To be a TU fan now you have to believe in magic

Even Depressed Ginger, an Ohio State fan, is against the transfer portal.

Hell month in Tallahassee, Florida began on Sunday when Florida State football fans screamed bloody murder both on campus and in social media.

The Seminoles were left out of the four-team college football playoff and they have a point for wanting to be in there.

The second-leading tackler in Temple history gives his thoughts on the NIL and the transfer portal and his feelings pretty much reflect what every Temple fan is thinking today.

There was a lot of boo-hooing going on Sunday afternoon in the state capital of Florida.

I had to laugh because Florida State fans are going to be fine compared to Temple ones. They will go to the Orange Bowl with a 13-0 record against a Georgia team they can make a statement against. They have gobs of NIL money and will be able to retain 99 percent of their players for the forseeable future.

Hell for a month isn’t so bad.

Temple might have entered a period of five or less years of hell by comparison. The Owls don’t have money and probably won’t be able to keep nearly that percentage. They probably won’t be going to a bowl game.

Temple football fans are the ones I feel more sorry for and it extends beyond the logic than I am one.

Fixing college football is easy.

Actually doing it is hard.

Here’s one solution: Eliminate the NIL and to put all of the college football TV money is one pot, split it in two (50 percent for the schools and 50 percent for the players) and give an equal share to every single college football scholarship player. That way nobody on the No. 1 team makes more than anyone on the No. 130 team and everybody has an equal shot. Make the transfer portal active for any team that loses a head coach. Otherwise, 90 percent of the college teams have no chance to succeed and the sport will lose 90 percent of the fans of more than half their teams.

Those numbers aren’t sustainable for the sport overall even if the blue bloods in the sport refuse to admit it.

The fact that a head coach, even our own favorite Matt Rhule, is this involved in the NIL is a sad commentary on the state of college football today.

More importantly, no single player on any team makes more money than any other single player and that would eliminate the prima donna problem that exists in most locker rooms that didn’t exist, say, a decade ago.

That would also rebut the two arguments that started all this NIL and transfer portal nonsense: 1) If the coaches can move, the players should be able to (solved by a transfer portal for coaching changes); 2) The schools are making millions and the players also deserve a share.

Making it an equal share should make everyone happy.

Everyone, with the exception of the rich.

Kent State or Temple or Toledo would have a much better chance to compete against the Oklahomas, Ohio State and Penn State under those parameters.

You have a better chance of losing your free ride to college than you have of getting a single penny once you enter the portal. Those are the facts.

The Kent States and the Temple and Toledos don’t make the rules, though. The people who make the rules are the Ohio States, the Oklahomas and the Penn States. If it benefits them to “steal” players developed by schools like Temple, they will do it. They will take the best and leave the rest behind. Screw the kids who get talked into going into the portal. Seventy percent of them did not find a home and lost their scholarships last year. Who knows how many this year?

As long as this system benefits those who make the laws, the rest of us can go to hell and that’s where most of FBS college football fans are now. Certainly the G5 ones.

Excuse me if I don’t shed a tear for Mike Norvell or Florida State.

Friday: How Temple can succeed in this system

E.J. Warner: Could haves and Should Haves

The fact that E.J. was concussed during this press conference probably led to him leaving Temple. Ironically, a “concussed” Warner made far greater sense here than a fully “cussed” Stan Drayton did in any of the press conferences.

When the history of Temple football of Temple football is written, and I have a sinking feeling that will come pretty soon, there should at least be one chapter titled: “Could haves and Should Haves.”

Maybe two.

One for players and another for coaches.

Stan Drayton has exactly nine months to close a 161-team gap in talent.

Not only for the 2023 season, but the program as a whole.

Had to laugh at all the “should haves, could haves” coming out of Stan Drayton’s press conferences in this abysmal 3-9 season.

Instead of blaming the guy who was in charge of the defense when both FIU (2021) and Temple (2023) imploded, he shook his head and blamed the PLAYERS for “misfits” after allowing 48 to Tulsa, 55 to SMU, 45 to North Texas and 45 to Memphis.

That finger should have been pointed inward, not outward.

No way could Saint Everett Withers be responsible for putting said players in terrible spots.

Sarcasm intended.

Now E.J. Warner is gone in the transfer portal and another set of should haves and could haves need to be raised today.

Had Temple gone out this offseason and got a big-time offensive line and a big-time running back in the transfer portal, would Warner be gone now?

Doubtful and there are a couple of clues.

The players wanted Matt Rhule and the administration gave him to them and they rewarded with consecutive 10-win seasons. The players wanted Fran Brown and they gave a big FU to the players and ended up with Rod Carey and Stan Drayton. There is a lesson in there somewhere.

His mom, Brenda, tweeted after Warner missed the North Texas game “I hate football but I love my son.” The hate comes from the fact that Warner’s bell was rung so much in the UTSA game that he had to miss the next two. E.J. had a big red mark on his far head for the final couple of games he game back to play. My educated guess at some point is that mom and dad discussed after the concussion that it was time to get Warner out of Temple before he got killed (figuratively speaking, of course).

Had Warner been protected sufficiently and Temple established a running game that would have contributed to at least a few more wins, the discussion could have changed.

Warner’s dad is worth $30 million. E.J. doesn’t need the NIL money. Playing in an NFL stadium for an improving team with a halfway decent offensive line and a viable running game probably would have been enough to make him stay.

Could have, should have but we will never know.

Check that, as Harry Donahue might say.

We will ONLY know what Drayton thinks about Warner leaving on signing day, Dec. 21, the next “media availability” for Drayton. That’s almost a month away.

E.J. Warner is headed to another school, my guess following Curt Cignetti to Indiana. Both should have been retained by Temple.

If this were any other big city with any other high-profile quarterback, the head coach of the city’s most prominent college football team would have already been interviewed and given his thoughts on the departure and plans to replace him.

Instead, nobody from the media cares and there is no demand among the fans of the few outlets who cover the team to get a quote or two from the coach.

In the same week, two former Temple assistant coaches were arguably the very best college football head coaching hires this offseason. On Tuesday, Fran Brown was hired by Syracuse and, on Thursday, Curt Cignetti was hired by Indiana. Brown was a defensive backs coach at Temple. Cignetti was a four-year QB coach at Temple.

When the Owls had head coaching openings, Temple players begged for both Cignetti and Brown to be hired and those pleas fell on deaf Temple administration ears. When it comes to Temple football, the Temple administration has dropped more balls in Sullivan Hall than anyone ever has at Lincoln Financial Field.

Amazing how Temple players begged the administration to hire four coaches in my lifetime: Cig, Matt Rhule, Phil Snow and Fran Brown and the administration gave a big FU to the players all but one time. That one coach the kids selected gave Temple a win over Penn State and an ESPN College Gameday.

Could haves, should haves indeed.

Monday: Do You Believe in Magic?

Temple football: The Fix is in the building

Notice how New Mexico State lets the clock run down to 1 or 2 seconds before snapping the ball.

Just when you thought you’d witnessed everything there was to see in college football, the 2023 Temple football season rolled around.

Temple’s No. 1 priority is to find a RB in the portal who can put these kind of numbers up in 2024.

Then you remembered you saw something like this almost a decade ago and it wasn’t the end of the world because a certain coach had an Epiphany.

In 2014, Temple’s offense went to an up-tempo approach and finished with mediocre results: A 6-6 season and mediocrity wasn’t head coach Matt Rhule’s cup of tea.

So what did he do?

Go back to what worked when Al Golden laid the foundation of a winning program: A heavy run emphasis with a feature back behind a punishing offensive line.

Rhule alluded to the approach in a 2015 preseason interview in USA today:

It doesn’t mean a great quarterback can’t succeed with that approach because P.J. Walker broke all of the passing records at Temple BECAUSE opponents were afraid of the run and Walker was able to fake the ball into the belly of a talented runner, freeze the linebackers and safeties and complete easy passes over their heads.

More importantly, Walker, Rhule and Temple won. Rhule’s Temple TUFF approach on offense produced double-digit wins in Walker’s final two seasons, including a win over Penn State and an ESPN College Football Game Day appearance.

Now E.J. Warner has shattered all of Walker’s records without, really, anything to show for it in terms of wins.

Warner can continue to pad his remarkable legacy if stays for his final two seasons at Temple but add that Cherry on the top of the White and do what Walker did in his final two years.

Win.

Rhule left that blueprint somewhere in a dusty corner of the Edberg Olson Complex and it’s up to head coach Stan Drayton to find it. Rhule had a DC who actually knew that the key to shutting out high-powered offenses was to attack the opposing quarterback, cause sacks, strip fumbles and interceptions.

There was a reason Temple had the worst turnover ratio in FBS in the last 25 years and that was sitting back in a passive defense and not causing, for want of a better word, Mayhem in the enemy’s backfield. Speaking of Mayhem, Geoff Collins might not have been a great head coach here but he has proven to be a great DC at several stops and he’s not doing anything so Drayton should pick up the phone.

Here are the five fixes Temple needs to make this offseason:

One, fire Everett Withers and conduct a nationwide search to get the best FCS coordinator in the nation in here. Two, recruit a huge and punishing OL also from the FCS ranks of players in the transfer portal who would appreciate a Temple opportunity; Three, get a big-time running back who strikes fear in the hearts of opponents every Saturday, not just one Saturday a year. Four, recruit a couple of corners who won’t make the first pass of every game an 80-yard touchdown. Five, use the new clock rules to your advantage by running it down to the last five seconds of each play and limit your opponents’ plays (see the genius of the Jerry Kill approach in the video above).

Geoff Collins (here with Nadia Harvin) was in the building in March. He’s not doing anything now, has a defensive philosophy that would cause turnovers and is only a phone call away.

Joquez Smith was as great in one game (Norfolk State this year). Edward Saydee was great in one game (USF last year). Temple needs a running back who can rip off eight or nine 100+ yard games, not one a year. The Owls need a running back who is great every week, like Paul Palmer, Tarnardo Sharps, Kevin Duckett, Tom Sloan and Bernard Pierce were.

Drayton said on Saturday that “everything will be evaluated” and that includes the coaching. Rhule already did that heavy lifting for him.

Somewhere in the coaching offices at the E-O, there is a cheat sheet with the formula to win at Temple written right there in black and white, which are OK colors for game plans but not OK for uniforms.

The sooner Drayton finds it and implements it for his own program the sooner the winning will come.

Or the, err, Sooners will lay a 90-burger on the Owls sooner than you think.

The worst of all 3-9 seasons

For the third-straight year, Temple University finished an abysmal 3-9 in football.

That’s the only thing that matters.

Not injuries, not coaching staff changes, not losing recruiting battles.

Not nothing.

This team without E.J. Warner has been a complete and utter joke. Congratulations to E.J. If this is the end, it was a pleasure to be a fan of yours (I won’t be once you leave but that’s the same thought process I have for every Temple player who leaves the nest.)

The bottom line is the bottom line.

Temple lost, 45-21, on Friday to a Memphis team that it lost to, 24-3, a year ago.

Whatever was gained on the offensive end was more than offset by the loss on the defensive end.

That’s been the story all season.

Basically, it was the same thing on a different day. This happened to be on a Friday in front of an ESPN audience. Most embarrassments came on a Saturday in front of ESPN+ viewers. A Thursday ESPN show ended up in a 48-26 loss to Tulsa (a team it lost 29-16 in 2022) and multiple Saturdays resulted in worse outcomes. Every single game against same opponents Temple performed at a worse level in head coach Stan Drayton’s second season than it did in his first.

Think about that.

In Al Golden’s first season, he was 1-11. In his second, he was 4-8.

In Matt Rhule’s first season, he was 2-10. In his second, he was 6-6.

That’s the way this thing is supposed to work.

It didn’t this year. Every opponent on Temple’s schedule in 2023 performed at a higher level against the Owls than they did in 2022.

The only outlier was the Navy game.

That’s not supposed to be the way things work when you spend $2.5 million to hire a new coach.

In the press conference afterward, Temple head coach Stan Drayton blamed injuries.

He didn’t blame a coaching staff that sat on its hands in the portal instead of bringing in 20 potential new starters from P5, JUCO and FCS teams. The only starters that needed to keep their jobs were quarterback E.J. Warner, linebacker Jordan Magee and (under a DC who knew what he was doing) LB Layton Jordan.

He didn’t point the finger to himself for not conducting a nationwide search for a defensive coordinator instead of picking the first friend to come to his mind. A great defense gives you a chance … chance .. to stay in every single game. D.J. Elliott outperformed Everett Withers in all but one game of Drayton’s first year without the benefit that goes with that additional year.

That’s more of an indictment of Withers than it is praise of Elliott, who is now the LB coach of the Philadelphia Eagles.

A poor defense can get you blown out on any given day.

An argument can be made of the three consecutive 3-9 seasons, this is the worst. First, the 3-9 Carey season at least had a win over a ranked team (Memphis) and this one did not.

Last year’s 3-9 team showed some fight in their last two games and this one did not.

Afterward, Warner was asked if he was leaving and said: “Please don’t ask me that.”

(If that doesn’t mean he’s gone, I don’t know what does. I hope he stays but I’m not an idiot. My educated guess is that he ends up at a place like James Madison in a couple of weeks.)

If no big firing is made on Monday (and we’re talking DC here because we don’t expect Drayton to be fired), Temple is telling the nation that finishing 3-9 every year is perfectly fine. Drayton is telling you he prefers a comfortable friendship with Everett Withers over winning football games at Temple.

That’s not perfectly fine with me. Nor should it be with you.

Otherwise, every Saturday next year will be the same Groundhog Day it has been every Saturday for the last three seasons.

A reminder that the opener next year is with Oklahoma, not Bucknell nor Akron. The urgency to get big-time players in here should have been last offseason, not this one.

Monday: 5 Immediate Fixes for Temple Football

Friday: At Least We Had This

Monday: The Nuclear Option

Friday: A Big Announcement in Lieu of a Big Announcement

Memphis looking for a new Philly tune

Stan Drayton’s seat can cool off considerably if he is able to win on Friday.

In about four days, Memphis’ football team will be trying to do something it hasn’t done in Philadelphia in nearly a decade.

Win a game.

They will enter Friday’s noon game (ESPN) has a 12.5-point favorite and the only surprising thing is that the oddsmakers see it as that close.

History plays into part of it, both recent and distant.

The distant part is that in 2019 Memphis brought into Philadelphia a team that eventually finished 12-2 and won the American Athletic Conference championship and lost, 30-28.

Two years later, the Tigers played a Temple team that openly rebelled against head coach Rod Carey in his final year and came away with a 34-31 loss.

One of the current players for the Owls, Amad Anderson, was the star of that game, taking a pitch and going 59 yards for a touchdown to seal it. Because a lot of key players for Temple hit the portal the prior year and many were threatening to do so the next, Carey’s hot seat was blazing by the final game of the season that new athletic director Arthur Johnson had to use an extinguisher to put out the fire. It was a costly piece of equipment as Temple is in the last year of paying Carey $2 million not to coach the team.

Our picks this week: Two in the bag already as another coach, Chris Creighton, at a much harder place to win than Temple (Eastern Michigan) delivers with another bowl season. Could not believe that EMU was getting 6 and they won outright.

The Temple team that beat 12-2 Memphis in 2019 finished 8-5. The Temple team that beat Memphis two years ago finished 3-9, while Memphis finished 6-6.

The last time Memphis won in Philadelphia, a familiar face here won it for the Tigers as current Eagles’ kicker Jake Elliott drilled a 31-yard field goal with no time left for a 16-13 win in 2014.

The recent history for Memphis is that the Tigers are 8-3 while the Owls have the exact opposite 3-8 record but the fact that Memphis “only” beat USF, a team that the Owls should have beaten, by 59-50 two weeks ago indicates the Owls might have an outside chance. Better yet, Memphis struggled to beat Navy, 28-24, and that was a team the Owls hammered, 32-18, three weeks ago.

The Owls can win. They probably won’t.

That’s only if they play a perfect game, no turnovers and no key penalties and, for Temple, that has been the biggest if of the season.

After a season of imperfection week after week, even envisioning that scenario seems preposterous.

Whether or not it sets the throne Drayton sits on ablaze is a story for another day.

Late Friday Night: Memphis-Temple Analysis

Monday: Season Recap

Kill Switch: Oh, what might have been for Temple

Less than a month apart, two of the most underperforming college football programs in the country made major football hires late in 2021.

On Nov. 29, New Mexico State hired Jerry Kill.

If Arthur Johnson was director of football operations at TCU instead of Texas, Jerry Kill probably would have been hired and Temple might be sitting on a 9-3 season at this point.

Exactly two weeks to the day later Temple hired Stan Drayton.

Temple was bad in 2021 but New Mexico State was much worse.

The Owls finished 3-9 but the Aggies were 2-10. In that 3-9 season, the Owls beat a ranked team, Memphis, while the Aggies best win was over a FCS team, South Carolina State.

Both needed a new coach and the New Mexico State brass thought hiring a proven program-builder was a better way to go than hiring an unproven running backs’ coach.

What happened since?

Temple went 3-9 in Drayton’s first season and, after a 34-24 loss to a bad UAB team on Saturday, will undoubtedly go 3-9 for the third-straight season. Kill had the Aggies 7-6 his first year and, since an August loss this year, New Mexico State is 9-2 including a 31-10 win over SEC power Auburn on Saturday night.

Did Kill say before the game with Auburn that “they recruit better than us and someday we hope to recruit like them” like Drayton did after the Miami loss? No. He hired a 33-year-old wunderkind DC who actually had a history of stopping modern offenses instead of a 60-year-old “close friend” retread who couldn’t stop a nosebleed. He devised a game plan to have his lesser talent beat Auburn’s better talent.

No thanks. I’ve seen enough heartbreak for one year.

That’s what great coaches do.

Oh what might have been for Temple if only Arthur Johnson was “director of football operations” at the last school Kill was at (TCU) instead of another Texas school.

Worse, Temple could have had the Kill switch to turn off the losing easily. Kill signed for $550,000 at New Mexico State. Drayton signed for nearly four times as much at Temple. You don’t think he would have taken the Temple job in a heartbeat over New Mexico State?

Hell, he still probably would.

Money talks, bullshit walks.

Kill was familiar with Temple and the recruiting area from the time he was an assistant at Rutgers while Temple was winning an AAC championship.

In an unremarkable opening press conference, the best promise Drayton made Temple fans was that he would “chase greatness.”

Kill said this at his introductory press conference: “I just like taking on challenges. It’s like building a house, and I like to do things. I like that. I like being the underdog. I like having a chip on my shoulder, and you get in with the players that have the same thing. …I like the process. I love the process.”

For Kill, the “process” hasn’t included the NIL but has included the transfer portal: “We just don’t have the big donors or the big money (for the NIL) but we do offer kids an opportunity for guys stuck behind P5 starters on those teams and FCS guys who have performed at a high level but want a bigger stage. That’s all we can offer at this point and it’s a formula that works for us.”

Temple fans when they hear Drayton is still bringing in high school recruits.

Meanwhile, Temple’s recruiting philosophy is stuck back in 1987 when you could build a team of high school recruits, redshirt them for a year, have them back up for another and then have them ready to play by the third.

Guess what? Nobody has the time for that anymore because if you don’t win by Year Three, you are out on your ass.

Two teams that reached a fork in the road a week apart in December of 2021: Temple and New Mexico State.

Make that two years in a row.

The Aggies could have picked an unproven running backs coach and probably would be looking at a third-straight 2-10 season.

Temple did and is staring at a third-straight 3-9 season. Kill was and is a proven program-builder. The best you could say about Drayton back then was that he was a huge roll of the dice at a time Temple couldn’t afford to gamble.

New Mexico State made a solid investment at a time when the Owls were spending their last chip at the crap table.

The Aggies made the correct call. One school’s blessing is another school’s curse.

Monday: Memphis Preview

Late Friday Night: TU-Memphis Analysis

Saturday: A clash of coaching styles

Temple has more talent than a 3-7 team should have. Coaching, not so much.

From about 1 p.m. in the afternoon on Saturday until a little past 6 in the evening, Temple fans will be able to gauge a couple different coaching philosophies.

At 1, Adam Fisher takes his unbeaten basketball Owls to the Liacouras Center where they will host Columbia.

What did Fisher say in his first press conference?

“I’m here to win right away.”

A couple of hours later, Stan Drayton will take his 3-7 football Owls to Birmingham in an effort to avoid another 3-9 season. Make no mistake, if the Owls don’t win tomorrow (3 p.m., ESPN+), they will finish a miserable 3-9 for the third-straight miserable season. The last guy who finished 1-6 and 3-9 got his ass fired.

What did Drayton say in his first press conference?

“We want to chase greatness.”

Well, Fisher is winning right away and Drayton is still chasing.

Greatness is way ahead of Drayton, almost lapping him on the track. Fisher is just where he wants to be, winning right away.

Our picks this week: SMU covering against Memphis, Navy covering the 2.5 against ECU, Army getting the 4.5 against Coastal and FAU to keep it closer than 9.5 against Tulane.

Sometimes setting the expectations and announcing an urgency to win pays off. We won’t know if it pays off for Fisher for at least a couple of months, but this “chasing” bleep has got to stop and the sooner the better. Fisher went out in the portal and got guys he thought would be able to win right away.

At some point, if you are chasing greatness you’ve got to show the few remaining paying customers that you are at least gaining on it.

Ultimately, when the story of this season is written, the Owls’ offseason failure to improve a running game that finished 129th (out of 131 teams) in 2022 will prove to be their undoing.

From the end of last season to the beginning of this one, we harped in this space that there were great running backs to be had from places like Ball State, Western Michigan, Liberty and even freaking Alcorn State available and ready to transfer to Temple in the portal and watched while the Owls were perfectly content to settle for the freshman running back from Tampa and the holdovers from last season that put them 129 on the totem pole.

That’s how you got to 129 in the first place. Get me at least two 1,000-yard backs in the portal. All the Owls did was get another E.J. (Wilson, not Warner) who had half the yards Edward Saydee had.

That’s not getting it done in the portal.

Worse, a great defensive end hit the transfer portal for the Big 10. The move there was to get three great defensive ends from lower levels. All the Owls did was get Davon Hood from East Tennessee. Nice pickup, but needed to attract two more Hoods to the hood.

That’s how you end up chasing the faster guys ahead of you. Go get me four Jamaican 400-meter relay guys and suddenly those guys are chasing you. That’s what you had all offseason to do. Fisher was pounding the pavement. Drayton might not have been getting a cheesesteak at Richie’s but he didn’t wear out any shoe leather, either.

Temple needs a Howie Roseman of the portal and it’s obvious the Owls don’t have that.

If the Owls beat UAB, an argument could be made that 4-8 is better than 3-9.

Not buying it.

Kyle Hunter picked up this tidbit: UAB is worst in the country in kickoff return yardage allowed. I wonder if this Temple coaching staff is even aware of this? If they are, tell Sam Martin to return those kickoffs. He might be able to recapture that magic and take one to the house like he did earlier this season.

If the Owls are clicking on all cylinders and leading late in the game, expect UAB head coach Trent Dilfer to be going ballistic and yelling at both coaches and players.

I have yet to see Drayton yell at an assistant coach, specifically his precious friend, Everett Withers, for their shortcomings and there have been many.

A guy named Settle might be playing basketball for the Owls but the football Owls certainly appear to settle for losing way too much.

Sometimes you get what you demand.

It’s high time Temple football demands more winning and less chasing.

Tomorrow would be a good day to start.

Late Saturday Night: UAB Game Analysis

Losing is an attitude, too

When you lose, you open yourself up to this kind of mockery from the bad guys so my advice is don’t lose.

A long time ago, a former colleague of mine in Doylestown, Steve Wartenberg, wrote a book about legendary Temple basketball coach John Chaney.

Steve followed Chaney through a season and mostly ups and really pinpointed why Chaney was a great teacher, recruiter and coach.

The title was “Winning is an Attitude” and it encapsulated what it took to win and maintain that attitude. Wartenberg was especially impressed that Chaney surrounded himself with winners, recruited team captains of winners from champion high school teams and only hired assistant coaches who were winners.

That mindset trickled down to every single Temple basketball player.

Too bad Steve didn’t follow Temple football head coach Stan Drayton around this season. His sequel could have been “Losing is an Attitude” because for every reaction there is an equal and opposite one.

From jumping offsides after stopping one series in the fourth quarter to hitting a quarterback clearly out of bounds after stopping another series, those were losing plays. They ferment a losing attitude and Temple football clearly has one now.

In reality, though, the game should have never come down to that because Temple spotted South Florida a 17-0 lead.

It’s hard enough to win in big-time college football as it is. It’s almost impossible to win spotting another team 17 unanswered points.

An absolutely mind-numbing decision contributed to that deficit. Temple won the coin flip but instead of giving the ball to its best unit, the offense, it went on defense. That’s the conventional wisdom but Temple is not a conventional team.

Two problems with that.

If there was ever a Temple game where the turning point came BEFORE the opening kickoff, this was it.

One, you have a kicker who kicked the ball out of bounds FIVE prior times this season and you give him a chance to kick it out of bounds a six.

He took it. Hell, go for the record. (Tried to look up the record for kicking it out of bounds but can’t find it. Wouldn’t be surprised if this was it.)

That’s a losing decision right before the kickoff, especially considering the Bulls gave up over 50 points in three of their prior four games.

Two, the winning move there is “let’s give our best player the ball and have him give us a 7-0 lead and build off that confidence.”

Instead, USF gets great field position from the jump and attacks the weakest part of the Temple team: The secondary.

Not a surprise that the Owls had to use most of the afternoon to dig out of the grave they dug for themselves. Through no fault of the kids, the coaches gave themselves no room for error and the “normal” errors that kids make followed after that: three interceptions, a key lost fumble out of a long gain and those two stupid penalties.

It was an inordinate number of player mistakes but coaches should know their team better than that.

Had they got that 7-0 lead, who knows would have happened?

Ironically, they didn’t learn from the success against Navy because they had the same decision to make a week ago and took the ball. That resulted in a 17-0 lead. This decision resulted in a 17-0 deficit, setting the stage for all the losing moments that followed.

John Chaney would be turning over in his grave.

Friday: UAB Preview

Temple football: A mind-blowing loss

A lot of things had to go wrong for Temple to lose on Saturday and they all did

Not very much still blows my mind.

Watching a 1950s TV game show interview of a guy who was an eyewitness to the assassination of Abraham Lincoln was one. Knowing that the grandson (not great-great or even great but regular grandson) of the 10th President of the United States is still alive (as of 8:30 Saturday night) is another.

If Harrison Ruffin Tyler, 95, was watching the Temple at South Florida football game on Saturday, that probably would have killed him.

Fortunately for him, he’s not a Temple football fan so he didn’t care enough to grab the old ticker on the way to dropping dead on the floor in front of his TV.

Many other younger Temple football fans did and I hope they survived because I can’t remember a more agonizing (or avoidable) loss in a long, long time.

The record will show that the final score was 27-23, South Florida, but there is more to the story.

Temple won the coin flip but, with one of the worst defenses in the history of college football, decided that deferring was the smart move instead of giving the rock to the best quarterback in the conference.

It wasn’t.

For the fifth time this season, the Owls kicked the ball out of bounds. This was exactly a decade after Temple had the best kicker in the nation, Brandon McManus, who drilled the ball through the end zone on 58 of his 70 kickoffs.

Never once did McManus, a former soccer player at North Penn, kick the damn ball out of bounds.

What happened to Temple football in 10 short years from having the best kicker in the nation to having the worst?

Brandon McManus kicking the game-winning FG at UConn in 2012. Kicking has become a disaster for Temple since and it should not given that Philly is a hotbed of great high school soccer talent.

The Temple cornerbacks do what Temple cornerbacks have done all season, allow completions on long passes, and the Owls found themselves in the same 17-0 hole Navy found itself in last week.

To their credit, the Owls fought back.

Not to their credit, some head-scratching mistakes made it impossible for them to win.

One of their most reliable players fumbled after a long gain.

They jumped offsides after doing the good work to stop USF on one drive.

They inexplicably hit the quarterback out of bounds when they could have gotten the ball back for the game-winning drive.

Who to blame?

Certainly the overpaid brain trust is right at the top of the list.

You don’t recruit a Purdue reject to kick off when there were about 20 great FCS kickers who would have LOVED a Temple opportunity. Kicking has become a disaster for Temple. The Owls had a great kicker in Brandon McManus and two very good ones in Austin Jones and Aaron Boumerhi but have had no luck since. Cam Price missed a chip shot FG and an extra point that was the difference in the game.

The Owls brought only 69 players to Tampa but whose fault was that? They left their RB of the future, Joquez Smith, home for an “administrative issue.”

Sorry.

Unless your best running back was stealing signals and suspended by the conference, you don’t leave him back in Philadelphia when he was supremely motivated to show the hometown folks in Tampa what they missed.

Do you think Steve Addazio wanted to suspend Matty Brown a ton of times? Yes. Did he? No. He wanted to win more.

Win. The. Game.

That’s the only important thing.

I never thought I’d want Addazio back. I do now.

Punish Joquez Smith next week, not this one. He might have run for 300 yards against this USF defense.

Have to win the game. Save the high and mighty stuff for later.

You’ve got to coach up that it’s NOT OK to hit a quarterback five yards out of bounds under any circumstances. This has to be done in spring practice, and May, June, July and August and not for yelling at the guy after the fact in November.

The other mistakes–the DMR fumble and the E.J. Warner interceptions–were more forgivable because those two guys have been warriors for the Owls all season and the errors were of commission, not omission.

There have been many mind-blowing losses in Temple football history. It’ll be hard to top this one for a long time.

If you had a grandson who attended this game, maybe he will still be alive to tell the story in 2123.

More people will believe he was there than the story he tells about it.

Monday: The Opposite of John Chaney

If Temple wins, you can utter this four-letter word

New USF coach Alex Golesh and his players talk about Temple.

About a third of the way through a 55-0 beating at the hands of visiting SMU a few short weeks ago, Temple football was trending for a very bad four-letter word.

Mess.

Mike Edwards caught this great shot of Edward Saydee scoring one of his three touchdowns on the way to 265 yards against USF last season. Saydee had a nice game against Navy and should be able to get 100 against USF if that wasn’t a mirage.

Other four-letter words were worse.

Now, after a 32-18 win over a representative Navy team, Temple defensive lineman Jerquavion Mahone went on radio and associated Temple football with another four-letter word:

Bowl.

“All we’re thinking about is winning this season out and getting into a bowl game,” Mahone said on Wednesday night’s Stan Drayton Radio Show (97.5 FM). “We want to do it for all the guys who have been here through all of what we’ve been through for the last three years and we want to do it for coach Drayton.”

When someone is 6-4, 290 pounds, you tend to listen to what he has to say.

My guess is Mahone won’t pull a Quincy Roche and opt out of a bowl if he gets his way.

First things first, though, and tomorrow’s game is at USF (noon, ESPN+).

If the Owls win that one, they can think about beating UAB.

IF .. and that’s a big IF .. they beat UAB, it sets up a home finale the day after Thanksgiving where they can beat Memphis for a bowl game.

Must admit it would be sweet to go from an absolute mess to a bowl in a little over a month.

Whoa, Nellie.

If that happens, chances are that E.J. Warner will be the first Temple player in my lifetime carried off the field after a victory because they will need a Herculean three games from Warner to complete the trifecta. The team gave a preview of that by carrying Warner around the locker room after the win over Navy.

Beating USF is a hard-enough task but by no means is it impossible.

Temple fans even in this season like to look down on one-win UConn, a former rival, and say that this three-win Owl team is better and I think it is. Yet UConn “only” lost, 24-21, to USF and even with all the Owls’ problems, I think any team with E.J. Warner on it beats UConn by double-digits.

Now go ahead and prove me right with a touchdown win at USF tomorrow.

There is both good news and bad news here because the good news is that USF can’t stop anybody.

The bad news is neither can Temple.

Now the Owls showed some defensive fiersness against Navy, holding a triple-option team to zero first-half points. That really was the only reason Temple won the game because everybody knows that a triple option team no matter how good it is doesn’t come back from 17-0 deficits.

The Owls played a flawless first-half of defense by putting their best players in position to make plays. They had effective run- and pass blitzes and they need to do that going forward because they can’t get a rush from their base three.

If they do that against USF, they can cause havoc in the backfield and make a running quarterback put the ball up.

Our picks this weekend

When that happens, guys like Magee, Layton Jordan and Jalen McMurray have to use their talents to go get it and take it the other way.

Mahone will have to do his part by occupying blockers and getting a push up the middle.

The rest will be up to an offense that needs to utilize its most talented players–Warner and tight ends DMR and Jordan Smith–in mismatches against the USF defense. That doesn’t even include the guy who got USF head coach Jeff Scott fired last year, Edward Saydee. Weapons galore for Temple.

UConn didn’t have that kind of offensive explosiveness against USF.

Temple does.

If the Owls use it effectively, you can start saying a four-letter word about them and, for the first time in months, it can be said in polite company.

Late Saturday Night: USF Analysis