not paying attention.
Or you are an Ostrich.
Many thanks to Scout.com, Rivals.com and informed fans like tchaump for helping us crosscheck this list with what’s available off reliable internet sources.
It may not be exact, but it’s darn close and in no particular order:
Adrian Robinson, LB, Harrisburg _ A three-star linebacker who the premier recruiting expert on the Scout.com network, Matt Alkare, says, “I’ve seen this kid play several times and he’s a big-time stud.” Has already academically qualified. Could become an immediate starter at either outside or inside linebacker.
Tony Cornelius, RB, Boca Raton, Fla. _ An Iowa de-commit who committed to Temple and a second-team All-State running back (large schools) in Florida. An immediate factor in the Owls’ starting backfield.
Alex Jackson, DE, Dunnellon, Fla. _ A 6-foot-4, 225-pound end who one Palm Beach Post writer told us reminds him of “a young Reggie White.” Nuff said.
Anthony Rapley, TE, Georgia _ Was a first-team all-state tight end in Georgia.
Ahkeem Smith, RB, Bethlehem Liberty _ Scored 15 touchdowns for Liberty and rushed for over 1,000 yards. A two-time Allentown Morning Call all-area first team selection.
Deven Baker, WR, Bound Brook, N.J. _ How this excellent wide receiver escaped the clutches of his hometown Rutgers’ squad is RU’s loss and Temple’s gain.
Cedric Hammond, WR, Washington, D.C. _ One of the best wide receivers in Washington, D.C., Hammond developed a reputation for great hands.
Vaughn Carraway, WR, Laureldale, Pa. _ First three-star wide receiver ever to turn down Michigan to accept a Temple offer. Carraway will get a chance to show his considerable skills here. Will push for a starting job as a freshman. Already academically qualified.
Kevin Kroboth, athlete, Nazareth High _ Playing for a traditionally losing program, the coaches there had to use Kroboth at a variety of positions from safety to wide receiver to punt returner to quarterback, his most recent position. Temple coaches will use him the same way to fill an area of most need.
Shahid Pauhill, DE, North Catholic _ Think Michael Strahan and you get the kind of game this North Catholic Falcon has.
Josh Williams, DE, Arizona Western _ Is already a Temple student and ready to play spring ball. That gives him a leg, or two, up on the rest of the class.
James Nixon, RB, Connecticut (via North Bridgton, Maine) _ A Connecticut signee out of high school, was rated the top running back out of that state as a high school senior. He could be the sleeper of this class only because a lot of fans don’t know how good he is. From our reports, he’s every bit as explosive a running back as Smith and Cornelius are. Could end up a starter. Academically qualified already.
Malcolm Williams, RB, Reading _ Played the same type of “wing T” quarterback position at Reading High that Boston College recruit Eric Reynolds sometimes ran snaps out of at Central Bucks South. Didn’t have the RB snaps Reynolds did, hence his less impressive stats. Don’t let that fool you, though. Reports we get from the Reading Eagle guys are that he’s every bit the RB Reynolds is.
Steve Caputo, OL, Unionville _ Big and strong with impressive speed and bench press numbers, Caputo is a beast with a brain. Turned down solid Syracuse offer to come to Temple and could probably start right now if the Owls played a game tomorrow.
Wayne Tribue, OL, Central York _ Comes from the same high school that produced former Owl quaterback Matty Baker and with Caputo-type street cred.
Muhammad Wilkerson, DE, Hargrave (Va.) _ Played his prep ball for Hargrave Military Academy, but was a top high school player at Linden. Tremendous explosiveness off the ball. Not only one of the best football players in the state of New Jersey as a senior, but one of the top basketball players as well. Big Mo should immediately become a part of the most fiercesome four-man DE rotation in the MAC. Think what the Giants did to Tom Brady and just times it by four.
Tahir Whitehead, S, West Side, Newark (N.J.) _ A fierce hitter at safety, he will fit right in with assistant head coach Mark D’Onofrio’s attacking defensive schemes. West Side experienced a “mini-Temple” like rebirth, going from 1-9 to 7-3. Whitehead was a big part of that resurgence.
Jeffrey Legree, QB, Fort Hamilton, Bronx (N.Y.) _ A quarterback with an outstanding skill set, speed and elusiveness and a strong arm, Legree is working hard to get qualified. If he does, great. If he doesn’t, there’s a chance he’ll go the prep route. Either way, he figures to be in the Owls’ quarterback plans once he qualifies.
Ryan Murray, OL, Bok _ A 6-6, 335 lineman with great physical tools, played for former Owl quarterback, Tom DeFelice, in South Philly. Should provide depth on the line.
Marlin Terrell, DB, Coppell, Tex. _ High school football is a religion in Texas and Terrell made enough plays on film to wow the Temple coaches. Anyone who has seen the film on this kid, as I have, knows he’s a very special player. If Daryl Robinson gets moved to lock-down left corner, this guy can easily lock down the other side.
Geoffrey Prather, LB, Archbishop Carroll _ A perennial all-league and all-Delco linebacker who has the speed to play safety, if needed, for the Owls.
Others (that we could not find film or enough written reports to make an informed evaluation) include Maurice Jones, athlete, Belleville, N.J.; and Sean and Pat Boyle (Calvert Hall brothers and offensive linemen), Quinten White, a linebacker from Cardinal Dougherty and Lawrence Turner, a linebacker from Newport News, Va.
If we left anyone out, we apologize.
There’s about 24 hours left to sort this all out for good.