Temple’s Secret Sauce: The American

Anyone who watched East Carolina dismantle defending American Conference champion Army on Thursday night had to come to the same conclusion I did:

This league–outside of Memphis–is nowhere near as good as it was last year.

Get rid of these white helmets and the Owls win 6 of their remaining 8 games.

Temple has eight games left, all in this conference. The secret sauce for the Owls’ success includes four things:

One, the AC isn’t as good as last year;

Two, Temple has the best head coach in the league;

Three, Temple might not have the best quarterback in the league (I think it might but the experts don’t) but it unquestionably has the best 1-2 QB combination.

Four, Temple doesn’t play Memphis (until, hopefully, the championship game).

Mix, stir, and this could be tasty.

What does this mean?

My glasses are not completely Cherry and White and I know some things can and will go wrong. That’s why no matter how well the Owls play in the final eight, I give them at least two losses.

Going into this season, nobody thought the Temple at Army game was in play.

I trust this guy with my team.

Now I think it is. Hell, I wouldn’t be surprised if Temple is the favorite going into that November game.

First things first, though.

Here’s how the season will break down (and remember you read it here first):

If Temple is able to split the next two games at home (UTSA and Navy), it finishes 6-6.

If Temple is able to sweep those next two, it goes 8-4 and has an outside–really outside–chance of making it to the title game at Memphis.

Best helmets in college football

Either way, it’s a complete culture change to what we’ve seen the last six years.

The biggest news out of the Edberg Olson Complex this week was that RB Terrez Worthy, one of my favorite Owls, quit due to “mental health issues.” That came six months after one of my other favorite Owls, John Adams, quit due to pretty much the same thing.

I didn’t know that was a thing that you could self-diagnose but I have to respect those two guys.

I go to the doctor twice a year and am always shocked when one of the questions is: “Do you ever think of killing yourself?”

Err, no, but if Temple kept either Rod Carey or Stan Drayton more than three years, ask me next time.

This is the burden of Temple fans. Why do we have starters leave for “mental health issues” and never have walk-ons do the same?

Fortunately, both the mental and physical health of this team other than my favorite RB seems to be OK. Temple will not face a team nearly as good as either Oklahoma or Georgia Tech this year. How they handle that next level down determines the Owls’ fate.

Mix in the best head coach in the league and some magic can happen. Not going to say eight wins or six wins but, given the competition ahead vs. the competition behind, color me optimistic.

That means Cherry helmets, not White ones.

Monday: Game Week

Temple-UTSA: You can’t make this stuff up

Wanted: Head football coach Temple University: If you watched the Owls on national TV Friday night, you know the opportunity that awaits you. A bunch of kids representing a great university played their asses off, only to to lose at UTSA, 51-27, because there were a lot of illegal shifts and illegal formations. If you know how to structure a practice to eliminate those kind of mistakes and put these wonderful young athletes in a better position to win, please contact Arthur Johnson at Temple University, Broad and Montgomery, Philadelphia, PA, 19122. Only successful head coaches need apply. Temple can’t make a mistake on another “promising” assistant because promises are often broken.

That pretty much summed up Temple’s effort in a 51-27 loss at UTSA on Friday night.

The kids at Temple played as hard as they could but a lot of procedural errors held them back.

As we’ve said in this space many times over the past couple of months, illegal shifts and illegal formations don’t happen to teams playing Temple nearly as much as they do to Temple.

The reason for that is simple: Temple structures its so-called practices like a team that was coached by a career assistant coach, which is exactly what happened over the last three years.

A career winning head coach at any level knows how to structure a practice so those kinds of mistakes don’t show up on national TV.

So that’s the decision facing Arthur Johnson now.

Does he go out and get a “promising” assistant to be head coach or does he go out and get a guy who delivered for some other school what he promised.

I’ll go for the guy who delivered the goods and not someone who is promising to deliver.

Maybe the most remarkable moment of Friday night’s game was the interview of Johnson while a slow quarterback negotiated his way through the entire Temple team for a 75-yard touchdown.

You can’t make that kind of stuff up but there it was for the world to see.

It left Johnson speechless and the world laughing at Temple once again. So, if you are keeping score, the last four appearances on a major ESPN network, Temple gave up 55 points to SMU, 51 to Oklahoma, 52 to Tulane and 51 to UTSA.

Enough is enough.

Get a guy in here who knows how to stop someone and has proven it by delivering more W’s than L’s to the school he was at before Temple.

Monday: Russell Conwell’s Pick for Next Head Coach