One day, two blown opportunities

By Mike Gibson
You can say Saturday’s 24-14 loss to Central Michigan was another blown opportunity for the Owls.
You could say that, but you could make a better argument the Owls blew two rather enormous opportunities.
That’s because the team just ahead of Temple in the MAC East standings, Buffalo, blew a 22-6 lead and lost a 34-28 game at overtime to Western Michigan.
Think about it.
Had Temple beaten CMU, the Owls would have been in first place in the MAC East.
Come to think of it, had the Owls scored as few as eight points against Western Michigan and capitalized on knocking out the Mid-American Conference’s best quarterback, Dan LeFevour, they would have been sitting pretty.
The disturbing and over-riding thought here is that they have run out of opportunities for this season. To get to seven wins, they would have to win out and beat a Navy team that beat No. 21 Wake Forest.
Their opportunities for being the kind of team many of us thought they could be appear to be in the rearview window.
Western Michigan, Miami, Central Michigan … those are the games they could have … should have … won, even without Adam DiMichele.
One and two in those games just didn’t cut it.
Would they have won three straight games by burning quarterback Vaughn Charlton’s redshirt?
I think so, but I’m not getting paid $575,000 to make those decisions so I defer to Al Golden on that one.
I think the salient point here is that it was much more important to win this year than to count on something Charlton MIGHT have been able to do the next two seasons.
You win as many games as you can now.
I could be wrong, but I don’t think so.
Ugh.
I predicted before the game that I was wary of the Central Michigan game because I knew there would be a big and questionable penalty at a bad time that would cost the Owls the game.
I was right. The following quote is from my post of two days ago. I didn’t need to be a Nostradamus to make this pre-game observation. Every other Temple fan with two good eyes sees the game thing week after week:

“It’s gotten so ridiculous at times this year that every time Temple makes a big
play or scores a touchdown, I expect to see a flag.”

So it was with no surprise that penalties and mistakes hurt the Owls. A 40-yard run by Kee-Ayre Griffin was called back on a holding penalty. Bruce Francis also appeared to have a 38-yard touchdown catch on 4th and 11, but Francis was hit by teammate Dy’Onne Crudup in the end zone to break up the touchdown catch.
It was reminiscent of the time Derek Dennis tackled his own Owl teammate in the open field last year at Army.
Freak plays seem to only happen TO Temple and not for Temple.
It’s both frustrating and disgusting.

Francis was hit by
teammate Dy’Onne Crudup
in the end zone to break up
the touchdown catch. It was
reminiscent of the time Derek Dennis
tackled his own teammate in the open
field last year at Army. Freak plays
seem to only happen TO Temple.

If the penalties are the officials’ fault, it’s criminal. If they are the Owls’ fault, you have to wonder what they are doing in the 15 hours of practice allotted for each week.
The guess here is that the truth lies somewhere in between.
“Penalties and mistakes killed us,” Golden said. “The penalties are just coming at really bad times in the game.”
Golden was seen yelling at the officials several times in the waning moments of the game. Yet he made no mention of his disaproval with the officials during the post-game session.

If the penalties are
the officials’ fault, it’s criminal.
If they are the Owls fault,
you have to wonder what they
are doing in the 15 hours
of practice alloted for each week

Let’s hope he makes his feelings known to the MAC Supervisor of Officials.
The squeaky wheel gets the oil and unless Golden becomes a pest to the officials and they know they are going to hear about it in review sessions, the Owls will not be the beneficiary of any calls down the line.
Just what help that gets Temple now is debatable.

Why the MAC hates Temple

By Mike Gibson
I’m always wary of people I don’t know patting me on the back.
It’s those people who I always meet with an askanse eye, checking to see if there’s a knife in the other hand.
I learned this lesson as it relates to Temple football early in the season, as early as late August.



Dan LeFevour
in front of a billboard
of himself

After a few visits to the MAC bulletin board, a healthy number of posters wished Temple good luck against Army and, by the way, come back with a win.
Nobody mentioned that Army was a bad team in any of those 37 posts.
Yet, after Temple beat Army, 35-7, a roughly equal number of posts all carried this troubling theme:
“Good win against Army but, let’s face it, that’s the worst Army team we’ve seen in years.”
Why?
Because it lost to Temple, 35-7?
Obviously, that was the unsaid message.
Nobody is saying that any more because it really carries no weight, not after what Army did to Tulane (44-13) in New Orleans this past weekend.
Let’s face it: The rest of the MAC, with notable exceptions such as Karl Smith of PhillyBurbs.com, hates Temple.
Or at least a good sizeable portion of the MAC fanbase dislikes the Owls.
They mitigate anything good the Owls have done by saying “yeah, but.” After Army, it was “yeah but” and after Miami it was “yeah but.”
I respect a guy like Joe Paterno of Penn State a lot more. Not only does he slam the Big East refs for costing the Owls two games against UConn, he says his team’s 45-3 win would have been “a lot closer” had “the DiMichele kid not been knocked out so early. I feel sorry for Temple.”
You know Joe means what he says.
There are two guys running MAC websites who have NEVER picked the Owls in a game against another MAC team, yet the Owls have won two MAC games on the road and more at home in the last three years.
“Temple should have beat
UConn. It completed a pass
on the first play of overtime
that took the ball down to the 1
and it was called back on a hold,
which was a bad, bad, bad call.”
_Penn State coach Joe Paterno
on his statewide radio show

It’s not logic. It’s hate. Or an intense dislike.
The motive is simple.
Nobody wants a ex-BCS team kicked out of a BCS conference coming in and dominating a league known for some pretty good football.
Nobody wants a team carrying a bad “brand name” like Temple carrying the conference’s championship trophy around Ford Field come December. It doesn’t matter that the Temple they are thinking about is the “same old Temple” and not the group of Grade A recruits hauled in by Al Golden the past three seasons.
That’s why I’m wary about this week’s game at Central Michigan.

Let’s hope for a clean,
well-played, game decided
by the kids on the field
and not the adults
wearing prison outfits

Not only do the Owls have to deal with the league’s best healthy quarterback, Dan LeFevour, they have to deal with refs who have that built-in mindset.
It was manifested last year in a home game against Northern Illinois when one side judge called 10 of the 11 penalties, almost all bogus, against the Owls in a 16-15 win.
It was manifested against visiting Western Michigan a couple of weeks ago when the MAC supervisor of officials apologized to Temple for calling a sideline interference call on the Owls’ coaches after Temple got a crucial third-down stop and was able to force WMU to punt in the fourth quarter.
The guy who called the sideline interference call? Same guy as in the NIU game. He should be fired or at least investigated.
Good officiating means never having to say you’re sorry. It’s gotten so ridiculous at times this year that every time Temple makes a big play or scores a touchdown, I expect to see a flag.
This kid LeFevour is really good. Central Michigan purchased a billboard (pictured) of him and put it in the middle of the Detroit stadium complex. He’s a load to worry about on his own, playing for a good team. I don’t want to worry about him AND the officials, yet two days before the game that’s just what I’m worrying about.
Let’s hope for a clean, well-played, game decided by the kids on the field and not the adults wearing prison outfits.

What they’re saying about the Owls:
… “They out-physicaled us up front. It’s really the first time we’ve come out of a game feeling like we didn’t control the line of scrimmage. Even Nebraska, we kind of thought was a wash.” _ Western Michigan coach Bill Cubitt talking about Temple…

… “I was told by a lot of people before the game that Temple is really good but, man, this team has all kinds of weapons.” _ Ohio News Network sports director Andy Raskin during the telecast of Temple vs. Miami on ESPN360.com…

…”What my Owls have done this year–and I will call them ‘my Owls’ because I’ve been on this team since the beginning–is sensational considering they lost their starting quarterback. … Maybe people are starting to realize that this is one of the top defenses in the country.” _ Vegas handicapper Robert Ferringo…

…”They have high-caliber athletes all over the place. That’s the hardest-hitting team we’ve played all year. I’ve never been this beat up after a game.” _ Western Michigan offensive guard Phil Swanson…

…”It was just two great teams. Both Temple and us have made great strides and I don’t think there are two better teams in our league than us and them.” _ Buffalo tight end Jesse Rack, after a Hail Mary pass beat Temple, 30-28, at the buzzer…

Winning isn’t everything … it’s the ONLY thing

Whoops quote of the day:

“We’re gonna go win eight in a row and go to Detroit where we deserve to be, and we work hard every day for it.” _ Miami quarterback Dan Raudabaugh, one day before losing to Temple, 28-10


Err, Whoops …

Bruce Francis is a God and other cogent thoughts ….
By Mike Gibson
Spent much of the week going online and reading the thoughts of Temple’s football fans.
They pretty much split into two spheres:
One, the sizeable group who said, “Blah, blah, blah … maybe we expected too much” and “it takes five years to build a winner” and “maybe four or five wins is progress this year. ” …. blah, blah, blah.
Phooey.
Then there is the group who I counted myself firmly with and maybe even its CEO.
“The time for talk is over” … “it’s time to win now” … “four or five wins is NOT progress; not when you really won five the year before and not when everybody is back.. ” and … “no excuses, just win, baby.”
Count Saturday’s 28-10 win at Miami as a victory for the latter group.
I don’t have time or patience to wait five years.
There is NO REASON Temple can’t win right now in this league and this year.
There is NO REASON Temple can’t run off four or five straight wins.
Or six.
There are no more Penn States on the schedule and Temple has already proven to be more than the equal of anyone else on it.
Temple running backs and receivers have the kind of speed I haven’t seen any of the other MAC teams have.
I have not seen a better wide receiver in the MAC than Bruce Francis who, in my mind, is as good a wide receiver as we have seen at Temple since Leslie Sheppard and Bruce is better than Sheppard, who was pretty good with the Washington Redskins.
I told Bruce Francis’ dad at the UConn tailgate that Bruce is a pro.
The last dad I told that to was Raheem Brock’s and the kid has a Super Bowl ring.
On the other side of the ball, Temple’s defense was arguably the best in the league last year.
This year, there can be no argument.
Temple has a dominating, intimidating, defense that is just hitting its stride.
“They have high-caliber athletes,” was the way Western Michigan offensive guard Phil Swanson put it.
“I haven’t seen us dominated at the line of scrimmage this year like we were against Temple,” Western Michigan head coach Bill Cubitt said. “That’s a concern.”
It should be to the rest of the MAC, too.
Consider this.
Before Temple beat Army, 35-7, the MAC message boards were full of “good luck, Owls” and “win one for the conference” and other similar wishes.
Nowhere did anyone post how bad Army was.
Yet AFTER Temple beat Army, 35-7, the only posts you saw on the MAC boards were, “Congratulations on the win but that’s really the worst Army team we’ve seen in years.”
Notice the juxtaposition?
It’s insidious anti-Temple stuff couched in pro-Temple remarks.
Let’s face it.
The leader of this group is Huron Dave, a guy who has a blog on Phillyburbs.com who would like nothing more than to see Temple meet the MAC media expectations of fifth in the East.
Not gonna happen, even with a slow start.
Chester Stewart had a confidence-building fourth quarter, thanks to two spectacular catches by Bruce Francis.
With this defense, and the great Adam DiMichele returning on Oct. 21, that should be enough.
Ahh yes.
Yesterday, in addition to Temple’s 28-10 thumping of the MAC East defending champions on their home turf, Army won at Tulane.
44-13.
The same Army team that lost to Temple, 35-7.
The same Tulane team that hung with Alabama (20-6) and East Carolina (28-24).
Next week, it’s league champion Central Michigan.
If Central Michigan can fall to Georgia, 56-17, it certainly can lose to Temple, 56-17.
Or 18-17.
Either one, I’ll take it.
From now on at Temple, winning is the only thing.
We, the fans, players and coaches should expect no less.

Owls and other stone-cold-mortal locks

By Mike Gibson
Temple might sport what on the surface looks like a sorry 1-4 record, but the Owls are virtually unbeaten against the spread this year.
Virtually unbeaten, because there is that little matter of Penn State.
That’s where the virtual part comes into play.
Going into the Penn State game, Temple was unbeaten against the spread.
Before that game, I got asked by the popular website Black Shoe Diaries my thoughts on why Temple would cover the then 28-point spread.
I said two words.
Adam DiMichele.

Temple vs. Miami (Ohio)
Game time: 3:30 p.m.
TV: ESPN360 (pay-per-view, $21.95)
Favorite: Miami by 7
Radio: WNTP,990 AM
Harry Donahue and Steve Joachim
(free, but they should have to pay you)

Those two words were taken out on the third play of the game, when Devin Tyler did his best impersonation of Winston Justice and failed to protect his franchise quarterback from the blind side. (Throw in an assist to head coach Al Golden and offensive coordinator Matt Rhule, who probably should have had big tight end Kevin Armstrong on that blind side providing Tyler help.)
Anybody who thinks the Owls don’t cover the 28 against Penn State with the slick DiMichele in there for four quarters just missed Temple’s first three games.
Which is what most Penn State fans did anyway.
That’s not to say the Owls are stone-cold-mortal locks tomorrow in their game at The Fake Miami.
They just aren’t.
I’d stay away from them, just like I’d stay away from taking a stroll in the direction of 17th and Daulphin.
Not because I don’t believe, but moreso that the matter is too close to my heart.
If Temple doesn’t win, I’m going to be bummed out big-time tomorrow.
If Temple doesn’t win and I lose major coin, it’s not going to bum me out that much more.
If Temple loses by four and I win major coin, that’s really not much consolation to me.
So I’m staying away even though the Owls have proven to be a good bet this year.
Last week, the Saturday morning line moved from 4 to 4 1/2 points. So if you got a quick bet in on Temple, you would have won.
The reality is that the Owls do not get much respect nationally (yet) so they are a good value against the spread if you want to go in that direction.
I don’t.
I also happen to be unbeaten in Stone Cold Mortal locks this year (2-0, betting the under in Temple games against UConn and Western Michigan).
Last week, in my “regular” locks, I was 3-1 (I blew it big-time on the Navy game) but won when Buffalo played Central Michigan close and Ball State got a late cover against Kent State.
The secret to good betting in college football is taking a look at the games on the list and picking the “wow” game.
Like, “wow, they really messed up on that one.”
So my wow game becomes my “stone-cold-mortal-lock” of the week.
I don’t like the card this week so I’m staying away from the regular locks.

THIS WEEK’S STONE-COLD-MORTAL LOCK

BOWLING GREEN (+20 1/2) hosting Eastern Michigan _ Eastern Michigan is really bad and Tyler Sheehan, the Falcons’ quarterback, is really good. Twenty and change is a lot to cover but BG will do this easily. After Saturday, my stone-cold-mortal-lock record goes to 3-0.

My soft-pretzel depression


Great photo of Temple’s terrific fans by Darryl Rule.

“For of all sad words of tongue or pen, the saddest are these: ‘It might have been.’ “
_ American poet and author John Greenleaf Whittier …

By Mike Gibson
Like a lot of people, I eat when I’m depressed.
When Temple wins in football, and that’s not nearly enough, I practically skip out of the stadium on a natural high and can’t wait to talk about the win in the parking lot afterward.
I don’t think about eating. I don’t think about sleeping. I just think about winning.
That’s the most fulfilling feeling of all.

You now about those
victory cigars
Red Auerbach used to have?
Well, I have my defeat pretzels

After Temple loses, and that’s always too much, I saunter over to the concession stand and buy the biggest jumbo soft pretzel they have.
You know about those victory cigars Red Auerbach used to have?
Well, I have my defeat pretzels.
I’ve been walking out of Lincoln Financial Field eating too many soft pretzels lately, thinking so much about a lot of things that I never really noticed how the pretzel tasted.
Some soft-pretzel thoughts:
CHESTER STEWART _ I’m sure he’s a good kid and a nice guy, but he’s just not ready to lead a Division I football team to a win. After he overthrew a ton of guys in the Penn State game, I chalked it up to first-game jitters. After he mastered the art of overthrowing open guys by 10 feet in the Homecoming Game against Western Michigan, I said enough is enough. “I thought I did all right,” Stewart said after the game. Sorry, Chester. Three points is not all right. Twenty-one points is all right. Fourteen points would have been acceptable but three points is abysmal. Ridiculously not all right.
AL GOLDEN _ If he didn’t have the confidence to run a balanced offense with Chester Stewart, then he should have went with Colin Clancy or taken the redshirt off Vaughn Charlton. “I thought he did all right,” Golden said of Stewart. With all due respect, Al, what have you been smoking? THREE POINTS IS NOT ALL RIGHT. It just isn’t. It’s the quarterback’s job to put points on the board and that means touchdowns and not field goals out the wazzoo. If Chester Stewart isn’t moving the team, it’s Al Golden’s job to get someone in there who can move the team. It’s not Al Golden’s job to keep running the same guy out, failed series after failed series.
VAUGHN CHARLTON _ Obviously, the redshirt was promised to this talented young man. But, as with everything in the Al Golden Era, the team comes first. It’s the team, not the individual. Vaughn has to go into the office and volunteer to do what’s best for the team. He just has to. Don’t wait for the coach to ask.
THE FANS _ They’ve done a great job in the first two games, 17K and loud and strong in the two games. A lot of them, me included, left without being able to talk for the next two days due to cheering so loudly. The fans, like the players, left a lot on the field. There is a law of diminishing returns. Unless this team is able to string together three straight wins, don’t expect a lot of them to return for the remaining three home games.
MARK D’ONOFRIO _ What can you say about the job Temple’s defensive coordinator has done? Twelve points against UConn, seven against Western Michigan. He’s a genius. Temple is very lucky to have him, but you have to wonder if the law of diminishing returns begins to erode the performance of this defense. They leave a lot on the field, too, and get little back.
THE REFS _ In three of the four Temple losses, a ridiculous call cost the Owls the chance of winning. This time it was sideline interference on a fourth-down call. Refs are human. They’ve been in the MAC for years. They take away Temple’s only touchdown, a beautiful run by James Nixon. They don’t want a team kicked out of another conference coming in and dominating their league. They make up ridiculous stuff like that, coming at a crucial time when Temple stopped Western Michigan on a fourth-quarter third down.
Thinking about all of those people and things got me to the bottom of the Lincoln Financial Field steps. By then, the soft pretzel was gone.
The depression, brought on by lingering thoughts of what might have been, was not.

What they’re saying about the Owls

… “They out-physicaled us up front. It’s really the first time we’ve come out of a game feeling like we didn’t control the line of scrimmage. Even Nebraska, we kind of thought was a wash.” _ Western Michigan coach Bill Cubit talking about Temple…

… “I was told by a lot of people before the game that Temple is really good but, man, this team has all kinds of weapons.” _ Ohio News Network sports director Andy Raskin during the telecast of Temple vs. Miami on ESPN360.com…

…”What my Owls have done this year–and I will call them ‘my Owls’ because I’ve been on this team since the beginning–is sensational considering they lost their starting quarterback. … Maybe people are starting to realize that this is one of the top defenses in the country.” _ Vegas handicapper Robert Ferringo…

…”They have high-caliber athletes all over the place. That’s the hardest-hitting team we’ve played all year. I’ve never been this beat up after a game.” _ Western Michigan offensive guard Phil Swanson…

…”It was just two great teams. Both Temple and us have made great strides and I don’t think there are two better teams in our league than us and them.” _ Buffalo tight end Jesse Rack, after a Hail Mary pass beat Temple, 30-28, at the buzzer…

This week’s Stone Cold Mortal Locks

By Mike Gibson
I usually don’t bring out the “stone-cold-mortal-lock” phrase made popular by a certain Philadelphia sports talk show host unless the degree of confidence is high.
I have one, but I’ll save it for the end.
So far in SCML terms this season, I’m 1-0.
I advised people on the Owlscoop.com board to bet the under (39) against Uconn.
Well, I beat the under by 18 that day and the game went into overtime.
Here are just my regular locks:
WAKE FOREST (-16) against visiting Navy _ lay the 16. Navy is just not that good and Wake Forest is. No weather issues.
BUFFALO (+6 1/2) at Central Michigan _ Buffalo is a better team, even with a ocuple of what Joe Paterno would call “fat guys” on the offensive line. This game will be decided on a field goal either way. Take Buffalo and be glad you are getting 6 1/2.
FRESNO STATE (-6 1/2) at UCLA _ Bruins got smoked by BYU, 59-0. Fresno is better than BYU. Fresno State wins this game by two touchdowns.
BALL STATE (-17 1/2) hosting Kent State _ Ball State is the MAC’s one big-time team. Kent State is a fraud. Ball State, 39-13.
TROY (+16 1/2) at Oklahoma _ Troy is pretty good and a good value with the 16 and change.
THIS WEEK’S STONE COLD MORTAL LOCK
The under (57) at the Temple vs. Western Michigan game. Huge weather issues will keep this score low.

It’s time to let the Dogs out

By Mike Gibson
The Temple football season so many of us had waited so long for and looked forward to so much has reached a crossroads.
Many of us, me included, feel with any breaks at all or at least the breaks the Owls should have received, this team should be 3-1.
In reality, it’s 1-3.
Prior to Penn State, a deserved loss, Temple trailed for a grand total of 1 minute, 49 seconds the entire season.
The refs took away the UConn game and even Penn State coach Joe Paterno said as much on his radio show last week.
“Temple threw a bubble screen on the first play of overtime and got down to the 3 an it was called back,” Paterno said of the UConn game. “It was called back for a hold and it was a bad, bad, bad call. Temple should have won that game.”
That’s three bads from Paterno, who was obviously watching the film closely.
The Owls’ own stupidity was responsible for the inexplicable Buffalo loss.
First, they allowed quarterback Drew Willy all the time in the world to throw the final dagger, a Hail Mary pass. Then they compounded that stupidity by going to tackle the wide receiver, rather than knock the ball down.
In my mind, if Al Golden really wants to beat Western Michigan this week, he will throw caution to the wind and turn his bend-but-don’t-break defense into an attacking one.
Blitz.
That’s this week’s buzzword.
Sneak into the locker room down the Lincoln Financial Field tunnel and steal a chapter from Eagles’ coordinator Jimmy Johnson’s playbook.
It’s a rather large chapter entitled “Blitz.”
Utilize Temple’s strength _ athletes on defense _ to make plays, force turnovers, dictate field position.
Help give first-time starter Chester Stewart a short field in his first start.
Play eight guys up on the line.
Get into Western Michigan quarterback Tim Hiller’s head.
Take the play to them, not let them dictate to us.
Get that big Homecoming crowd involved.
Play to win, not avoid to lose.
Al Golden and Mark D’Onofrio, it’s time to unleash the Dogs of War, Temple’s Pit Bulls, and tell them to sick the quarterback.

That looks like a black cloud to me

This looks like a black cloud to me.
By Mike Gibson
Taking a somewhat gallows humor approach, Al Golden tried to lighten the mood at practice a week ago after a heartwrenching 30-28 loss to Buffalo.
“We checked the field; there were no locusts,” Golden said.
You might want to check the sky this week.
Although it could be blue, that looks like a black cloud hanging over the Temple football program.
“Why us, God?”
Consider:

  • A great job by Temple promotions and sales looked like it was going to put 35K in the stands for the opening game against UConn. Two weeks before the game, I said mininum 30K if no rain. We got a Hurricane and 17K. The next day, the Eagles, who can draw 70K in a Hurricane, got 86 and sunny.
    “Why us, God?”
  • Three weeks ago, against UConn, three fourth-quarter Temple plays that gained over 30 yards each were called back by, you guessed it, Big East refs. I guess it was just a coincidence. Not.
    “Why us, God?”
  • Two weeks ago, Temple decided to defend the pass in the end zone, rather than rush the quarterback. As a result, Drew Willy had all the time in the world to throw a Hail Mary for a touchdown. He did. Inexplicably, three Owls went to tackle a guy who was already in the end zone rather than knock the ball down.
    “Why us, God?”
  • Yesterday, the game plan was to keep everyone healthy for the MAC season ahead. Everybody, meaning at the minimum 75 percent of the team’s total offense. What happens? Seventy-five percent of the offense goes down on one play. For the second year in a row, no less.
    “Why us, God?”
  • Our top high school quarterback recruit follows up an 8 for 24 start in his first three games with those same exact numbers, 8 for 24, in a Saturday loss. There could be extenuating circumstances, but 8 for 24 is 8 for 24.

“Why us, God?”
Why indeed?
In a season that could have easily been 3-1 right now with a world of momentum headed into the teeth of the MAC schedule, all that is certain is uncertainty.
On a day when my college alma mater lost its star quarterback for “a significant amount” of time, my high school alma mater lost its star quarterback for the rest of the season.
My college team lost, 45-3. My high school team lost, 51-7.
If that doesn’t look like a Black Cloud, then I don’t know what it is.
Maybe sunny days are ahead but it’s hard to see through that ugly cloud.