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

Temple Depth Chart: Punching Back

Two heavyweight champions and Temple fans, boxer Tex Cobb (left) and Ted DeLapp.

About this time last week, being a summer-lover like I am, started getting a little depressed about entering the last month of–at least in my mind–the best three months of the year.

Also, while the stats for Temple Football Forever were higher than any previous summer, the money coming into the website never matched the money going out.

Then came home to this post from in my mind the greatest single Temple football fan I’ve ever known: Ted DeLapp:

Nothing to pick up your spirits like knowing someone is reading this blog and appreciating it. Around the same time, we got our first three donations in over a month so our readers were putting their money where their mouths were.

Really appreciate it and it will make a difference going forward.

Ourlads’ Guide’s view of Temple’s offense. I would put Luke Watson as first-team LT (now that Kevin Terry is injured), Colin Chase and JoJo Bermudez as WRs (John Adams is gone) and Worthy second team. Also note that McCoy should be at No. 2 at QB and moving up. Wouldn’t be surprised if Worthy/and or McCoy start at UMass, those positions are that close.

Better days are yet to come.

We hit a low ebb in Temple fandom at the end of the 2004 season when Ted, me, heavyweight fighter Randall “Tex” Cobb, Rick Gabe, Fred the Owl Club President, and a couple of other Temple fans were the last remaining tailgaters in an empty Lot K. While there were more Miami fans than Temple ones that day, always felt that if we were unfortunate enough to get in a fight with them, Cobb could take on five or six by himself. Punching back was something the team wasn’t doing, but the few fans left always were.

Pretty good summary of the defense, but would flip Badmus and Poteat and we understand Ordonez is moving up the depth chart fast.

That’s it. About five fans tailgating before being spanked by the Fake Miami, 41-10.

The pre-game conversation was a debate whether we wanted an up-and-comer like Al Golden or some big name out of a job at that point like Rick Neuheisel.

Fortunately, Temple made the right choice then and we certainly feel Temple has made the right choice now. Then, Golden was the man of the moment for Temple. Now, K.C. Keeler is that guy.

Keeler has assembled a roster that includes a defensive line that he called “the deepest I’ve ever had” and DC Brian Smith added that it is a deeper defense than any of his seven previous ones at Rice. The last few days have been dedicated to shuffling all that talent and putting it into some form.

That’s what depth charts are for.

Offensively, Temple has two good quarterbacks for the first time since the Matt Rhule Era (Evan Simon, Gevani McCoy) and three running backs who made the Doak Walker Watch list for best RB in the country–Terrez Worthy, Jay Ducker and Joquez Smith–the most in Temple history.

Ourlads’ Guide is one of the few websites outside of Temple that takes a stab at the current depth chart.

Defensively, they did a pretty good job but we won’t know until the official depth chart is released the week of Aug. 25.

Offensively, they need to update a few things but keeping track of 136 depth charts is an almost impossible task.

Yes, the summer is coming to an end but watching a competitive Temple football team for the first time in six years would be a pretty good consolation prize.

Finally, after being a punching bag for the last six years, Temple is showing signs of punching back. If Tex Cobb is still watching the Owls, our guess is that he will be smiling.

Friday: Behind The Lines

This week: The AAC Discovers Keeler’s Plan

Plenty of “money quotes” in the above short six-minute interview where the AAC sent a media person into the Temple film room to interview K.C. Keeler.

To me, the big takeaway was that Keeler was so unlike his predecessor, Stan Drayton, that any objective observer has got to assume that the record is going to reflect that.

Drayton spent three years of spinning his wheels in the mud at Temple, going for the trifecta with the same record that got his predecessor, Rod Carey, fired: 3-9. Drayton never figured out a way push the bus out of the mud and get it moving forward.

I have that exact black jacket but it’s a pullover and not a full zipper. Would be sweet to find a full zipper in adult extra large.

Keeler spent six minutes detailing how he is going to put some straps around those Temple tires and have his new strength coach and big hogs up front pull this spinning vehicle out of the mud.

It’s sounds like a pretty good plan.

It’s a week of discovery for Temple football, not so much for the people inside the $17 million Edberg-Olson facility but for the AAC and maybe college football in general because they are going to hear Keeler’s plan to revive everything inside the building and at Lincoln Financial Field.

That’s because media day is in Charlotte on July 24th-25 and a lot of what Keeler said in the above interview will be on full display those two days. ESPN will cover the second day session but, by then, it should become apparent that Keeler’s approach is different than Drayton’s.

In the above interview, Keeler says that “we’re not going to be the kind of team on 4th and 1 where we’re going to bring five receivers in. We’re going to run the football.” Yet bringing five wide receivers in is what Drayton did on 3d and 1 at the 50-yard line in Year Two of his regime, throwing a pass with a lead against visiting ECU that turned out to be incomplete with 1:46 left in the game. He was forced to punt on fourth down and never saw the ball again in a 46-42 loss.

That wasn’t even Keeler’s best money quote of the week.

The money quote came not from the above interview but from Shawn Pastor’s excellent five-part series about Keeler, which just concluded on Sunday. (We recommend you subscribe to OwlsDaily.com to read all five parts. It’s well the few bucks a month it takes to subscribe.)

Here’s the Keeler Money quote:

“I didn’t come from Michigan. I came from Sam Houston, where we had very limited resources. So I see life a little bit different. I see this isn’t half-full here. This is overflowing in my mind. I think this is a gold mine.”

Compare that to what Drayton said on Nov. 10 on the same site after a 53-6 loss to Tulane: “Tulane has made the commitment to bring good players into the program. There’s definitely a gap there if we don’t catch up, no question about it. We have to level up.”

Two Temple coaches. Two very different opinions to what resources they have/had at their disposal.

One made Chicken Shit out of Chicken Salad.

The other is trying to make a Chicken Parmesan dinner, complete with Spaghetti and meatballs on the side out of the same base ingredients. He knows what he needs to put in the pot, even though his proven recipe is largely a secret. He’ll outline what the dinner will be this week, but not give away any KFC (or KCK) secret recipes.

When he gets back from Charlotte, he will be in the kitchen working on the first course to be served Aug. 30.

My educated guess is that it won’t taste like the same chicken bleep we fans have been eating as our post-game meal for the last four years.

Friday: Media Day Reactions

Monday: Biggest Turnarounds