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

Behind The Lines: NYP Finds Value in Temple

One of the themes first-year Temple head coach K.C. Keeler keeps bringing up at team meetings is to shoot for the top and not settle for incremental goals like winning one or two more games than last year’s team.

Keeler has repeatedly mentioned going for the championship this year and now he has a nice slideshow to drive home that point in the next team meeting because someone well outside of the E-O has mentioned Temple and the AAC title in the same breath.

On Thursday, the New York Post floated the possibility of Temple winning the AAC title.

In football.

This year, not some fictious year three or five years down the road.

My response: Why not?

College football can change from year to year.

Carl Hardin shares his surname with the greatest Temple head coach of all time, Wayne. He’s been sensational both in the spring and summer practices as Temple’s placekicker.

No greater example of that than Southern Mississippi. Pretty much the entire Marshall team which won the title in its league transferred to Southern Mississippi, which plays in the same league, following their head coach, Charles Huff.

That’s the way of the world in this transfer portal era. My feeling is that team will go from worst to first because of the coaching decision that university made.

Temple going from third worst to first due to the same reason might be mildly surprising, but not out of thr realm of possibility.

Keeler brought only the best running back on the Sam Houston State team, Jay Ducker, with him to Temple on the player level. On the staff level, he brought the architect of that 9-3 roster, General Manager Clayton Barnes.

Barnes and Keeler upgraded the Owls in every single area where they needed starter or depth.

They have two high-level AAC quarterbacks in Evan Simon and Gevani McCoy, a defensive line that goes 9-10 deep (Keeler’s words) and two star receivers (Colin Chase and JoJo Bermudez) to replace the Owls’ best wide receiver of the last three years, the oft-injured Dante Wright.

Are there areas of concern for Temple?

Sure.

The offensive line is pretty much the one that had Simon running for his life all last fall but with a new strength coach, a better offensive line coach and a better overall scheme, that one perceived weakness can be masked.

We will see.

Everywhere else–with the possible exception of placekicking–Temple has improved significantly. Even there, current Indianapolis Colts’ kicker Maddux Trijillo called his replacement, Carl Hardin, the second-best kicker in the AAC last year.

That, combined with the fact that the league is nowhere near as good as it was a year ago, means there is a lane for Temple to shock the world. It’s a small lane but, with Keeler in charge, there is a way Temple can squeeze through.

People are noticing, even a guy who writes for a paper 90 miles away.

Let’s hope we can call him a genius come December.

Monday: Some Interesting First Years

Friday (8/22): First Things First

Monday (8/25): 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

New Temple Unis: A Solid B

Al Golden, whose 56th birthday is today, brought back both the striped pants and TEMPLE on the helmet.

One of the things a lot of new Temple coaches do is try to change the uniforms.

Some get it right.

Some swing and miss.

Some get close.

New Temple football coach K.C. Keeler is in the third category.

I had hoped to give the new Temple uniform reveal which came three days ago an A.

Got to admit I’m a little disappointed to hand out a B, but I have to be honest.

It’s not an exaggeration to say Al Golden saved Temple football, both from an on-field standpoint and a uniform standpoint.

Only two Temple football coaches in my lifetime nailed the new uniform assignment and both were among the best, Wayne Hardin and Al Golden. (Happy Birthday to Temple Hall of Fame head coach Al Golden and a sincere thank you from TFF for saving the program.)

Hardin turned the old Owl the side of the helmet into TEMPLE on both sides.

“A lot of people wear Ts on the side of the helmets,” Hardin said in 1971. “Tennessee, Texas Tech and Texas A&M, among others. We don’t want to be confused with anyone. We’re TEMPLE and we’re proud to wear the name on our helmets.”

That theme returned in Al Golden’s second season when he decided to put TEMPLE back on the helmets.

“When I played at Penn State, we played a lot of teams that hit us pretty hard,” Golden said. “We played Notre Dame. We played USC. Nobody hit us as hard as those guys wearing TEMPLE on the side of their helmets. I wanted to return to that kind of tradition.”

Helmets through the years. The only decent ones were TEMPLE and the T.

So Golden, like Hardin, put TEMPLE back on the helmets.

That’s kinda what I was hoping for Keeler.

Not being a perfectionist, all I wanted was for the team’s football logo (TEMPLE) to share the school’s logo (T).

Split the baby is what we’ve been writing about for the last decade.

A King Solomon-style solution would be for one side of the helmets to be TEMPLE and the other side of the helmet to be the school’s familiar T logo.

Keeler made a step in the right direction with putting the T on both sides of the helmet. Maybe next year he’ll consult with King Solomon. For now, getting rid of the stupid numbers on the helmet is a huge step in the right direction. There was never a need to have numbers both on the front and back of the jerseys AND the helmets.

Steve Addazio made the most egregious change in the helmet when it removed the TEMPLE of Al Golden to the T of the school.

He was out after two years. I would have fired him for the helmet change but fortunately BC took him off Temple’s hands after a 4-7 Owl season in 2012.

Keeler’s unis–while not the pure dark Cherry colors or having the TEMPLE on the helmet–aren’t perfect, but they are a step toward perfect.

Kinda like the program on the field at this point and we’ll have another reveal this time next year so there’s always hope that the grade could be upgraded to an A.

King Solomon is counting on it.

The foreign element: Temple has a Pope, too

Darius Pope makes key touchdown catch in Delaware’s state championship 3A game.

Since May 8, Villanova has used having a Pope as a trump card on Temple and really everyone else.

Both schools have a Brunson basketball player as a famous graduate and but on that day Villanova added a Pope.

All recruiting roads lead to Temple

No more because Temple has a Pope, too, and he’ll probably do more for the Temple football program than the real Pope will do for his alma mater.

Darius Pope of Delaware became the latest of three players to turn down a solid Syracuse offer for a Temple one and it’s an, err, blessing.

That’s because for all of Fran Brown’s documented prowess as a recruiter, there’s a buzz around the Temple recruiting this June that hasn’t existed here in a long time and even a great recruiter like Brown seems powerless to stop the momentum.

Delaware isn’t a foreign country but one of the other gets who spurned ‘Cuse for Temple, Jude Okeleke, a Top 75 in the nation defensive tackle from Nigeria. The fact that he’s from Nigeria gives Temple a real solid shot to keep him from transferring to a P4 school because foreign students are not eligible for NIL money.

Yet.

No one knows what the future holds but Brown was a dynamite recruiter here, at Rutgers, Georgia and now Syracuse and whatever recruiting magic he has couldn’t keep three solid Syracuse offers under his spell.

The other Syracuse offer who opted for Temple was Antwan Rogers, a 6-5, 290-pound defensive end from Salem, N.J.

College Football Talk Daily rates Temple as doing one of the best three recruiting jobs in the nation with UCLA and Florida. That’s pretty heady company. CFB Talk has more than 40,000 followers on twitter/x so it carries some clout.

That’s not to say that Temple’s recruiting rivals the quality of UCLA and Florida, but for its competition, Temple now stands out.

It might not show in the final recruiting rankings of the 2026 class, but there’s a lot of quality in it for the Owls and the fact that the Owls beat out P4 schools for commits bodes well for the long-term future.

Pope is one of many future Owls who will make their impacts in the 2026 season and beyond but, while new head coach K.C. Keeler was concentrating on the long-term this month, he hasn’t forgotten short-term needs.

Temple got a quality guy in running back/wide receiver Tylik Mitchell of Southern Nash in N.C., whose 10.78 in the 100-meter dash was .2 faster than that of Bernard Pierce in the PIAA state championship meet when he competed for Glen Mills. Pierce was a football player who excelled in track and was ready to go, becoming an instant starter for Al Golden at running back. His 268 yards and two touchdowns beat a 10-2 bowl-winning Navy team as a true freshman and, had he played in the second half against both Penn State and UCLA, the Owls of 2009 might have won both of those games. As it was, Pierce became a third-round draft choice in the NFL

Many feel that Mitchell has the kinds of moves and speed that could make him an instant starter at Temple, either at WR or RB–but probably at WR because there is a greater need there.

That’s a lot to ask of a true freshman but he seems to have the talent and will arrive in a month. That’s the same kind of time frame it took Pierce to get noticed.

Having a Pope helps in 2026 but a Mitchell does the same thing now.

Keeler and his staff are cooking in recruiting and others outside of Temple are liking the smell from the 10th and Diamond kitchen.

Friday: Temple’s Next Famous Names:

Monday: Short vs. Long-Term

Temple returns to recruiting footprint

Another year around the sun came and went on June 19th for this reporter and it was my annual reminder that the expiration date invisibly stamped on my forehead is rapidly approaching.

In a sense, Temple Football Forever, too. We don’t know the date and probably don’t want to at this point.

Yet while this website won’t last forever, what new head K.C. Keeler did this week was a sign that Temple football as a program will last, if not forever, a long time.

If Keeler keeps this kind of recruiting up, chances are he will be talking about Temple going from one year with a lot of losses to one year with a lot of wins like he did here at SHS last year.

That’s because he stepped away from the nasty habits of the last three head coaches and returned to the Owls’ recruiting footprint.

Bruce Arians once said it was simply metro Philadelphia, South Jersey, the Lehigh Valley and the D.C./Virginia corridor that included Norfolk and Richmond.

Al Golden reaffirmed that when he arrived on the scene, correctly pointing out that Temple is smack dab in the middle of 46 percent of the nation’s population.

“If you drew a 250-mile circle around Temple, that’s well within a five-hour drive for any family who wants to send their kids here,” Golden said. “That’s 46 percent of the nation’s population and you should be able to find 25 great players from that many kids.”

Arians went 6-5 twice against a Top 10 schedule with that philosophy.

Golden ended 20 years of Temple misery adopting it.

What do Arians (York), Golden (Colts Neck, N.J.), Matt Rhule (State College) and Keeler (Emmaus) all have in common? They played their high school football within 250 miles of Temple.

What do Geoff Collins, Rod Carey, and Stan Drayton have in common?

They did not.

Daron Harris makes returning kickoff and punts for touchdowns look easy, like this one against Imhotep.

Now with a slew of local recruits signed recently, Keeler apparently has decided that blueprint makes sense for him, too.

Among those guys are a 6-4, 315-pound offensive tackle from Strath Haven named Billy Brown, an All-Philadelphia Catholic League tight end named J. P. Oates and defensive backs Daron Harris of Chester and Dylan Abram of Monsignor Bonner.

Temple might not be back this year, but rest assured Keeler’s plan is to return the Owls to those kinds of days.

That’s not all.

Defensive tackle Jude Okeleke (pronounced OAK-LEAK-EEE) turned down a solid offer from Fran Brown and Syracuse to commit to Temple this week, saying “I’m home.” While not a Philly-area recruit, it’s nice to know that Okeleke considers Philadelphia home. Technically, he is within that 250-mile footprint, having played at the Taft School in Watertown, Conn. Better yet, he is considered one of the top 75 DT prospects in the country. Being from Nigeria and not able to earn NIL money, Temple gets the added benefit of probably keeping him for four years.

Brown was a first-team Philadelphia Inquirer OT playing in 2023 before moving onto Phillips Academy in Andover, Mass. last fall.

Oates was a first-team All-PCL tight end for a 10-0 regular season LaSalle High team last year, catching 47 passes for 576 yards and five touchdowns.

Harris was called “one of the top athletes in the state” by Chester head coach Dennis Shaw, scoring 28 touchdowns for the Clippers in a variety of ways (5 rushing, 7 kick returns and 2 interception returns).

Abram was all-PCL and had five interceptions for Bonner after returning to his original school from Philly Public League power Imhotep.

None of this proves Temple football is back to the winning days of Arians, Golden and Matt Rhule but usually a good blueprint leads to a solid foundation.

History always repeats itself and, while we’re all getting older, all evidence points to Temple football getting better.

Monday: The Foreign Component

Seeing double: A Brady Palmer vs. Brady Palmer matchup

The “other” Brady Palmer committed to Cal on the same weekend the “good” Brady Palmer committed to Temple. No relation.

Seeing double is what could happen if Temple and California decided to commemorate the 50th Anniversary of a Garden State Bowl matchup with an intersectional football game during the 2029 season.

That’s because, in addition to the Golden Anniversary, it could feature maybe the first college football game where the starters at quarterback for both teams have the same first and last names.

Brady Palmer.

That’s because on the same exact weekend in 2025 the two 2026 grads of the same name committed to Temple and Cal, respectively.

You can’t make this up and we certainly didn’t so both schools should roll with the good fortune. How could a network resist a Brady Palmer vs. Brady Palmer matchup, especially if both are able to secure the starting jobs at their respective schools? Brady Palmer vs. Brady Palmer with Paul Palmer handling the color on Temple radio.

It’s too good to pass up.

The 1979 matchup featured the nation’s top-rated quarterback in passing efficiency, Brian Broomell, vs. Cal’s Rich Campbell, who later played in the NFL.

Temple won, 28-17, before 40,000 fans at Giants Stadium.

Both are highly rated quarterbacks and Temple’s Palmer is an Elite 11 one, joining the ranks of recent Temple quarterbacks who made the Elite 11 (Anthony Russo and Re’Al Mitchell were the others). He was the starter at St. Francis High School in Wheaton, Ill. and now transferred to national powerhouse St. Thomas Acquinas (Fl.) for his senior year. In Illinois, Palmer threw for 33 touchdown passes and reportedly clocked a 4.5 in the 40-yard dash, which would make him exactly as fast as former Temple great running back Bernard Pierce.

The California Brady Palmer threw for 16 touchdowns against just five interceptions for Cathedral Catholic (San Diego) in the 2024 season. To be fair, his offer sheet was more impressive than the Temple Brady Palmer as he turned down scholarships from Utah and TCU to sign with Cal.

On the other hand, that Palmer was not an Elite 11 quarterback.

This one is and we can settle the issue of who is better with a Garden State Bowl rematch in 2029.

Friday: Home Cooking