Notre Dame Game Week

Remarkably, the weather should be hotter on Saturday than all but one of the Temple practices so far.

Remarkably, the weather should be hotter on Saturday than all but one of the Temple practices so far. Owls better bring the pickle juice.

As has been the custom here over the years, on Monday our post revolves around Game Week.
Note the capital G and the capital W.
This, though, is the first time we’ve been able to post Notre Dame Game Week and that’s a humbling thing.

Click on photo for five upset specials.

Click on photo for five upset specials.

When you think that Temple and Notre Dame have been playing intercollegiate football since the turn of the century (two turns ago), it’s pretty amazing that the two teams haven’t crossed paths until now. Heck, Temple beat Miami (Fla.), 34-0, in 1934 so it’s not like the Owls have ever left the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

I kind of feel sorry for the 1979 team, which probably could have handled Dan Devine’s 7-4 Irish squad. Temple finished 10-2 in 1979 and lost by only a point to Pitt (10-9), which was ranked No. 1 at the time and led Penn State at halftime in the other loss. Lou Holtz’s 1986 Notre Dame team lost by the same 10-9 score to Pitt, the same year Bruce Arians’ Temple team won at Pitt, 19-13. So I think those Owls would have acquitted themselves quite well.


If the Bulls, Middies and Huskies
proved anything during their
three-hour stays in South Bend,
it is that college football isn’t the WWF
and it’s not fixed

In between, not so much until Al Golden arrived and righted a sinking ship.

Now it’s the 2013 Owls’ turn and I think they will make the university and the players who came before them proud.

Will they win?

That’s to be determined, but the odds makers already have made Notre Dame a 30-point favorite. That could be partially due to Notre Dame’s reputation and partially due to Temple’s reputation, but I think that line is skewed because people are aware of Notre Dame and not all that aware of Temple.
Love the Irish or hate them you are always aware of them. As the son of an O’Connor on one side of the family, I grew up very aware of them.
It’s funny. I was reading one of the many good Notre Dame blogs and one of the guys there wrote: “You either love Notre Dame or hate Notre Dame, there is little in between.”
I must be the little in-between.
I neither love nor hate Notre Dame.
I’m pretty ambivalent.
Geez, I wish Temple football had many of the advantages of ND: A major television deal, a large national fan base, a few best-selling books and top-rated movies about it but it doesn’t.

Does all that mean Notre Dame should win on Saturday?
It shouldn’t.
After all, the game is played on a 100-yard field with 11 guys on each side. The ball isn’t round and it can take some funny bounces.
As South Florida, Navy and UConn have proven since 2009, anything can happen once the ball is kicked off under the watchful eyes of Touchdown Jesus.

If the Bulls, Middies and Huskies proved anything during their three-hour stays in South Bend, it is that college football isn’t the WWF and it’s not fixed. After all, JC is watching and we don’t mean John Chaney (although he’ll probably be watching, too).

Tomorrow: Reaction to the Depth Chart Released Late Today

Wednesday:  The new Temple radio team

Thursday: Saturday’s helmet surprise

Friday:  Game preview and where to watch with fellow Owls …

Saturday night: Game analysis

Five Misconceptions About Temple Football

Temple Football For Dummies

Temple Football For Dummies

There is so much misinformation out there online about Temple football that we thought we’d set the record straight, at least for internet search purposes, for the next week or so.


This is not for Temple football fans, who know better, but for the great unwashed out there like that Notre Dame Bleacher Report guy who probably still thinks Bobby Wallace is the head coach.
Misconception No. 1
Temple football is among the worst programs in college football.

Answer: Not so. In fact, Temple is among the upper half of college football programs over the last five years. The Owls have been bowl eligible for three of the last four years and, except for the flukiest of Hail Mary plays (Buffalo, 2008), would have been bowl eligible four of the last five.

In 2010, they were denied a bowl despite having an 8-4 record and beating a champion from a then BCS league (UConn, which also beat Notre Dame that year). Temple beat that team by two touchdowns.
Misconception No. 2
Temple will be worse this year than last because it lost its head coach to Boston College.


Describing Addazio’s offensive philosophy
as “three-yards-in-a-cloud-of-dust”
is doing a disservice to two yards

Answer: Heck, we’ll just let this Florida fan give you the answer here. Boston College actually did Temple a favor by taking Steve Addazio off its hands. Describing Addazio’s offensive philosophy as “three-yards-in-a-cloud-of-dust” is doing a disservice to two yards. It was more like one yard in a cloud of dust. No one has told Addazio that it’s actually legal to throw on first and second downs. Any Florida or Temple fan can tell you that. In six months, every Boston College fan will say the same thing, too.
Misconception No. 3
Temple has no players.

Last common foes, same season* How Temple did How Notre Dame Did
UConn, 2009 Won, 30-16 Lost, 33-30
Navy, 2009 Won, 28-24 Lost, 23-21
Pitt, 2012 Lost, 47-17 Won, 29-26

*Temple and Notre Dame also played South Florida, although not in the same season. South Florida beat Notre Dame, 23-20, in 2011, and Temple turned around and beat South Florida, 36-27, in the 2012 season.

Answer: The Owls have plenty of players and new head coach Matt Rhule, who recruited almost every one of them, is finally putting them in the best position to win.
The Owls have a tough and physical defensive line, led by end Sean Daniels and interior defenders Kamal Johnson, Levi Brown and Shahid Paulhill. In linebackers Blaze Caponegro, Nate D. Smith and Tyler Matakevich, they probably have the best starters combined with subs in the AAC. Anthony Robey is a future NFL pro at one corner.
Misconception No. 4
Temple no longer has a running back with the talent of Bernard Pierce, Matt Brown or Montel Harris.
Answer: Not true. Kenny Harper has the most experience, but Zaire Williams comes with a higher recruiting pedigree than Pierce and Brown had.  Jamie Gilmore, who was Scout.com’s No. 7 all-purpose running back in the nation the year he was recruited out North Marion (Fla.), is a third-down back who likely inherits the Matt Brown role.
Temple has plenty of weapons on offense, led by quarterbacks Connor Reilly, Juice Granger and P.J. Walker (last year’s Player of the Year in New Jersey) and slot receivers Khalif Herbin (2011’s Player of the Year in New Jersey) and Jalen Fitzpatrick, who started as a quarterback of the Pennsylvania team in the Big 33 Game. Owls have a triple-threat (run, pass, catch) H-Back in Chris Coyer and a playmaking tight end, Romond DeLoatch, who can get deep.
Misconception No. 5
Since Temple lost kicker Brandon McManus to the Indianapolis Colts, the Owls have no kickers.
Answer: Also not true. They have one of the highest-rated punters in the country, Paul Layton, a transfer from the University of Albany. One of their two freshmen placekickers, Jim Cooper, Jr., was a first-team All-American and holds the New Jersey record for career field goals (38). The other freshman kicker, Nick Visco, holds the Philadelphia record (all kickers over 100 years) for points scored.

Tomorrow: Back to regular programming

Monday: The Depth Chart Finally Released

Temple football tops on national website

Today's Temple at Notre Dame story led the national Rantsports.com college football website.

Today’s Temple at Notre Dame story led the national Rantsports.com college football website.

Temple was skewed recently by a Notre Dame writer who pulled a lot of the pre-Al Golden history and tried to portray Temple as the program that existed prior to Al Golden’s arrival in 2005.

Fortunately, astute college football fans know that, except for last year’s brain cramp by Steve Addazio, Temple has really been one of the most successful programs in the country over the past five seasons.

Today, my story on the Temple at Notre Dame game led the national Rantsports.com website.

The complete story can be read here by clicking over the first three words of this sentence. Rantsports.com employs a team of professional editors hired away from major newspapers across the country. Only professional journalists are considered for hire as part Rantsports.com’s writing team.

The Notre Dame writer’s version  on Bleacher Report doesn’t even deserve a read but I will link it over the first three letters of this sentence as a point of reference. Bleacher Report  employs no editors and allows just about anyone to write for its site.  As a result, there is a big difference in credibility of the two sites.

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