K.C. Keeler is the last hope for Philly Sports

On probably one of the worst nights in Philadelphia sports history, we are on the eve of … maybe … one of the best ones in Temple football history.

The Phillies lost on a monumental brain cramp by a relief pitcher who didn’t even know what a 10-year-old Little Leaguer knows. The Eagles were blown out by the worst team in the NFL one year away from being the best team in the NFL.

If all the Temple alumni and students head inside instead of hanging out to tailgate, they will make the difference for the kids on the field.

K.C. Keeler might be Philadelphia sports’ best hope.

There is a vulnerable unbeaten college football team left and it’s up to the Temple Owls to hand them a loss. Navy (5-0) is in town (4 p.m., ESPN2) and every Temple fan within an hour of the stadium needs to put down the remote and head to Lincoln Financial Field.

Yeah, I know the Joe Sixpack guy living at 8th and Bigler doesn’t care much about Temple football but this is all Philadelphia has right now and you’ve got to take the wins where you can get them.

We’re focusing on Keeler right now because he not only beat a UTSA team that hung with a potential national champion this year (Texas A&M) but he has the Owls buttoned down in areas that even the Phillies or Eagles neglected in the last few weeks.

As much as Jalen Hurts looks disinterested in winning (or even making a play), that’s how invested Temple quarterback Evan Simon is in winning. Put it this way: Does Hurts sleep at the Eagles practice facility? No. Does Simon sleep at Temple’s?

Yes.

In a town that appreciates that kind of commitment, Temple is this weekend’s only hope.

There is a big Navy presence in town this week with the 250th anniversary of the Naval Academy with the festivities centered on Philadelphia, not Annapolis.

Yet there is a bigger Temple presence in this town because the Owls are expecting around 30,000 of their own fans for Homecoming.

Say, a crowd of 30K Temple fans vs. a crowd of 12K Navy fans.

That’s the ceiling. The floor is 20K Temple, 15K Navy.

Either way, the Linc should be rocking. It doesn’t matter whether the announced crowd is 35K or 42K.

The “buttoned down” part is that Temple hired the Rice DC who held Navy to its lowest point total in 2024 in a 24-10 Rice win. Brian L. Smith knows how to stop a triple option and he’s been preaching gap integrity for two weeks.

Navy head coach Brian Newberry said as much this week when he said that Smith is the kryptonite to the Navy offensive scheme and that Temple has better athletes than Rice which makes this Saturday scary for the Midshipmen. The Owls need to contain Navy quarterback Brian Horvath, who loves throwing it to No. 22 (Eli Heidenrich). He can outrun Air Force’s corners but he won’t be able to outrun Temple’s.

If the Owls listen, and do their jobs and take care of their assigned gaps, the Owls win. If they go outside their jobs and “try to make a play” they lose.

It’s as simple as picking a ball up and throwing it to first base. The Phillies nor Eagles got that message Thursday night.

In a day or so, if the Owls do, Philadelphia sports gets to celebrate a big win and K.C. Keeler becomes a Hometown Hero.

For a guy who is from here and for a school that was always here, it doesn’t get much better than that.

Very Late Saturday Night (pushing Midnight): Game Analysis

Tush Push Could Return to Temple

Not quite the tush push, but a reminder of the days when “Temple TUFF” was more than a phrase.

Something that got plenty of attention here, but little elsewhere, was the story of the tush push staying in the NFL.

It’s always been legal in college football.

Temple’s last head coach, Stan Drayton, dabbled in it with mixed results in the last two seasons. When he tried it with a big tight end, David Martin-Robinson, it worked pretty well two years ago. When he tried it with a 160-pound backup quarterback a year ago at UConn, the play went viral for being laughable.

Temple TUFF dictates that the play return under the former framework, not the ladder.

The Owls are deep with big tight ends who can do the pushing. They have a big defensive lineman, Colin Greene, a former quarterback, who can do the tushing. The great thing about having Greene take the snap is that there can be a lot run off the tush push, like a quick pass or a fake tush push and a toss to the running back.

It’s a play perfect for new head coach K.C. Keeler to run because he understands the dynamics involved and how he can make it play to his advantage.

K.C. Keeler tush pushes his way through the Eagles’ victory parade.

Nobody that we can recall asked Keeler what he thinks of the play but he’s a big Eagles’ fan who attended the victory parade so he might dictate that show up in the playbook at some time in the future.

Former Temple DC Fran Brown already said he’s going to run the play at Syracuse and it makes sense.

For a team that rebuilt the offensive line over the offseason and is deep at tight end, no play makes more sense at Temple than the tush push.

It’s already popular in Philadelphia.

Temple now has three Howie Roseman’s

Khalil Ahmad will reportedly go from being recruiting coordinator at Penn State to a high-profile football job at Temple.

What’s better than one Howie Roseman?

Three of them.

While Jalen Hurts received the MVP of the Super Bowl on Sunday night after a 40-22 demolishing of the Kansas City Chiefs, most inside football guys will tell you that the real MVP this year was Roseman, the general manager of the Philadelphia Eagles.

Put it this way: After last year’s total collapse, it was Roseman’s job to retool both the roster and the coaching staff and hit went 4-for-4 with both.

He got a couple of No. 1-type picks in Quinyon Mitchell and Cooper DeJean and both provided good coverage and sure tackling on the back end of the defense the team didn’t have a year ago. Plus, he signed what turned out to be the best linebacker in football in Zach Baun and re-signed C.J. Gardner-Johnson.

Kyle Pollock.

Then he fixed the coaching piece by hiring a pair of proven coordinators in Kellen Moore and Vic Fangio.

Mix the coaching with the new players and a team that couldn’t tackle anyone at the end of last year could not be blocked.

Temple football fixed that coaching piece a few months ago when it fired Stan Drayton and replaced him with a Hall of Fame head coach in K.C. Keeler.

Now with Keeler’s hiring of Khalil Ahmad to a “high-ranking” front office role at Temple, the Owls do not have one Howie Roseman but three.

The other two are Clayton Barnes and Old Dominion’s Kyle Pollock.

All will have a “Howie Roseman” type role with the Owls, scouring the transfer portal for overlooked talent like Baun was in the NFL.

Ahman is Penn State’s recruiting director so he knows what he’s doing. Barnes was the portal guy at Sam Houston State and helped build a roster than gave Keeler a 9-3 record this year and Pollock’s job description is “associate general manager for personnel and roster improvement.”

Sounds to me like the days of reaching for JUCO talent are over and Temple is going to make some real inroads into acquiring talent that could win right away.

One Howie Roseman turned out well for the Eagles.

Maybe three of them will do the same for the other Lincoln Financial Field football tenant.

Friday: A tale of three Temple programs

Temple needs to embrace the Eagles’ success

Temple students headed to the Eagles’ Super Bowl winning parade in Feb. of 2018.

Temple students love football.

Temple students love the Philadelphia Eagles.

Temple students probably don’t love their own football Owls as much but, if anyone understands the connection between the students, President of the university and the pro team in town it is new head coach K.C. Keeler

Owls share the same stadium with the NFC champion Eagles and that needs to be a selling point both for recruits and fans.

Maybe he can do something about it.

Already Keeler is pounding the pavement talking about his team and the Eagles.

Last week, at the annual Philadelphia sports writers dinner, Keeler told the story of scheduling a team meeting at the same time the Eagles were playing the Green Bay Packers.

“One of the players took me aside and said, ‘Coach, do you know that’s the same time the Eagles’ game starts?’ I said we can adjust.”

And that’s just what Keeler did.

Team meeting was scheduled for after the game and a team bonding session was scheduled around watching it.

Keeler also likes to tell the story of Temple president John Fry cheering for the Eagles as a selling point for him to take the Temple job.

Brainstorming ways to tie in recruiting to playing in the Eagles’ stadium in front of NFL scouts is one way to make up the difference between Temple’s NIL and, say, Memphis. Coming to Philadelphia to play in an NFL stadium was the major selling point for kicker Maddox Trijillo and, partially as a result, he will be kicking for an NFL team next year.

Keeler needs to sell that.

Temple as an institution needs to help out with creative ticket-selling ideals. While students are given free tickets to the games, getting them inside the stadium as been the rub in the past. Maybe an Eagles’ ticket giveway to a student who is actually seating somewhere in the stadium in the fourth quarter one idea to put fannies in the seats.

It could not hurt. Maybe it starts as 100 fannies. If word spreads through loudspeakers on campus during the week that a couple of students won Eagles tickets, maybe that 100 turns into 1,000 the next week and so on and so forth.

Beyond that, any paying Temple season ticket-holder who is also inside the stadium in the fourth quarter gets a shot at winning a raffle for Eagles’ tickets.

Buying those few Eagles season tickets is an investment that probably won’t pack the stadium but would certainly capitalize on the connection the city feels with their NFL football team.

Getting some of those fans into the stadium to see an exciting and well-coached Temple team might create a similar bond.

Friday: The No-So-Dirty Dozen

Junior Galette’s Return to Philadelphia

Click on photo of Eagles' fans to find five keys to the game, one involving former Temple player Junior Galette.

Click on photo of Eagles’ fans to find five keys to the game, one involving former Temple player Junior Galette.

Just like about six million other people in the tri-state area on Saturday night, I’ll be watching the Eagles vs. Saints playoff game on Saturday night.

I also hold no hopes for New Orleans’ starting defensive end Junior Galette to say “Junior Galette, Temple Owls” when he does his own introduction on NBC. That honor will be probably reserved for Spellman College, which recently eliminated all intercollegiate sports.

Damn.

Galette is returning to Philadelphia, but not “coming home.” He had to be dismissed from the team by then head coach Al Golden for a discipline issue we won’t get into here, but I’m always sad to see great talent exit Temple for any reason.

Galette’s return does make you wonder about what happened to the one vaunted Temple pass rush, though. Consider the guys who have been through here: Galette, Muhammad Wilkerson and Adrian Robinson. Of the three, although “Big Mo” is the all-pro, Robinson was the best pass rusher in college. I always told his dad he was playing out of position (I thought the Owls should have used him as an OLB with pass-rushing responsibilities, ala Lawrence Taylor with the Giants) but I could see Golden’s point in that the Owls needed to play him as a down lineman.

Hopefully, Matt Rhule brings in Galette, Wilkerson and Robinson type talent in with this class. Pass defense becomes a lot easier when the bad guy’s quarterback is on his ass all the time.

Greatest Punt Block Ever: