I had a glimpse today of what kind of sports fan I would have been had I lived 2,000 years ago.
At the Temple game in the late stages of a 55-52 win over Eastern Michigan, I friend of mine who claims he has been "entertained" all year by the football Owls, turned to me and said:
"C'mon, tell me you weren't entertained by this?"
"No," I said.
Pausing only for a second, I added:
"I would have been entertained by a 55-3 win, but I'm not entertained when I know we can do better than this."
"We're not there yet," my friend said of that kind of dominance.
Well, then, I'll take 55-14.
I come from
the school that
says the best
pass defense
is putting a
quarterback on
his backside.
If you can't
get that done
with a
conventional
4-3 or 5-2
front, then
it's time
to send a
linebacker
as well
Don't get me wrong.the school that
says the best
pass defense
is putting a
quarterback on
his backside.
If you can't
get that done
with a
conventional
4-3 or 5-2
front, then
it's time
to send a
linebacker
as well
I loved the win. I loved how my favorite Owl, No. 82, Bruce Francis, abused the Eagles' secondary for four touchdowns. I love the seven touchdowns by my second favorite Owl, Adam DiMichele, six by passes, and one by run.
I was the one guy in the stands yelling for them to throw it to No. 82 on a fairly consistent basis.
(It's not rocket science.)
I love the intimidation factor of our special teams and returner Travis Shelton.
But to be completely entertained, I would have liked to see our No. 1 unit coming into the season play at least to their potential.
Had I lived in the days of the Roman Coliseum and knowing how much I love animals, I might have been entertained by the Lions who killed every murderer, rapist or traitor on a given Roman Holiday.
I probably wouldn't have been as entertained had the bad guys killed a few animals.
That's pretty much how I feel about Temple football these days. I want blood. Bad-guy blood. To me, any team who doesn't wear Cherry and White are the bad guys.
The Owls came into the season with the returning No. 1 defense in the MAC intact.
I expected, no demanded, that they at least repeat that same standard this season as well. Instead, they were ranked No. 6 coming into the game. I know there are some injuries back there, but not for this kind of drop off.
"Adam, disregard Rhule's play call and throw it to No. 82!"
Darryl Rule photo
I did not understand why the No. 1 defense in the MAC was able to give up 41 points to a Kent State team every other MAC team pretty much handled, but I got a clue by watching our defense today.
We weren't attacking. We were reacting.
I come from the school that says the best pass defense is putting a quarterback on his backside.
If you can't get that done with a conventional 4-3 or 5-2 front, then it's time to send a linebacker as well. If you can't get pressure on the quarterback with a conventional front and a linebacker, then send two linebackers. If you still can't get pressure, send linebackers and safeties. Send more than they can block and send them from every conceivable angle.
If you don't know what that looks like, grab a Eagles-Steelers DVD off the NFL network from earlier this season.
Or at least look at how Mark D'Onofrio's defense played last season.
Keep getting in the quarterback's face, put him on the ground and make him feel pain. Or at least make him uncomfortable enough to throw the ball away earlier than he wants to.
I saw none of that against Eastern Michigan quarterback Andy Schmitt, who put the ball up 76 times. Except for the time linebacker John Haley got to him on a blindside blitz, I didn't see Schmitt uncomfortable at all.
"We've need to straighten some things out on defense," Temple head coach Al Golden said late Saturday afternoon. "We're not playing the way we're capable on defense."
Last year, the Owls were an attacking defense, getting in the face of every quarterback they played on a pretty consistent basis.
If Golden is looking at what he can do in five days to improve things, getting back to that core philosophy might be a good place to start.
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