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

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 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

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

New digs: Temple should start planning now

An artist rendering of what the new domed Eagles’ Stadium will look like.

For anyone who was around when Jeffrey Lurie tried to stiff Temple out of playing at Lincoln Financial Field way back when it opened in 2003, his latest plans should be viewed as a Five Alarm Fire.

Temple BOT chair Mitchell Morgan could be the key for getting November and December games at the Bank for the Owls.

Lurie only relented and allowed Temple in when the state of Pennsylvania reminded him that as part of the city and state’s funding of the Linc was the stipulation that Temple, one of three state schools (along with Pitt and Penn State) be allowed to play there. Lurie paid a third of the $521 million tab, while the City and State paid two thirds.

The state and the city threatened to take Lurie to court to allow Temple to play there and Lurie didn’t have the stomach to fight on two fronts.

That won’t be the case with Lurie’s current plans.

What are they?

Lurie floated the idea last month of building a new “Eagles Stadium” at a place yet-to-be-determined. Unless it is in Center City or North Philly, the Owls have virtually no chance of playing there.

Since Governor Josh Shapiro has ruled out state funding and the city has empty pockets, this new project will be funded entirely by the Eagles.

For anyone who remotely entertains the idea that Lurie would welcome Temple as a tenant, we have some condo space to sell in a Florida flood zone.

In other words, it ain’t happening.

Temple has to find another place to play or at least start the planning process now.

My preference has always been an on-campus stadium. A student body that has 12,500 students living on campus should have a football stadium on campus. LFF, which is a fantastic stadium, is way too big for Temple’s purposes. Creating a demand for tickets should be a priority and it’s just logical that the demand for tickets in a 35K stadium would be double the demand for tickets in a 70K stadium.

That ship, though, has sailed in a corrupt city that will always allow a Councilman to veto a project in his district. (My feeling is Temple has just as much right to build anything it wants on its own property as a school in any other city. Look at Georgia Tech’s stadium below. It also is in the middle of a residential neighborhood but was welcomed by the neighbors when it was built a century ago.)

If Georgia Tech can have this in Atlanta, Temple should have the same in Philadelphia.

So Temple has to explore other options.

With Temple Board of Trustees chair Mitchell Morgan as a part owner of the Philadelphia Phillies, some combination of Citizens Bank Park and another stadium should be explored. Temple should explore scheduling September games at the Bank but not October ones as those are baseball playoff dates.

Failing that play, say, two games at Franklin Field in September and October and two games at the soccer stadium in Chester in those same months and play the final two home games at Citizens Bank Park.

Slot CBP for any possible AAC title game in December.

Temple should start planning now because once Lurie comes out with the announcement it will almost definitely not include the Owls.

Monday: Depth Chart Clues

Friday (8/15): Behind The Lines

Immediate help is on the way for Temple football

Jay Ducker was the leading rusher at NIU, Memphis and Sam Houston and hopes to do the same at TU.

Lost in the Big Beautiful Month for Temple football 2026 recruiting that ends Monday is the fact that new head coach K.C. Keeler placed immediate needs ahead of future ones.

Keeler loaded up on the transfer portal to bulk up this roster before concentrating on future rosters and that’s the way it should be.

Any Temple fans having concerns about the roster need not.

That’s because the roster has been UPGRADED with newcomers and not downgraded by any loss of Stan Drayton’s guys.

Colin Chase could make Temple fans forget Dante Wright.

Look just at the key spots:

If Gevani McCoy beats out Evan Simon, he’s a pretty good quarterback.

QUARTERBACK__Temple was pretty much screwed at the backup quarterback position before Keeler addressed that with the addition of Oregon State starter Gevani McCoy in late April. Right now, we don’t know who is going to start at QB, McCoy or Evan Simon but going into this season not a single person can say Temple was better off at this time last year with Forrest Brock as the starter and Simon as a backup. Consider that position upgraded simply because backup quarterbacks have been a disaster at Temple for most of the last six years.

RUNNING BACK__Temple went into last season with high hopes for an FIU transfer (E.J. Wilson) and a true sophomore, Joquez Smith, not realizing that the 2023 leading JUCO rusher in the nation was on the roster in Terrez Worthy. Once Worthy got in the game, Temple realized it had something but he didn’t get highlighted until the middle of the season. Not satisfied with JUST Worthy, Keeler added Jay Ducker, who was the leading rusher in the MAC as a true freshman and the leading rusher at NIU, Memphis and Sam Houston State in the last three seasons. Think he’s not motivated to add Temple to that list? Hunter Smith, who was the leading rusher at Louisiana Monroe as a freshman, adds depth and joins a crowded room that includes Worthy, Smith and Ducker. Fortunately, Wilson is gone. Position definitely upgraded.

WIDE RECEIVERS__While Temple lost a couple of serviceable receivers in Dante Wright and John Adams, they added the leading receiver from Delaware (JoJo Bermudez). Grambling transfer Antonio Jones showed he had pretty good hands last year and returns, as does Xavier Irvin, who showed flashes of being pretty good. Colin Chase (St. Thomas) could surprise. EVEN.

OFFENSIVE LINE__Temple returns seven guys who started FBS games in South Carolina transfer Grayson Mains, Chris Smith, Jackson Pruitt, Luke Watson, Eric King, Diego Barajas and Kevin Terry. Keeler also brought in a letterwinner from Georgia who should provide depth. UPGRADE.

DEFENSIVE LINE__Keeler has called that the deepest position on the team with single-digit Demerick Morris coming back to Temple after a short stint at Oklahoma State. His teammates voted to allow him back, which shows he’s a leader. Other solid players include Miami (Fla.) transfer Allan Haye, Philadelphia city star Tyrese Whitaker, Rutgers’ transfer Cam’Ron Stewart (who has been good here) and Georgia Tech transfer K.J. Miles. UMass starter Aaron Beckwith transferred here over the winter but is not expected to start here. HUGE UPGRADE.

LINEBACKER__Eric Stuart is the lone returning starter but Keeler recognized that fact and brought in UMass starter Jalen Stewart and Delaware’s best linebacker, Ty Davis, who both should start here. Another potential starter is Kentucky backup Jayvant Brown, who turned down Alabama and Auburn offers to sign at Kentucky. UPGRADE

SPECIALS__Temple returns punter Dante Atton and former Temple kicker Maddux Trijillo called his backup, Carl Hardin, “the second best kicker in the AAC.” We’ll see if Maddux is as good a talent evaluator as he is a kicker but Hardin was consistent throughout the spring. Tylik Mitchell could be the best kickoff returner Temple has had since Isiah Wright. DOWNGRADE (because MT was so good). Hopefully, Temple will not be punting this year.

Anyone who has any concerns about Temple’s roster being thin is ignoring the players Keeler is bringing in and, in this day and age of the transfer portal, fans do that at their own peril.

Friday: Just Short of an A

Temple football’s No. 1 target commits

By all accounts, the gathering on June 3d between Temple fans and new head coach K.C. Keeler broke all records for an Owl event in the offseason in terms of attendance.

The buzz both inside and outside the Wissahickon Brewing Company was positive enough to get people to buy season tickets and have those people get other people to buy season tickets. The impact should show in fannies in the seats come September.

Keeler offered a few interesting nuggets in the sense that “we’re probably done” with the transfer portal for this cycle and concentrating instead on high school recruits.

Already, those dividends are paying off.

It didn’t take more than a few days for arguably Temple’s No. 1 target, a quarterback from North Carolina named Brody Norman, to commit. Five days to be exact because Norman announced on his twitter feed at exactly 7:41 p.m. on Sunday night he was an Owl.

There’s definitely an Anthony Russo-type vibe to the the Norman signing in it’s been a very long time since Temple signed a quarterback with gaudy stats like this.

As a senior at Archbishop Wood, Russo had 35 touchdown passes vs. only four interceptions for Steve Devlin’s state championship Vikings. Russo had just visited with then LSU head coach Les Miles in the Archbishop Wood cafeteria when then Temple head coach Matt Rhule got Russo to switch his Rutgers’ commitment for the Owls. Russo finished in the top four of Temple’s all-time quarterbacks from a statistical standpoint and probably would have worked his way up the ladder had then head coach Rod Carey not tried to make an option quarterback out of a drop back passer.

Temple sports set a record for an offseason event with a big crowd on Tuesday night to listen to K.C. Keeler

That was a whole different time in college football when G5 teams routinely out recruited regional P5 rivals because there wasn’t a whole lot of money to throw around and the G5 team could offer immediate playing time.

Keeler pulled off his own heist with the Norman recruit, taking advantage of the current state of college football when many P4 teams eschew recruiting high school players in favor of raiding other P4 team’s ready-made quarterback in the transfer portal.

With Norman, P4’s loss is Temple’s gain.

Norman had 32 touchdown passes in the junior year at Mooresville, N.C. His team finished 11-2 and won its league championship.

Who knows how many he will have this upcoming season but that fact that he won’t be distracted by having to deal with recruiters should help him focus on his high school season and padding those high school numbers.

Like Russo, the most important statistic for a quarterback is a championship pedigree followed by number of touchdown passes vs. interceptions.

Norman passes the smell test on both counts.

He obviously loves Philadelphia and, while he won’t arrive on campus for another couple of years, Philadelphia will no doubt love him back.

Friday: Sunday’s other three commits

Monday: Seeing double

Temple football: Location, location, location

First-year Temple head football coach K.C. Keeler is proving the old real estate adage:

Location, Location, Location.

At this time last year, then Temple head coach Stan Drayton was starting the second week of his two-week vacation in Houston, Tex (his house there)., texting the two reporters who cover Temple football on a regular basis that everything back home was cool because he was in constant contact with the senior leadership group.

Contrast that to what happened on Tuesday night when Keeler met with a couple hundred Temple fans at the Wissahickon Brewing Company.

That’s in Philadelphia, not Houston.

In that time, Keeler showed a grasp of the Temple personnel that Drayton never had.

There, he called last year’s starting quarterback, Evan Simon, “a dude” and incoming quarterback Gevani McCoy a guy who could win the job based on his history as a starter at both Oregon State and Idaho (two teams who have beaten Temple in the last 30 years). Drayton, on the other hand, fumbled his quarterback situation by naming the worst quarterback in Temple history, Forrest Brock, as the starter in the Oklahoma game over a Temple quarterback, Evan Simon, who started and did decently well in Big 10 games.

K.C. Keeler comes approved by Hooter.

Drayton, a running back guru, fumbled the ball.

Keeler, on the other hand, seems to have a grasp on his QB situation by even floating the idea of a two-quarterback system.

Afterward, Keeler left–not for Houston–but for his home here. This weekend, he might go as far as his longstanding home at Rehoboth Beach, Del., which is exactly 1,535 miles from Houston and only 121 miles from Philadelphia.

No need to have the team leadership group on standby. He can be at 10th and Diamond in a hurry.

Keeler dropped a couple of jokes–not staged, but based on his first few months here–that had the Temple fans in stitches on Tuesday and left the definite impression he was not going anywhere and he was large and in charge.

I don’t know about you but that’s comforting to me.

Monday: The No. 1 Target

Way too early 2025 Temple football predictions

K.C. Keeler might have this pose after the Owls beat North Carolina in the Military Bowl.

Our “way-too-early” 2024 predictions appeared in this space on May 19, 2024.

Only four days and a year later, we’re going to swing and hopefully hit on a lot of these but first a review.

We predicted the 2024 Temple Owls to go 2-10 and they went 3-9 (again). We pretty much nailed the Tulsa game on the head, predicting the Owls to win by 11 (they won by 10). Also nailed the UConn game predicting the Owls would lose, 17-14 (they lost 29-20).

Our biggest miss was Utah State, where we predicted the Owls to lose, 34-7 (they won, 45-29). We predicted a 77-6 loss to Oklahoma (they lost 51-3) and a win over Coastal Carolina (they lost that one, 28-20). Also lost FAU as we predicted Temple would lose to Tom Herman. Owls won, 18-15 and Stan Drayton was fired the next day.

The football is a strange shape and it takes funny bounces but we’ll give it the old college try in this spot:

Temple 24, UMass 10 _ The fact that Temple was able to steal UMass’ best linebacker tells you all you need to know about this one. Temple has a seasoned head coach in K.C. Keeler. UMass has a first-time head coach in a former Rutgers’ assistant. Evan Simon throws for two touchdown passes, Gevani McCoy adds another on the ground and Carl Hardin kicks a field goal. Temple is unbeaten (1-0).

Temple 48, Howard 7 _ Howard shocked the world a few years ago when it went to UNLV and came away with a win as a 37-point underdog against an FBS team. That’s not happening. Simon plays the first half and throws for three touchdown passes and McCoy does the same in the second half. Jay Ducker runs for 176 yards but no touchdowns as he is caught from behind twice. Temple is 2-0.

Oklahoma 34, Temple 14 _ Not completely sold on the Owls, the Temple fans are outnumbered in the stands by the visitors from 1,600 miles away. Crowd of 52,333 is heavily pro-Sooner and that makes the difference. Temple is now 2-1.

Georgia Tech 38, Temple 7 _ Plenty of talk about Georgia Tech’s 24-2 loss to Temple in 2019 before the game. Yellowjackets are primed for revenge and get it. Temple is now 2-2.

Owls to face both Bill Belichick and any distractions Jordan Hudson can provide in the Military Bowl.

Temple 24, UTSA 21 _ Carl Hardin nails a 48-yarder with 2:53 left to give Temple a lead and Temple’s defense stops the Roadrunners at midfield to end the game. Temple is 3-2.

Navy 31, Temple 21 _ The Midshipmen, which lost to Temple, 32-16, in 2023, get some revenge for that one. Temple, though, shows improvement over its 38-11 loss to Navy last year. Still not good enough. Temple is 3-3.

Make that 99 as of today.

Temple 34, Tulsa 21 _ Jay Ducker runs for 142 yards and sets up two short touchdown passes from Simon to Antonio Jones and Temple comes away with a comfortable win in Oklahoma. Many of the Oklahoma fans who made the trip to Philadelphia show up rooting for the Owls. Crowd is generously announced at 6,234. Temple is 4-3.

Temple 28, Charlotte 14 _ Owls go into the 20,111-seat Jerry Richardson Stadium and come away with a comfortable win. McCoy starts, throws two TDs and runs for one. Simon comes in to close out the game in the fourth quarter. Terrez Worthy scores a 56-yard touchdown and wins the starting RB job from Ducker. Temple is 5-3.

Temple 28, East Carolina 20 _ The last time ECU visited Lincoln Financial Field, the Pirates escaped with a 49-46 win because the Owls couldn’t convert a third-and-1 at midfield (trying a pass instead of a run) and kicked the ball away with a lead. This time, the Temple defense has a much better day, getting two picks. Temple is now 6-3.

Army 31, Temple 28 _ Temple leads the whole game but Army, in a game similar to the 2017 game, wins on a last-second bomb from a backup quarterback. Afterward, K.C. Keeler shakes Jeff Monken’s hand and says, “You are the best coach in the country.” Monken returns the favor, saying, “K.C. you are not so bad yourself.” Temple is 6-4.

Tulane 28, Temple 17 _ Keeler spends the entire off week showing the Owls film of their 52-6 loss at Tulane last year. It helps only a little. Brian Smith’s defense contains but does not stop the Green Wave. Temple is 6-5.

North Texas 31, Temple 17 _ The late November temperature in Denton, Texas is 82 degrees. Owls, who have practiced all week in 30-degree temperatures in Philadelphia can’t hang. Temple finishes 6-6 and accepts a bid to the Military Bowl to play North Carolina afterward.

Keeler laughs.

“I have a lot of respect for coach Belichick but I don’t have the off-field distractions he has,” Keeler says. “We’re going to be focused on winning. I told the kids anybody who opts out of the bowl game is no longer a Temple Owl. Kids said they are all in and so am I.”

There you have it. Temple finishes 6-6 in the regular season.

I had them at 2-10 a year ago. I won’t be mad if they win one more game than predicted this season.

Again.

Monday: The Temple Push