Huge Temple crowd expected Saturday

Everyone please subscribe to Gary’s website. This is the best college football prediction website.

By now, everyone should know that artificial intelligence is pretty much ahead of the crowd.

In Temple’s case, literally.

KJ predicts Okie 31-3. This was his prediction two days before Temple beat Penn State, 27-10. Sorry KJ.

Without knowing anyone in the Temple ticket office or the Philadelphia Eagles ticket office, I took to chat GPT and Grok and asked how many tickets were left for Temple hosting Oklahoma (high noon, ESPN2).

Here’s what they were able to tell us.

One, there are only a couple of thousand tickets left in a 70K-seat stadium. Two, only five percent of the tickets sold are from outside the tri-state (Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware) area.

What AI didn’t say was how many sections were open for sale but, given the demand, it only makes sense to open as many sections as possible.

We won’t find out until Saturday but what we do know is that given the proximity of the ticket sales to Lincoln Financial Field and the unlikelihood of Oklahoma fans living in the nation’s fourth-largest TV market, it will be a heavily pro-Temple crowd. Lot K–the largest Philadelphia Eagles’ parking lot–sold out by Wednesday. Even for the 2016 opener against Army, which drew 34,271, that didn’t happen until the day of that night game. Lots M and O are open for now. Since the Phillies are playing a night game on Saturday, CBP lots should be open also.

Now it might be 60K or it might be 35K, but we do know it will be loud and proud.

No one expected this result, either.

We don’t know if that’s enough to push this team across the finish line but it can’t hurt. There are many things that make me like Temple’s chances but one indicator is that Temple’s defense–with the worst head coach in history–was able to limit Oklahoma to 1-for-13 on third downs last year.

Another is that the Temple quarterback responsible for five of the six turnovers in last year’s game between the teams is on the trash heap of history and the guy who was denied that chance, Evan Simon, will get a chance to make history.

Who knows?

Desmond Ridder blaming Cincy’s first loss of the 2017 season on the loud Temple crowd.

They might even let him conduct the world-famous Temple University Diamond Marching Band again if he’s able to do it.

Temple is two-deep in quality along the defensive line and, yet, K.C. Keeler called his offensive line the most improved unit on his team.

These lines won’t be bullied.

No predictions but I will not be surprised if Temple wins outright because Oklahoma is expecting to play in a high school-like atmosphere and has no idea that a 7-0 Cincinnati team in 2017 came into LFF and came out with an overtime loss because it couldn’t hear its signals.

This stadium can be very loud and unfriendly for visitors and it needs to be on Saturday afternoon.

After that, let the chips fall where they may.

Late Saturday Night: Game Analysis

5 Trick Plays that could fool Oklahoma

Nice call on this fake field goal for Temple at Houston a couple of years ago.

Usually in this space on Monday after a Temple football game we’d slot it for reviewing some things from the past game.

Our predictions for the first three games way back on May 23d. If anything, we sold Temple short in the first two games.

Bleep that.

That was Howard the Owls were playing and there is not much to learn from that game. Our May 23d post predicted the score of every single Temple game and, if the result of the first two games are any indication, we sold Temple a little bit short.

We had the Owls beating UMass (24-10) and Howard (48-7) and the Owls beat our expectations by 18 points in the first game and seven points in the second. We also had Oklahoma beating the Owls, 34-14, so if the Owls split the difference and are, say, a dozen points better that game finishes 34-26.

The trick now is to shave even more points off that differential and if the TU offense shows the Sooners wrinkles it hasn’t shown so far that could do it. Temple has been pretty vanilla on offense so far but what new OC Tyler Walker has done that is so impressive is a lot of pre-snap reads that cause the defense confusion.

Emphasis on trick.

Here are 5 plays that could fool Oklahoma:

Kajiya Hollawayne, like former Big 33 MVP quarterback Jalen Fitzpatrick, is a Temple WR who can also throw the ball, having committed to UCLA as a QB.

One, the throwback pass _ WR Kajiya Hollawayne is a former top-rated QB recruit at UCLA. We assume he can still throw the ball. Simon throws backward to Hollawayne who finds a streaking JoJo Bermudez down the sideline for six. The Sooners are an over pursuing defense and the pass to Hollawayne suckers the other corner just enough that Bermudez can get behind him. (We gave this suggestion to Matt Rhule before the SMU game one year when we mentioned to him that he has a Big 33 MVP QB who had not thrown the ball in his career up to that point. Rhule had WR Jalen Fitzpatrick throw a 95-yard touchdown pass on a double-reverse in that game.)

Two, the shovel pass _ One of Wayne Hardin’s staples was the shovel pass, faking a handoff usually to a fullback (Henry Hynoski, Mark Bright), then dropping back to pass and then shoveling the ball ahead on a pass against a defense going for the QB. Temple doesn’t have a fullback but does have an effective between-the-tackles runner in Jay Ducker and a shovel pass to him might earn him a touchdown.

Three, the tight end jump pass _ Al Golden pulled this one out at the Fake Miami (Ohio) with Chester Stewart dropping back and jumping while throwing a TD pass to Evan Rodriguez.

Four, the fake field goal _ If you are Temple playing a P4 like Oklahoma, at least once you have to roll the dice for six instead of setting for three. Temple had a successful one at Houston (see video above).

The Fake QB sneak_ Facing a 3d and 1 at midfield in the 2008 Navy game, QB Adam DiMichele feigned a QB sneak and deftly hit Bruce Francis for a touchdown pass. Obviously, this is a 3d and 1 type call or maybe even more ballsy as a 4th and 1 call.

Friday: Oklahoma Preview

Late Saturday Night: TU-Oklahoma Analysis

Oklahoma is now on the radar

Between looking down at the Dopler Radar and looking up to see if my favorite Temple quarterback was going to turn an ankle, it was a pretty stressful afternoon for at least this Owl fan.

Evan Simon conducting the world famous Diamond Marching Band.

Fortunately, after a half-hour delay to start the game due to “lightning in the area” (Eagles fans know all about that), the game started and Temple won, 55-7. All game long, my radar had a ton of lightning bolts around Lincoln Financial Field but most of them went south.

My favorite Temple quarterback (Evan Simon) not only didn’t turn an ankle, but he also lived to see an important next game, played a terrific first half and conducted the world-famous Diamond Marching Band in perhaps the best rendition of “T for Temple U” anyone has ever heard after sitting out pretty much the entire second half.

Leonard Bernstein (RIP) couldn’t have done it better.

Never thought it was necessary for him to play in a 55-7 win over Howard and wanted to preserve him for Oklahoma. Fortunately, he slid enough to prove K.C. Keeler right in playing him and me wrong for worrying about it.

A win over Oklahoma would be the sweetest music Temple fans have heard since the 27-10 win over Penn State in 2015.

The fact that this Oklahoma game day is the day he’s been waiting for the last 365 days for a particular day that will happen a week from today is interesting.

I was very tough in this space on Stan Drayton because I felt that very nice man had the “want to” but never had to “how to” for a Temple head coach.

K.C. Keeler is also a nice man but he has both the want to and the how to part down.

That much he’s proven in his two games on the job at Temple.

An example of the how to part came in the opening day game against Oklahoma last year. Believe it or not, both Temple lines more than held their own against the Sooners but that game got out of hand when Temple had 6 turnovers to the Sooners zero. Oklahoma was 1-for-13 on third down against one of the worst Temple football teams in history last year.

Plus, knowing how to be Temple head coach means knowing who the best quarterback on your team is. Drayton never had a clue.

I do know this.

If Simon played, rather than Forrest Brock (responsible for five of the six turnovers against Oklahoma), he’d have zero or maybe one turnover last year and that would have been closer to a 35-21 game than a 51-3 one.

Does that mean Saturday will be a 35-21 game?

Have no idea.

It could be closer.

What I do know is that it won’t be a 51-3 one and Temple does have a puncher’s chance.

With a Maestro like Simon, who knows how to orchestrate an offense and it on all the right notes, Oklahoma fans, might be the ones most stressed a week from now.

There’s a storm coming in so batten down the hatches.

Monday: 5 Trick Plays for Oklahoma

Friday: Oklahoma Preview

Temple home opener: Gameday is fun again

This should be the gameday film shown in the EO team meeting room Friday night.

Not very many new Temple head football coaches have accomplished what K.C. Keeler has in his 261 days on the job.

He’s made gamedays at Lincoln Financial Field fun again despite never having coached a game in that stadium.

I will be grabbing one of these bad boys.

Oh, yes. There was some excitement with Geoff Collins taking over for Matt Rhule after an American Conference championship season, but nothing like this.

Nothing like Temple fans will experience at 2 p.m. on Saturday afternoon against visiting Howard University.

Why?

Because Temple is coming out of six dark years into the light. Temple was already in the light the year after Rhule won the league championship.

Things fell apart somewhere between the time Collins left and the time Keeler arrived.

There are doubting Thomases out there but don’t count me among them. What Keeler has done so far is very impressive. In addition to convincing most of the “good guys” on the roster to stay, he’s added some key pieces to the puzzle that only enhanced the roster and bolstered this team’s 2025 chances.

Then came June and Keeler–despite the handicap of four-straight 3-9 seasons–was able to convince the third best recruiting class in all of G5 football to come to Temple.

The students need to answer the call and become the 12th man for the Owls on both this Saturday and next week against Oklahoma. SEPTA is no excuse for not attending this game.

Mix in a 365-day offseason and no vacations for head coaches to Texas–like we had two weeks in the summer for three-straight years–and this team is primed and ready.

They demonstrated as much in the opener at UMass, finishing the game on a 35-0 run to beat the home team 42-10. Many in the “real world” of college football expected that game to be a 3.5-point Temple win. Not me. I predicted 24-10 and hoped for a blowout.

My most fervent hopes were realized.

Now let’s hope a lot of the fans buy in because they won’t all buy in unless the Owls are able to either give Oklahoma a good game next week or win it outright.

That’s not important now.

What’s important now is to get the largest-ever Temple student freshman class into the habit of both attending the game and enjoying the experience once they arrive in South Philadelphia. That means giving them a fun pre-game experience and convincing those same kids to get into the habit of going into the stadium and cheering their heads off. This isn’t Tulsa, which only has 3,432 full-time students. This is Temple with over 30,000 full-time students, including the largest incoming class ever.

Get those kids into the habit of going to the games.

For the team itself, it also means not overlooking anyone. When you’ve gone 3-9 for four-straight years, that shouldn’t be an issue but knowing that Howard–as a 40+-point underdog only eight years ago–shocked the world should get their attention.

For me, this is a Gevani McCoy game. Either sit Evan Simon at the jump (my choice) or play him one series and get him the hell out of harm’s way. Earlier this week, Keeler said he’s told the Owls many times they are a good football team and if they play clean, they are a tough out.

According to the great Cecily Tynan, there are no weather concerns for the Temple game on Saturday.

He didn’t mean a tough out against Howard. He meant a tough out against Oklahoma and the other good teams remaining on the schedule.

Play hard. Play clean. No spitting on anyone in the pre-game and no excessive celebrations after any good play.

Win the game and only then let the dice roll against Oklahoma.

Temple football is fun again in South Philadelphia.

It’s been a while.

Very Late Saturday Night (since I will be at the game until 8 or so): Game Analysis

5 Takeaways From the Temple Game

OL shows the improvement Keeler spoke about by blowing UMass off the ball here.

Controversial take here but I’ve thought about it long and hard since the end of Temple’s 42-10 win at Mass on Saturday.

Put Evan Simon in bubble wrap for one game only and sit him against Howard this Saturday.

My thinking is this:

You can beat Howard, 40-0, with both Simon and Gevani McCoy so why not start McCoy? If the game works out like it should, McCoy gets a nice game under his belt and faces live ammunition that can’t be duplicated in practice.

You probably don’t even have a puncher’s chance against Oklahoma if Simon turns an ankle (or worse) against Howard. For those of you who don’t think Temple has a chance against Oklahoma anyway, this is your periodic reminder that fellow AAC member Navy beat Oklahoma last year.

Who did Navy lose to, 32-18, a couple of years ago?

Temple.

You can hear a lot of cheering for Temple when Peter Clarke catches this touchdown pass.

Beating Okie after going 2-0 would make a huge statement for the program and the conference itself.

Okie beat Illinois State, 35-7, on Saturday. Hard to believe that Illinois State is as good as UMass so Temple does indeed have a chance. They need Simon healthy to do it and getting McCoy up to game speed with an extended look against Howard wouldn’t hurt either. He was inserted into the game deep in Temple territory with the Owls up so big that all he did was basically hand off.

Allowing him to throw the ball downfield and utilizing the entire playbook would be a win/win for Temple. To do that, he needs to play an entire game.

That’s our first takeaway from the game. Here are four more:

Keeler was right about the lines

Two weeks ago, Keeler said he “never had a defensive line this deep. We have 9-10 guys who can really play.” Turns out he wasn’t blowing smoke. The Temple DL dominated, and all 10 guys played well. A week later, Keeler said, “I don’t know if I’ve ever seen a position group improve as much as our offensive line.” He credited that with an intensive strength program and new OL coach Al Johnson. UMass went to a goal-line defense, selling out for the run, when Temple had the ball on its 1 and the Temple OL blew a hole so wide open a truck could run through it. Instead of a truck, Jay Ducker went for 55 yards.

The Tight End Room is Stacked

Peter Clarke and Ryder Kusch emerged as the top two tight ends, both catching a pair of TD passes. Yet Daniel Evert, who scored a long touchdown against Army last year, is also very good and will make an impact. Despite all that, Jake Woods might have been the star of summer camp and he will be heard from as well.

K.C. Keeler should consider put Evan Simon in bubble wrap for one week only. He can play all the rest starting with Oklahoma.

Ducker and Worthy Should be Mr. Inside and Mr. Outside

Got the distinct feeling that if Terrez Worthy went through the hole at the goal-line, he would have taken it to the house. Worthy runs a legitimate 4.4-40 and is the fastest guy on the team. He’s a home-run hitter and few linebackers have the speed to cover him out of the backfield. OC Tyler Walker probably noticed that from the booth and will take advantage of that mismatch.

Two Dante Wrights are better than One

Temple was expected to miss the oft-injured Dante Wright but Kajiya Hollawayne and JoJo Bermudez proved to be up to the task with the former catching a touchdown pass and the latter catching 7 balls for 78 yards. Yet Colin Chase was pretty much the WR star of the summer camp, much like Woods was with the tight ends, and although he had a spectacular catch near the goal-line, was not targeted like he will be as the season goes on and, once he gets those targets, should show fans in the stands what he showed his teammates in the summer.

While Saturday was exciting and a lot of players performed well, there will be a lot of other players making an impact over the next 11 games.

Or if they are as lucky as they appear to be good, a dozen or more games.

Friday: Howard Preview

Temple leaves fans with a good taste in their mouths

Gameday at Lincoln Financial Field is going to be fun again, maybe for the first time in 10 years.

The last word in this space yesterday was that we expected to eat some sort of delicious cake at around 6:30 p.m. today.

Well, we were off only by about 17 minutes.

The game ended at exactly 6:47 p.m., Eastern, and the double-layered Cherry and White cake with ice cream on the top was well worth the wait.

Best part of this is from 0:38 timestamp on…

Temple went into Amherst and not only won but won 42-10.

We didn’t expect the Cherry on top of this White cake but, thanks to the leadership of K.C. Keeler and Evan Simon, our bellies are full right now.

So ends a 20-game losing streak in the first year of a Temple head coach and, if that number sounds familiar, that happened roughly 20 years ago in the middle of Al Golden’s first season. That was a real 20-game losing streak and Golden stopped the bleeding with a 28-14 win over Bowling Green that day.

This was a little less real but no less embarrassing 20-game road losing streak that is, thankfully, over.

Those of us sitting in the stands back in 2006 knew it was the start of something special and those of us who had the pleasure of watching today have a similar feeling in the pit of our stomachs. Not heartburn, but a stomach that just ingested something Cherry and White and delicious.

Like a cake.

Poteat’s sack of Rose here turned the game around. (Photo Courtesy Zamani Feelings)

After 20-straight road losses, Temple has a road win and similarities between the two times abound.

Golden led the Owls to a nine-game winning two years later before bolting for Miami.

He made gamedays fun again at Lincoln Financial Field. Instead of bitching and moaning about this call and that call and that hire and this one, the pre-game talk turned to winning.

Then, Golden was 36 and we all knew in the back of our heads he was eyeing the next-big thing.

Keeler is 65 and his roots are planted here and less likely to leave and that’s one of the reasons why this time is even more exciting than that time.

The last time a Philadelphia football team above the high school level played a meaningful game they won it by sacking the quarterback at crucial times. This Philadelphia team did the same in the next game with Khalil Poteat providing the kind of sack that reminded Owl/Eagle fans of Jalen Carter.

Temple Football Forever way back on 8/29/25

UMass couldn’t handle the Temple D-Line pretty much the way the Chiefs couldn’t handle the Eagles’ D-Line. Keeler pretty much said it would be that way two weeks ago when he noted that “this is the deepest D-Line I ever had. We have 9-10 guys who can really play.”

A week later, Keeler said the same thing about his O-Line, “I’ve never seen a position group improve as much as our O-Line” perhaps referring to the “iron sharpens iron” of playing against an elite D-Line. The OL gave Evan Simon time to throw for six touchdown passes and gave Jay Ducker space to rush for over 100 yards in his Temple debut.

The Eagles proved on Super Bowl Sunday that games are won in the trenches and the other birds who play home games in that same stadium seem to have adopted that formula.

Either way, the food at the tailgates is going to taste better for the first time in a long while and the dessert afterward is promising, too.

Leave some room for both.

Monday: Five Takeaways From The Game

Friday: Howard Preview

Late Saturday Night: Howard Game Analysis

Monday: 5 Trick Plays for Okie

Temple-UMass: Only one way to look at it

Should be a beautiful day for Philadelphians to drive the six hours to Amherst and see their only FBS team come away with a win.

Most of the nation’s “wise guy” bettors have the Temple at UMass football game tomorrow as pretty darn close to a pick-’em.

Should be a perfect day for football tomorrow in Amherst.

Temple is a 2.5-point favorite at this moment. At other moments it was -4. Earlier in the summer, it was +1.5.

Most of those know nothing about Temple or UMass.

It’s not their fault.

The so-called wise guys, otherwise collectively known as “Vegas”, pay a lot more attention to Texas-Ohio State and Notre Dame vs. Miami.

They don’t spend too much time studying the G5 because the money isn’t there.

If they had, they would know there is one way to look at this Temple at UMass game (3:30 p.m., ESPN+) and that way is this:

Both teams played UConn tough last year but Temple was the team that dominated UConn in the trenches and lost on the flukiest of fluke plays in New England. That, despite the Owls having the albatross of a terrible head coach (Stan Drayton) and a worse quarterback (Forrest Brock) around their necks.

UMass fans don’t sound as confident as they were earlier in the week.

The necks are loose and free this year and that’s the way this team should play. The only players who should have their heads on a swivel Saturday should be on the home team.

Now the Owls have one great head coach and two pretty darn good quarterbacks playing a New England team far worse than the one they played and lost to on a scoop and score a year ago.

Temple has spent nine months gestating this baby of a lead-pipe cinch College Football Hall of Fame head coach in K.C. Keeler and it’s about to be birthed kicking and screaming at 3:30 on Saturday.

Keeler will be in the CFB Hall of Fame in Atlanta one day (joining former Owls Wayne Hardin and Paul Palmer) not because of what he has done for Temple but because of what he has done up to this point, winning the most FCS games in the history of any head coach.

What he will do at Temple will only be icing on that cake but, based on that history, what he’s baking now should be pretty tasty for Owl fans. UMass should be the first slice of that cake. If it’s a win, it’s a pound cake. If it’s a comfortable win, it’s a double-layer cake. If it’s a blowout, there’s ice cream on top of those double layers.

One way or another, cake it should be.

Not only did the Owls make a serious upgrade in coaching on both sides of the ball they improved their running back room by getting Jay Ducker to play first team in front of last year’s best running back, Terrez Worthy. (Bold prediction: Worthy breaks a long one and gets more yards than Ducker.)

They lost last year’s best receiver, the oft-injured Dante Wright, but overcompensated for that loss by adding Colin Chase and JoJo Bermudez, who could instantly make Owl fans forget about Wright.

On the defensive side of the ball, they replaced the worst DC in Temple history, Everett Withers, with a guy who has the chance to be one of the best, Brian L. Smith.

Keeler said his defensive line was “9-10 deep and the best I’ve ever had.” Keeler also noted that his OL was the position group that improved the most over the last nine months, perhaps due in part to playing against such a talented DL every day. This team has the ability to dominate UMass in the trenches and that’s where winning football begins.

Keeler has taken the right approach, telling his players to not worry about the scoreboard but to take it one play, one position battle, at a time. He said if they take care of the play in front of them, they can start to look at the scoreboard in only the closing seconds and they will like the results.

If they don’t, they won’t.

Still, the biggest determiner of the outcome is the attitude of the players who seem to have bought into the notion that 3-9 seasons are a thing of the past and are collectively focused on changing that dynamic now.

It all starts tomorrow. One play at a time.

One win at a time.

Me?

I’d love to see a Temple blowout but I don’t think it will happen. There will be some growing pains and it will be something between the 40-22 Super Bowl score and the 23-21 Vegas seems to expect.

Call it 24-10 Temple. That’s my story and I’m sticking with it. If I’m wrong, I will eat crow but I’m fully expecting a pretty decent slice of cake around 6:30 tomorrow night.

Saturday Night: Game Analysis

Temple football: Finally, Game Week

Since Wayne Hardin transitioned the Temple football Owls from what was then called the college division (roughly FCS) to the university division (FBS), football here could be broken into five eras:

One, The Hardin Years (1970-82)

Two, The Arians Years (1983-88)

Three, The Dark Ages (1991-2005)

Four, The Golden Rhule Era (2006-2016)

Five, A Mini-Dark Age (2017-2024)

Some pretty good times and a couple of rough patches.

There are signs with the season opener at UMass on Saturday (3:30 p.m., ESPN+) that the Owls are coming out a rough patch and into good times and that’s encouraging because one of the lessons of the Golden Rhule Era should have been the Owls were not going back the dark ages.

After Al Golden righted the ship, the prevailing thought around here was that there was no reason for Temple to return to losing seasons and breaking even should have been the minimum standard for every season.

Nobody could have predicted that after being bowl eligible for nine of a 10-year period, they would slump to a 1-6 season followed by a lot of 3-9 ones.

What happened?

After Rhule, the university went away from the formula that caused the revival in the first place–instead of hiring coaches with local connections, the administration hired either big-time coordinators from elsewhere or “a fish out of water” head coach from the middle of the country.

By returning to the formula that worked, the Owls got the best of both worlds–a big-time winning head coach with Philadelphia roots.

Everything K.C. Keeler has done since his arrival in Philadelphia screams he gets Temple as a university and gets both this city and the Temple football program.

Now emerging from the dark tunnel into the sunlight begins and winning isn’t everything, it’s the only thing.

The first game won’t be an easy one as the Owls have to take to the road to take on another revitalized program in UMass. Temple is a 4-point favorite and Vegas is usually pretty good so very few expect a blowout (although I wouldn’t mind the Owls getting one).

This is the type of confidence UMass fans have (LOL).

As much as the Owls expect to win, that’s how much the UMass fans expect to win because they, too, have a first-year coach who understands their region as much as Keeler does his. While this is head coach Joe Harasymiak’s first FBS head coaching job, he’s was a successful head coach at Maine. Many of their fans think they can win.

Still, Temple plays in a tougher conference and has a four-year head start recruiting a superior pedigree of players so the Owls have reason to be confident. The last time Temple played UMass, even a Stan Drayton-coached team came away with a 28-0 win.

With a better coach and better players, the Owls need to start fast and, after 231 days of hard work under a guy who knows what he’s doing, they are hungry to show how far they’ve come.

They’ll have that chance in six days.

Friday: Temple-UMass Preview

Saturday Night: Temple-UMass analysis

First things first: Single Digits

Must admit that the only thing that generated any interest in my watching the sad 2024 season of The Temple football Owls was The Evan Simon Story.

It might make for a pretty good movie someday.

Was miffed when then head coach Stan Drayton picked a JUCO quarterback over him to start the season at Oklahoma and then watched in horror as said JUCO (Forrest Brock) played like Forrest Tucker (F-Troop fame) and became, at least in my mind, the worst starting quarterback in Temple football history.

The miffing turned to anger when I saw Simon throw four touchdowns and run for another in a 45-29 win over Utah State. (Yes, the same Utah State that handed Hawaii a 55-10 loss and Hawaii is favored over P4 Stanford this weekend.)

Me, a mere fan who sits in the stands was right and the freaking CEO of the entire program who made $2 million more than me to watch this garbage was wrong. My first thought was that the Owls might have won as many as three more games (certainly one or two more) if Drayton had might the right decision.

I cheered my ass off when Layton Jordan sacked Evan Simon here in 2022. Little did I know I would become Simon’s biggest fan a couple years later.

That wasn’t when I became a big Evan Simon fan.

I became a big Evan Simon fan when, during the later stages of a 53-6 loss at Tulane, he fumbled the ball and crawled on his hands and knees for 5 yards at midfield to outfight four bigger faster and tougher Tulane defenders and recover the fumble. He sacrificed his body and health for the ball and, in some respects, for Temple University.

That’s Temple TUFF.

On Thursday, Simon was rewarded not for that but what he has done since and his leadership of this team as being one of the new single digits. One of the other single digits was a punter, Dante Atton. Let’s hope this is one single digit the Owls never have to use.

The big story is Simon, though.

There are two ways to look at this.

One, it’s an indication Simon will start at UMass in about a week.

Two, new head coach K.C. Keeler is throwing a bone to Simon with the single digit for his leadership and accepting last year’s Oregon State starting quarterback, Gevani McCoy, into the fold.

I don’t know. We will find out the answer to that question in eight days.

This I do know: Both are AAC championship level quarterbacks and Temple can win with both and need both to win.

I only know one who I can be sure will crawl forward on his hands and knees for a full 5 yards to recover a fumble. I can hope the other guy has the same level of courage.

Or never fumbles.

If Simon gets the job and wins a championship, though, that would rival “Rudy” for the best college football film ever made.

Monday: Game Week

Is Temple “Doomed” to Repeat History?

K.C. Keeler is hoping to bring the same kind of smiles to Owls as he did for three other teams.

Underestimating Temple football coach K.C. Keeler is done at your own peril.

At least that’s the lesson of history and we all know what Winston Churchill said about those who don’t learn from history being doomed to repeat it.

After the legendary Tubby Raymond posted a 5-6 record in his last year, K.C. Keeler improved that record to 11-4 the next season.

At Temple, football fans can only be lucky to be so doomed because Keeler has an interesting history of first years at schools as a head coach.

Keeler has been head coach in three places–Rowan University, the University of Delaware and Sam Houston State–and improved the team from the prior year in every place.

At all of those places the bar was set pretty high because former Philadelphia Eagles’ linebacker John Bunting passed the torch at Rowan (then Glassboro State) to Keeler after the 1992 season. That year, Bunting took the Profs to the Division III semifinals. The next year Keeler took that same team to the Division III title game.

An improvement right away, not a 3-5 year plan.

After the 2005 season, legendary Delaware coach Tubby Raymond decided to hang up the clipboard after a 5-6 season.

Things were looking pretty bleak for that program when Keeler took over in his first year and led the Blue Hens to an 11-4 record and a loss in the national championship game to future FBS member Appalachian State.

That’s a six-game improvement from the previous season. After that 5-6 season, a look through the wayback machine on the Delaware football message boards contained a lot of negativities about what Keeler could immediately bring. One fan said “I’d settle for one or two more wins” and another said “don’t expect much from Keeler in his first season. This is a complete rebuild.”

Sound familiar?

Think Temple fans would sign for a six-game improvement right now?

Remember a “complete rebuild” in 2025 is far different than a complete rebuild in 2006. Back in 2006, you had to settle for what you had in your building. There was no reaching out and grabbing this piece or that piece through the transfer portal and immediately improving the roster.

That dynamic also didn’t exist in 2014 when Keeler became the first-year coach at Sam Houston State and succeeded another legendary coach, Willie Fritz, who had the Bearkats in the FCS second round.

Keeler did one better than Fritz, getting the Bearkats to the FCS semifinals in his first year.

Three first years better than the prior one.

Those who say this is a “complete rebuild” shouldn’t be surprised if they didn’t learn enough about Keeler’s past history to be doomed by underestimating it.

That’s one Temple of Doom that should put smiles on the faces of Owls everywhere, maybe even the doubters in our midst.

Friday: First Things First

Monday: Game Week