Beautiful day, ugly (but needed) win

Having been to the last half-century of Temple football Homecomings, what happened on Saturday might have been the most impressive of them all.

OK, maybe I fibbed.

This overflow lot of mostly Temple students was completely full after the main lots were sold out. Those kids missed a helluva game. (Photo courtesy of me)

The 2015 Homecoming against Tulane was more impressive, simply because Temple fans filled the entire lower bowl in a 48-14 win. They even did a wave across the entire stadium.

On a gorgeous Philly day (74, sunny, no wind) this one was like that one in the sense that the crowd outside the stadium was at least as impressive on Saturday as the one back in 2015.

The difference was that time 35,145 made it inside the stadium and this time only 18,871 did. The flip side of that was Temple was 6-0 then and 1-5 now so maybe the fans deserve more credit. No doubt in my mind if Temple was 5-1 instead of 1-5, a dozen thousand or more people would have wanted to go inside.

Weather-wise, it doesn’t get better in Philadelphia on any Oct. 19. A month from now we will be here freezing our asses off against North Texas.

Yes, there were about as many people who partied the whole day in the lots as the people who made it inside in a 20-10 Temple win.

10 for 104 is way too much

The honey needed to attract those bees inside going forward for Temple is to turn a 17-0 lead into a 34-0 win and the Owls have shown they don’t know how to execute that killer instinct yet.

Penalties were the big reason why, at least in the second half.

On offense, whenever the Owls had a big play, they had a holding penalty.

On defense, whenever they made a big stop in the second half it was either a PI (pass interference) or defensive holding.

That’s why Tulsa–arguably the worst team in the AAC–was able to cause those fans who made it inside (raising my hand here) to bite our fingers until about the 2:40 mark of the fourth quarter.

Eliminating the penalties is the way to beat these teams like East Carolina and FAU coming up. Continuing with this season-long trend is a formula for joining Tulsa at the bottom of the league standings.

If Temple ever wants to get those fans to go from the parking lot and into the stadium, it is going to have to clean up now what should have been done in spring and summer practices.

You could say that about a lot of things, including the swing and miss on who should have been the starting quarterback at both Oklahoma and Navy.

A lot of things that need to be cleaned up by now should have been done by Aug. 31 and that’s on Stan Drayton. Whether it costs him his job or not will depend on his sense of urgency now.

Monday: A Different Kind of Homecoming