Temple radio: A Long History Comes to An End

As a journalism major at Temple back in the late 1970s, they made us take a course on public relations even knowing many of us would be in the traditional media.

The thought process behind that was we needed to know how the other side wrote.

Really, the whole process of PR a lot of times is polishing a turd and that’s exactly what the Temple PR team did on Thursday.

Dave Sims called the 1990 season for Temple football, including a 23-18 win at Wisconsin over Barry Alvarez’s team.

Can’t take credit for that description but saw it on the Temple basketball facebook site and almost spit out my coffee laughing.

“That release was like polishing a turd,” one of the guys said.

No shit.

The PR release in question was that Temple was announcing an “exciting” new format for broadcasting its major sports games and nowhere in that release did the university include terrestrial radio in its plan.

What does that mean?

A tradition that goes back to at least 1937–and probably even further back–comes to an end with the Aug. 30th opener at Oklahoma.

You will be able to hear Temple radio on a streaming basis but for the first time in history you won’t be able to get in your car and turn the dial to a Temple football game. You won’t be able to carry a transistor radio to hear a Temple football game.

Don’t know if Temple is the only school that doesn’t broadcast its games on a regular radio station, but pretty sure it is probably one of the very few.

And that’s pretty sad because my first job in journalism after Temple was being the sports editor of an afternoon daily in Norwich, N.Y. and the Temple football radio network back then included 10 stations, the farthest north of which was in Binghamton. I could even hear Temple football on the radio in the Southern Tier of New York state.

The “Temple football radio network” went from double-digit number of stations in the 1970s to one in the 1990s and after.

Ron Menchine: The greatest Temple football play-by-play guy ever.

That’s sad because many of my great Temple football moments are radio-related.

When I was an underclassman at Temple, the games were broadcast both on WRTI-FM and WCAU (1210 AM).

Students like Howie Herman did the play-by-play and Jim Kelsh did the color on WRTI. On the AM dial that reached 40 of the 48 states on a cloudless night, the great Ron Menchine did the play-by-play and Heisman Trophy winner Joe Belino did the color.

While the two students who were my friends at Temple did a great job, Menchine and Belino brought a big-time aspect to the Temple broadcasts.

Former Navy coach Wayne Hardin brought both announcers over from Navy radio.

For many of the road games, I doubled as both the Temple News correspondent and the statistician and spotter for Ron and Joe. The two could not have been nicer to a 17-year-old kid and Belino probably was the humblest Heisman Trophy winner I ever met.

Menchine had a big-time voice and tabbed former Owl fullback Henry Hynoski, a 1,000-yard rusher, as “Dynamo Hyno.”

Hynoski had the kind of running style where he would burst through the line, knock over a linebacker, break a tackle of a safety before he was caught from behind by a corner.

Menchine: “Dynamo Hyno looks like Bronco Nagurski out there.”

As a 17-year-old kid, I had no idea who Bronco Nagurski was but since Google didn’t exist back then, I went into the Paley Library the next Monday and looked him up.

Pretty high praise by Ron.

Temple had a few radio announcers after that who didn’t quite measure up.

Steve Fredericks was one.

He was arrested for doing drugs at Kensington and Allegheny and lost his career not only as a play-by-play guy but as a sports talk show host.

Before Menchine and Fredericks, Pro Football Hall of Famer Merrill Reese did the Temple football games of head coach George Makris. I assume he called at least one touchdown by a fullback who wasn’t as good as “Dynamo Hyno” but became more famous.

A guy named Bill Cosby.

Dave Sims was the play-by-play guy for the 7-4 1990 season and his call of the 23-18 win at Wisconsin that year was a masterpiece. Now Dave calls the NFL on Westwood One and is the Seattle Mariners’ baseball play-by-play guy.

For most of the years after Menchine, the play-by-play guy was Harry Donahue. He became famous for his call of the final play in Temple’s 28-24 upset win at No. 10 Virginia Tech.

Since my headphones weren’t working that day, I carried the radio on my jog up East River Drive (now Kelly Drive) listening to the Temple game and wearing my Temple game jersey. When they won, I did a 37-inch vertical leap and pumped my fist. Running the other way, a jogger asked me what the Temple score was.

“28-24, they won,” I said.

“I’m Raheem Brock’s father,” he said.

“Are you Zach Dixon?”

“No, I’m his stepfather. Great news.”

Most of the time, though, I remember Donahue’s calls as going something like this:

“Mike McCann goes back to pass and it’s a touchdown! No, check that, it’s dropped.”

(Needless to say, when Temple moved to the MAC I could see all the road games on my laptop and stopped listening to the radio.)

Temple had another announcer named Don Henderson who pronounced Sid Morse’s name as “Sid Morris” for all four years of his Temple career.

I always thought Sid deserved better.

By Saam came to Philadelphia to do Temple football in 1937. He ended up being the most iconic Phillies play-by-play guy before Harry Kalas.

Temple football broadcasts can be traced way back to 1937 when the play-by-play guy was Ft. Worth Texas native By Saam, who became voice of the Phillies for 30 years.

Nobody knows if the famous Saam flubs existed back then but here were a couple of his with the Phillies:

Saam, who attended high school with golf legend Ben Hogan and college with Sammy Baugh, once created a beheading on air.

“Alex Johnson is going back. He’s going back, back. His head hits the wall. He reaches down, picks it up, and throws it into second base.”

Saam once opened a game by saying, “Hello, Byrum Saam, this is everybody speaking.” (This goof has also been credited to other announcers, including Lindsey Nelson and Phil Rizzuto.) Prior to Game 5 of the 1959 World Series, when Mel Allen introduced the NBC Radio audience to “amiable, affable, able Byrum Saam”, a distracted Saam unthinkingly replied, “Right you are, Mel Allen.” 

Would have loved to hear how By called some Temple games in the 1930s. Or would have loved to hear some tapes of the Sugar Bowl team on the radio in 1934.

Now the capable duo of Kevin Copp and Paul Palmer are doing the games but you won’t be able to get in your car to hear the post-game show anymore and I’m too stubborn to do the bluetooth thing. I’m guessing I’m not the only one.

For me, it’s been a great 50 years of Temple radio that will finally come to an end and there is no PR team alive that can polish that turd.

Monday: Translations

An early quarterback controversy

Leave it to Shawn Pastor to come up with the best quote of summer camp.

Talking to one of the three quarterbacks vying for the Temple football starting job, the answer provided by one of the candidates was that the two players basically held a rock, paper scissors competition to see who would get the reps with the first team.

The editor of OwlsDaily.com always gets the best answers because he asks the best questions but this answer, while revealing, certainly does not give one the warm and fuzzies about Temple’s chances at Oklahoma on Aug. 30 (7:30 p.m., ESPN flagship station).

Temple may end up starting not the best passer but the one who is best at rock, paper and scissors.

The best answer would have been this:

“The coaches have developed a pretty good methodology to determine who runs with the first team. Both coach (Stan) Drayton and coach (Danny) Langsdorf (OC) study the prior practice film and the guy who made the best throws and fewest mistakes runs with the first team the next practice. Then we wipe the slate clean and one of the three of us emerges to run with the ones the next practice.

As John Belushi might say, “but nooooooo…”

The controversy, in this case, is not who should be the starting quarterback but how that quarterback is determined.

It certainly sounds like the coaches are letting the inmates run the asylum and makes one wonder if the right quarterback will emerge in a couple of weeks.

I don’t really care which one emerges because the two top candidates are a guy who has four career FBS touchdown passes against seven career interceptions (Rutgers transfer Evan Simon) and another guy who never did anything above the JUCO level (Forrest Brock). Temple fans had to cover their eyes while that guy did enough to get beat 55-0 in his only extensive Owl experience last year.

The entire Kenny Pickett Era at Temple lasted about five minutes, in which this photo was taken. (Photo courtesy of Heisman Trophy runner-up Paul Palmer)

Tyler Douglas starting would certainly be interesting, though, because he has been compared favorably to current Philadelphia Eagles’ backup Kenny Pickett. They both played for Ocean Township (N.J.) and the coaches there swear he was every bit as good as Pickett while there.

Pickett, a former Temple commit, left the Owls one day after Matt Rhule signed Toddy Centeio out of Florida. Then, a week later, Rhule left himself after winning the AAC title.

Maybe history will repeat itself but this time with a twist. Douglas leads the Owls to the AAC title and both he and Drayton leave for greener pastures a week later.

That is, if Douglas can perfect his rock, paper, scissors game before then.

Friday: Translations

Why this season is different from any other

I’ve seen three scores of simulated games so far: 80-7 bad guys, 14-10 good guys and this one, 31-8. I think it’s going to be closer than 80-7 but would not be surprised if it was 66-7.

In three weeks, we will be watching the Temple Owls play one of the storied teams in the history of college football.

The Oklahoma Sooners.

On national TV.

The Friday night of Labor Day weekend on the TVs of every bar “down the shore” which is where the City of Philadelphia traditionally empties on that weekend.

Winning the AAC would be much more important than beating Oklahoma but I will take both if possible.

Tell me about it.

I’ve lived in Philadelphia for all my life and, in my 20s, lived in a shore house in both Avalon and Stone Harbor. The rest of my life I stayed home in Philly and saw how empty the streets were that weekend compared with every other weekend of the year.

Between going to see the Grease Band on Saturday nights at the Bongo Room and having a few beers at the Princeton Tavern on Fridays, it was a pretty good time.

Always there was a game of some sort–baseball or football–on the TV and we were pretty glued to it while enjoying our last big weekend of a summer that always goes way too fast.

Now Temple takes center stage.

It could be something wonderful for my school or the embarrassment it’s been for the last four seasons.

Not going to bet the game but if I did my money would not be on the hometown squad.

Just watched a Barry Switzer-Era Oklahoma opener, a 38-3 win over visiting UCLA in the 1980s on Youtube, and that was pretty ugly for the fans of a school from a major city.

This has the potential to uglier as the rest of the nation is laying money on a 40.5 favorite.

Will a 40-0 loss make me happy?

No.

You play to win but, whatever the outcome, this is one game you have to throw away because the opponents become more similar to Temple in talent in the next few weeks.

This season is different from any other in the sense that this has to be treated–not by the Temple coaches and players but the Temple fans–as an NFL exhibition game. The result shouldn’t mean as much as getting the players ready for the rest of the season.

I don’t have to like it because it sucks but that’s the reality. One team is being paid millions to beat the other team that is getting paid minimum wage.

I’ll watch with one hand over one eye and hope for a few fortuitous bounces of the oddly-shaped ball and hope the Owls can take something like a 14-7 deficit into the second half before getting blown out.

That’s the best we can hope for until the NCAA or Congress or someone–anyone–restores sanity to the game I once loved a lot more than I do now.

Monday: The QB Battle

Friday: Translations

5 Newcomers to Get Excited About

In Pennsylvania on Saturday night a couple of players split a $635,000 Cash 5 first-place prize by picking five winning numbers between 1-43.

So tonight’s jackpot is a measly $200,000.

I’ll try for it with this combo: 10, 13, 23, 25 and 31 because combing over the roster those are five Temple newcomers I’ll be most excited to see come Aug. 30.

In that winning combination is a UTEP corner who starred, a Big 10 running back who scored some touchdowns in big games, a new linebacker who was the star of Temple’s spring practice and an MVP in the Big 33 game.

(Temple’s last MVP in the Big 33 game was Adrian Robinson, who led the Owls to their first bowl win in 30 years for the 2011 Steve Addazio Owls.)

Torrey Richardson, No. 13, 6-1, 185-pound Sr. CB _ Last year, Richardson started all 12 games for UTEP with 33 tackles (23 solos) and eight pass breakups and those are all better numbers than any Temple cornerback last season.

Antwain Littleton II, No. 31, S 6-1, 240-pound Jr. RB _ Last year, Littleton led Maryland in rushing in a loss at Ohio State and also added a touchdown run in the fourth quarter in a win over Virginia. In 2022, he scored a rushing touchdown in six-straight games, the first time any Maryland RB did that since the 2005 season.

Andreas Keaton, No. 10, 6-2, 200-pound Sr. Saf. _ Last year, Keaton led Western Carolina in tackles with 67. Also led the Catamounts in tackles in 2022. He is the best Temple import from Western Carolina since Matt Rhule left there to take an assistant coaching job with Al Golden in 2007.

Antwone Santiago, No. 23, 6-3, 225-pound So. LB _ Emerged as the most dominant linebacker in spring practice at a position of dire need for the Owls. “He has a chance to be a special player at Temple,” head coach Stan Drayton said in recapping the Cherry and White game. As a high school player in Connecticut, he was selected as first-team all-state at two positions, wide receiver and defensive back.

Terrez Worthy, No. 25, 5-11, 175-pound Jr. RB _ At Parkside (Md.) High School, he repped his squad in the 2022 Big 33 game as the MVP of the Maryland team. Last year, at Lackawanna College, he led all JUCO runners in the nation in both yards (1,492) and touchdowns (10).

Those aren’t the only lucky numbers among the newcomers, but those are the first that stood out to me.

Other possibilities include No. 28 (Ashton Allen), a wide receiver who was a track star at USC. He is not without football experience, though, having played for the Bullus (Md.) High School, Latrell Jean (No. 96), a probable starter at DT (6-3, 280) and Tyrei Washington (No. 22), who averaged nearly 30 yards on 15 kickoff returns.

Temple needed an infusion of talent and certainly all of those players represent an upgrade from last year’s roster.

Whether it’s enough for Drayton to cash a winner at the ticket window is yet to be determined.

5 “Old Heads” Who Might Merit Single Digits

This is the kind of explosiveness that Dante Wright needs to show for Temple.

Appropriate to get excited for the season, even rooting for a team that has the 14th-rated QB in a 14-team league.

It’s football and Temple is my team. I love football and I love Temple. Temple at Oklahoma is less than a month away and there should be a sense of urgency at the Edberg-Olson Football Complex.

The other kids have been working hard and can’t control that other circumstance.

We’ve been on record here as saying Temple needs to tweak its single-digit tradition especially when you consider that Stan Drayton has been here for two full years and lost five single digit players to other schools.

To keep that from happening in the future, the coaches can control that by limiting the digits to either guys who have “Sr.” (senior) or “Gr.” (graduate) next to their names on the roster.

(The coaches also could have controlled the quarterback narrative by bringing in a big-time guy but chose not to do that.)

Also would be helpful to bestow that honor on those players who have been here for awhile and knowing that offensive linemen can’t actually wear the digit in the game but that should not disqualify them from the “honorary” single digit.

D.J. Woodbury chases down Clayton Tune in last-minute loss (2022).

With that in mind, here are five “old heads” who should merit single-digit consideration:

Dante Wright, WR, 5-9, 160 (Gr.) _ Last year’s fastest player on the team was a first-team freshman All-American at Colorado State and the most explosive player on the current Owls. He’s No. 10 now.

D.J. Woodbury, LB, 6-2, 232 (Sr.). _ No. 11 was injured in the Tulsa game last year and missed the rest of the season but, in 2022, started five games and led the team in tackles in an OT loss at Navy.

James Faminu, OL, 6-6, 315 (Gr.) _ No. 62 missed the entirety of the 2023 season with an injury but was an important cog in the line two years ago, starting five games.

Wisdom Quarshie, OL, 6-3, 320 (Gr.) _ No. 79 started the final 11 games of the 2023 season and was named honorable mention all-AAC.

Demerick Morris, DT, 6-3, 300 (Gr.) _ No. 88 looks like he’s going to earn a starting spot on the defensive line after battling through injuries last year but he did play in all 12 games for D.J. Eliot’s defense in 2022.

Another possibility would include corner Ben Osueke, a 6-1, 185-pound senior but that would mean he would have to earn one of the starting cornerback jobs and I think he’s going to do just that.

Limiting the single digits to these “types” of players means no Temple fans will ever have to watch another team’s game and hear the announcer say “you know he’s tough because when he was at Temple he earned a single digit.”

That always causes both agita and acid reflux and Temple fans get enough of that watching their own team.

Monday: 5 Newcomers We’re Anxious to See

Artificial intelligence or pure logic?

Must admit I was fooled when a friend of mine sent me a message Sunday afternoon that had former President Barack Obama’s voice endorsing Temple Football Forever.

It sounded so real I was convinced for almost a full 60 seconds.

Then a few seconds later, he let me know it was AI-generated.

Who knew the technology would be this good? (I’ve heard AI-generated voices before but they always seemed a little off. Obama’s was spot on.)

Artificial intelligence hasn’t checked on what it thinks Temple’s record will be in 2024 but the pure logic so far isn’t optimistic.

Vegas has the over/under for Temple at 2.5 wins, which means a $100 bet on the over gets you only a measly five bucks ($105 payout) if Temple goes the same abysmal 3-9 this year it had for the prior three years.

Had to laugh when someone said five wins would be a successful season.

It won’t in my mind and should not be in anyone else’s mind. Matt Rhule went from 2-10 in his first season to 6-6 in his second and that’s what Stan Drayton should have done last season, not this one. Stan has to make up for going sideways in Year Two.

Now he must find a way to get to 6-6 or better by hook or crook.

One way would be to get a quarterback who has done something on the FBS or FCS level in here ASAP. I don’t think that’s happening. By doing something, I’m not talking about six career interceptions versus four career touchdown passes in the Big 10. What would it look like?

A FCS guy with 20 TD passes vs. 10 INTs or a New Mexico Bowl MVP from the 2022 season.

Both guys with those credentials are still in the portal, yet the brain trust at the Edberg-Olson facility is sitting on their hands.

What are they waiting for?

Peyton Manning’s kid to shake free?

It’s not going to happen.

So right now, simple logic dictates it won’t be a good season.

One running of the EA Sports game had Temple beating Oklahoma, 14-10, and we ran a trailer on that game in our last post.

Maybe that can be considered AI.

If Temple wins, 14-10, that will surpass my being blown away by how the same friend made Obama’s voice sound.

From his lips to God’s ears.

So you’re telling me there’s a chance?

Since I had a couple of teeth extracted on Thursday, my literal grasping of straws has taken a doctor’s ordered week hiatus.

They say that you can’t drink anything through a straw because the “sucking motion” impedes healing.

The dentist didn’t say anything about grasping for figurative straws, which I’ve been doing for most of the last couple days after watching Temple head coach Stan Drayton’s performance at this week’s AAC Media Day Extravaganza.

The one biggest straw is the fact that Drayton has one scholarship remaining in his pocket and is holding it as a wild card for someone currently in the transfer portal who can immediately help the Temple football program.

All I could think about is that one Jim Carrey meme: “So you’re telling me there’s a chance?”

I don’t want Drayton’s ace in the hole to be used for anything other than a starting quarterback. There are a few left in the portal who still haven’t found a home if one shakes free, there’s a pretty good chance that guy is better than any guy who has been at the E-O facility over the last seven months.

Any real success that Temple will have this year will depend on how Drayton uses that one remaining scholarship and whether he is able to talk an upgrade into coming to Philadelphia.

Drayton hit on some themes he’s always hit on and, while that sounded nice, it’s not as important as upgrading the quarterback room. He talked about the No. 1 thing being that the players love one another and know each other “well enough” to hold everyone in the room accountable.

Whatever.

Those are things that he’s talked about for the past two years and all that’s gotten him is a couple of 3-9 seasons.

So the biggest thing he said was that he was holding a scholarship for an impact player. There is no more impactful player on any team’s roster than a quarterback.

If he’s not able to grasp that last straw and turn it into pixie dust, watching the Owls probably will be as painful as getting a couple of teeth pulled and any sucking motions will be reserved for a three-hour period every weekend.

Last in the American for a reason

Long before Wayne Hardin coached Temple, he was a guest on What’s My Line?

The great sportswriter Charles Dryden once dropped this line about Washington, D.C. in 1904:

“First in War, First in Peace and last in the American League.”

(He was referring to the Washington Senators back then.)

Except for the War and Peace part, you could say the same thing about Temple football Monday and Tuesday as the American Conference holds a two-day football media extravaganza.

It’s pretty hard to get everyone in any field to agree on anything but the assembled media has agreed on one thing:

Temple is the worst team in the “American League.”

While a slight bit of hope could gleaned from the fact four of the five recent last-place picks didn’t actually finish in last, it’s not a good look for Temple with a little over a month to go before the opening kickoff.

Temple is picked last for a reason and, a lot of the writers who cover the league have been looking around and seeing what teams were most aggressive in the transfer portal and which were not.

While Temple did add a lot of quantity in the portal, the perception is that the quality is lacking. Temple went after a good share of JUCOs while the rest of the league scoured the FCS ranks for established starters or at least took a good look at P5 (now P4) backups who made some noise when they were in a tougher player group.

The Temple Board of Trustees once paid a Princely sum to bring Pop Warner from Stanford to Philadelphia.

Temple has one of those players in running back Antwain Littleton II. Almost all of the Owls’ fellow league members have four or five of those type players.

Also it doesn’t help that the school is coming off an unacceptable stretch of 1-6, 3-9, 3-9, and 3-9 seasons.

Perception has been a problem at Temple for awhile now. A school that was able to hire one of the best coaches in college football, Pop Warner, once followed that up 40 years later when it hired one of the best coaches in college football then in Wayne Hardin (see his appearance as the “new” Navy coach on What’s My Line? above).

Making that kind of investment paid off handsomely for Temple both times as Warner got the Owls in the Sugar Bowl and Hardin secured the first bowl win ever for the school.

Now, all Temple can afford is a running backs’ coach who will spend the better part of the next two days explaining why the perception of football at the school has plummeted to the bottom.

You get what you pay for.

Friday: The Answers

5 Questions that need to be asked at Media Day (but won’t)

A little over a month until this happens … or not

For about six months, five questions about Temple football have been rattling about in my head.

I expected some to be asked after the Cherry and White Day game by the assembled Philadelphia media, but did not hear a single one.

Maybe next week as AAC Media Day is July 22-23 in Texas.

Stan Drayton will be there.

I suggest the biggest stress that came from two Stan Drayton 3-9 seasons was not on Stan but on the Temple fans who were expecting him to better Rod Carey’s last 3-9 season.

I don’t expect the Philadelphia media to ask him one of these questions (they’ve pretty much kissed his ass for three years) but since I won’t be there, I hope some of the AAC Media does.

The key to asking good questions is the phrase them in a way that cannot be answered with a yes or no so, with that in mind, here are my top five:

One, you seemed to have gotten what you needed in Clifton McDowell, a proven championship level FCS starting quarterback. After he left, why wasn’t there an attempt to grab a proven FCS or FBS starter–instead relying on backups to replace a Temple record-setter at the most important position on the team?

Everett Withers gave up 35.7 ppg last year. He was retained.

Two, at the end of last season, you said you’d re-evaluate everything in the program, including the coaching staff. How is it that a defensive coordinator who allowed a record 35.7 ppg be evaluated as having done the kind of job that suggested he be retained?

Three, in the transfer portal, you seemed to have gone heavy on JUCOs and light on proven FCS starters and P5 backups. What was the thought process behind that approach?

Four, in the three years you’ve been here, you’ve seen five single-digit Temple players leave for other schools. One solution might be to limit those single digit honors to players who are in their final year of eligibility at Temple? Why have you not implemented that rule?

Five, the NIL and the transfer portal have changed the game but other schools with similar or less resources than Temple have been able to attract a higher-level of player with the promise of playing time. Why haven’t the Owls leveraged that advantage?

Important questions that have not yet been asked but need to be answered. If not by the press, then at least by the new Temple administration. Surely there has got to be one press guy with the courage to ask these questions next week.

We’ll find out.

Monday: Setting The Table With Honest Answers

Friday: Analyzing The Real Answers

Hidden Figures: Some Temple coaching gems

A YouTube channel called Temple special teams coach Adam Schierer a genius.

One of my favorite movies of the last decade was Hidden Figures about a group of women whose mathematical genius contributed to the success of the space program.

Watching that movie last week got me thinking about some of the “Hidden Figures” on the Temple coaching staff who might contribute to any of the success the Owls might have this season.

Adam Scheier was the lead recruiter in getting Maddux Trujillo and some Australian punters in here.

Three coaches immediately come to mind: Temple special teams coach Adam Scheier, running backs coach Tyree Foreman and Temple offensive line coach Chris Wiesehan.

Wiesehan we’ve known for a while. He was an accomplished offensive line and tight ends coach for both Matt Rhule and Geoff Collins here. The players from two different Temple eras raved about him and, for what we know from the people inside the E-O, Wiesehan isn’t only considered the most accomplished coach in the building but also the most personable.

The pleasant surprise has been Scheier, though, who has fit the Temple culture quite nicely.

Knowing that the placekicking and kickoffs have been a problem, Scheier was at the forefront of trying to get someone who could solve the problem by being a lead recruiter of Maddox Trujillo, who made 38 of 52 field goal attempts.

Tyree Foreman is a well-respected coach with a solid background of winning at Temple.

Trujillo wasn’t a part of spring practice but Carl Hardin was and his kickoffs were, by all accounts, the best we’ve seen at Temple Austin Jones was here. Jones made 17 field goals in a row at Temple and was a victim of a cheap shot against Memphis, only for Aaron “Boomer” Bouhmeri to do a great job subbing for Jones in the 2016 championship year.

Now, with Scheier leading the way and a kicking corps that includes Trujilo and Hardin, that part of the game figures to be in good hands.

Also the offensive line under Wiesehan appears to be better, as does the running game under former Temple RB coach Tyree Foreman.

Will it be enough to overcome the deficiencies of the defensive coaching staff and the CEO who refused to get a big-time quarterback in here?

Since all the holes have not been plugged, that’s certainly a concern but it is nice to know that at least three important areas of the 2024 Owls have not only better personnel but proven leadership on a micro level.

Three math geniuses were enough to help lift the space program off the ground. Hopefully, Temple’s version of Hidden Figures devises out an equation to bypass the obvious deficiencies on one side of the ball.

Friday: AAC Media Day