Temple’s recruiting focus: Speed Kills

Tylik Mitchell is expected to make some kind of immediate impact for the 2026 Owls on offense and special teams.

Lose a Hollawayne, gain a Holloway.

Kajiya Hollawayne was a productive receiver for the Temple football Owls a year ago, starting all 12 games including a spectacular nine-catch, 149-yard game against Navy. He ran out of eligibility, leaving the Owls look for a speed receiver on the edge.

Pretty impressive offer list for Kamari Hollaway.

Temple gained a “Holloway” recently, grabbing highly thought of North Carolina running back Kamari Holloway from Southern Durham (N.C.) High School, right under the noses of East Carolina, which offered him a full scholarship last year.

Holloway has four years of eligibility left.

He was the second “athlete” recruit with speed from North Carolina that K.C. Keeler and his coaching staff have recruited and both have something in common.

Blinding speed.

Hollaway has clocked a 4.48 in the 40-yard dash, which, in terms of measurables compares favorably to former Owl superstar back Bernard Pierce, whose NFL combine time in the 40 was 4.55. So Hollaway is a full seven tenths of a second faster in the 40 than Pierce was the year after he scored 25 touchdowns for the Owls and became a third-round NFL draft choice.

Mitchell, who should compete for a wide receiver job for the Owls this season, also was a former running back out of North Carolina’s Southern Nash High School. His measurable comparison to Pierce was that he ran a 10.7 100-meter dash in high school. Pierce’s 10.8 in the same event was enough to win the PIAA state indoor title as a senior at Glen Mills.

Both Hollaway and Mitchell both put up good football numbers as well. Hollaway had 122 carries for 1,420 yards and 13 touchdowns in 2025. Mitchell, also playing running back, had 1,866 and 21 touchdowns during his senior season in 2034.

Kamari Hollaway.

So the Owls plucked not only two great athletes out of North Carolina, but two of the fastest guys in that state.

The Owls looked a little slow against some of the better teams in the league last year. Going forward, it appears they are determined to win their share of foot races, which usually means getting to the goal line faster than the bad guys.

Friday: How Others See Temple

The foreign element: Temple has a Pope, too

Darius Pope makes key touchdown catch in Delaware’s state championship 3A game.

Since May 8, Villanova has used having a Pope as a trump card on Temple and really everyone else.

Both schools have a Brunson basketball player as a famous graduate and but on that day Villanova added a Pope.

All recruiting roads lead to Temple

No more because Temple has a Pope, too, and he’ll probably do more for the Temple football program than the real Pope will do for his alma mater.

Darius Pope of Delaware became the latest of three players to turn down a solid Syracuse offer for a Temple one and it’s an, err, blessing.

That’s because for all of Fran Brown’s documented prowess as a recruiter, there’s a buzz around the Temple recruiting this June that hasn’t existed here in a long time and even a great recruiter like Brown seems powerless to stop the momentum.

Delaware isn’t a foreign country but one of the other gets who spurned ‘Cuse for Temple, Jude Okeleke, a Top 75 in the nation defensive tackle from Nigeria. The fact that he’s from Nigeria gives Temple a real solid shot to keep him from transferring to a P4 school because foreign students are not eligible for NIL money.

Yet.

No one knows what the future holds but Brown was a dynamite recruiter here, at Rutgers, Georgia and now Syracuse and whatever recruiting magic he has couldn’t keep three solid Syracuse offers under his spell.

The other Syracuse offer who opted for Temple was Antwan Rogers, a 6-5, 290-pound defensive end from Salem, N.J.

College Football Talk Daily rates Temple as doing one of the best three recruiting jobs in the nation with UCLA and Florida. That’s pretty heady company. CFB Talk has more than 40,000 followers on twitter/x so it carries some clout.

That’s not to say that Temple’s recruiting rivals the quality of UCLA and Florida, but for its competition, Temple now stands out.

It might not show in the final recruiting rankings of the 2026 class, but there’s a lot of quality in it for the Owls and the fact that the Owls beat out P4 schools for commits bodes well for the long-term future.

Pope is one of many future Owls who will make their impacts in the 2026 season and beyond but, while new head coach K.C. Keeler was concentrating on the long-term this month, he hasn’t forgotten short-term needs.

Temple got a quality guy in running back/wide receiver Tylik Mitchell of Southern Nash in N.C., whose 10.78 in the 100-meter dash was .2 faster than that of Bernard Pierce in the PIAA state championship meet when he competed for Glen Mills. Pierce was a football player who excelled in track and was ready to go, becoming an instant starter for Al Golden at running back. His 268 yards and two touchdowns beat a 10-2 bowl-winning Navy team as a true freshman and, had he played in the second half against both Penn State and UCLA, the Owls of 2009 might have won both of those games. As it was, Pierce became a third-round draft choice in the NFL

Many feel that Mitchell has the kinds of moves and speed that could make him an instant starter at Temple, either at WR or RB–but probably at WR because there is a greater need there.

That’s a lot to ask of a true freshman but he seems to have the talent and will arrive in a month. That’s the same kind of time frame it took Pierce to get noticed.

Having a Pope helps in 2026 but a Mitchell does the same thing now.

Keeler and his staff are cooking in recruiting and others outside of Temple are liking the smell from the 10th and Diamond kitchen.

Friday: Temple’s Next Famous Names:

Monday: Short vs. Long-Term