Business as usual: We’re back baby

In 1984, Time Magazine estimated Bill Cosby’s net worth at $368 million. That same year, Cosby went on the field and hid a flag that an official threw against Bruce Arians’ Temple team. Fortunately, the ref laughed.

Sometimes you have to read between the lines to get a real handle on what someone is saying.

Reading too much between the lines is dangerous but this we do know.

Temple’s new President, John Fry, is on the record as being anti-football. According to a recent article in Football Scoop, which shouted out Temple Football Forever and got Fry’s quotes from a Philadelphia Inquirer story, he’s now anti-football ONLY at places not named Temple.

Hmm.

In the story, Fry says “Temple has a proud football tradition” and he has “no plans to end football.” He also says he has “no preconceived notions” about football at Temple.

Thanks to Zach Barnett of Football Scoop for the shoutout.

So we’re back in business, baby, but on notice.

This is where the reading between the lines part comes into play.

The comment I felt particularly interesting was the “no preconceived notions” part.

The implications are when he does get here–and that will be after Drexel names a President–he will start having “conceived notions.”

I imagine if another 3-9 season or worse comes while Fry is on board he will start building those notions.

So Temple football is on notice. Start winning and make it snappy. I find it particularly interesting that Temple’s recruiting class for 2025 is good but what about 2024? To paraphrase Terrell Owens, “where is my quarterback?” because we can’t say for sure “that’s my quarterback.”

If 2024 is not a good one, there might not be a 2025. When the E-O is on fire, you don’t bring out a garden house to wet it down. You need the whole damn fire department or, in this case, the whole damn transfer portal.

Where’s the urgency to win now?

No more 3-9 seasons in the future because those will be conceived notions built on the foundation of two-straight 3-9 seasons before that and one 1-6 season before that.

The university is investing a lot of money in football and has seen little return on it since Geoff Collins used Matt Rhule’s players to post consecutive winning seasons. Since the university invested $17 million into the E-O and a couple more million on Collins’ salary, and maybe a couple more on support staff, that was an acceptable return on the investment.

Happy Birthday to Temple Sports Hall of Famer Al Golden. Not an exaggeration that he saved Temple football at a time it needed saving. Born 16 days before the first Moon landing.

Since then, what we have seen is unacceptable.

It would be impossible for Fry to do to Temple what Drexel did to itself when it eliminated football if Stan Drayton could meet that minimum standard.

Right now, that’s the $21 million question only to be answered by either Drayton or his next big boss.

Monday: Some roster additions

Owls: Screwed, blued and tattooed

One more day. 

As a big fan of summer and long days, Monday is a sad day for me.

The sunset has been 8:33 p.m. since June 22 and will be for one more day until Tuesday, when it's 8:32. Means it really didn't get dark until 9 for more than a week now.
Jason Wingard (left) soaked in the Temple football tailgates. New President John Fry probably won’t.

One more day.

As a big fan of summer and long days, Monday is a sad day for me.

The sunset has been 8:33 p.m. since June 22 and will be for one more day until Tuesday, when it’s 8:32. Means it really didn’t get dark until 9 for more than a week now.

New Temple President John Fry thinks schools should not have football.

Loved these last three months because I was looking forward to the days getting longer. The good news is that we really won’t notice it until the middle of July because we only lose three or so minutes until then but it’s sad nonetheless. The other good news is that hope springs eternal every year.

BOT chairman Mitchell Morgan sent a clear signal by hiring former big-time football player Jason Wingard as President and now he’s sending a similar message by hiring a football hater.

Worse news is that the sun seems to be setting on Temple football with the apparent hiring of John Fry as the new President and there might not be a spring, if not by 2025, certainly by 2026.

Temple football is blued, screwed and tattooed.

Screwed, we’ve known about for a while. That means “cheated” and the Owls–along with the other 63 fellow G5 members–have been cheated out of the big boys’ club by NCAA rulings favoring the larger P5 schools.

Blued, means lost or being robbed and that certainly applies to all the players Temple developed over the last half-decade or so only to see them move to other schools.

Tattooed refers here to a beating with very rapid blows, in the same sense as a military tattoo, which is a rapid pattern on a drum. That interpretation is correct in the sense that this pattern has repeated itself over the last few years with no remedy in sight.

So the phrase literally means cheated, robbed and beaten.

Does Temple continue to go down this dark alley year after year to get its figurative wallet stolen or lumps on the head or does it go in another direction?

The Temple BOT seems to have made its decision by hiring an anti-football guy in Fry, who wrote a noted editorial decrying schools who try to succeed in big-time football.

Contrast that with their last hire, a Stanford tight end who was a teammate with U.S. Senator (D-New Jersey) Cory Booker at that school.

The BOT seemed to put the football bus in drive with the Jason Wingard hire and back to neutral by going to old standby Dick Englert. With Fry, it’s in reverse.

The BOT micro-manages Temple and this is sending a clear signal to the fans that it prefers a David Adamany-type over a Jason Wingard-type given the current state of college football.

Otherwise, they would not have signed off on a football-hater.

One more day until the sun sets a little later is sad but nowhere near as sad as one, maybe two, years before the sun sets on Temple football for good.

July 4: Business as Usual

Monday: Roster Additions