American Football Database
Advertisement
Temple Owls football
AmericanFootball current event.svg Current season
File:TUOwls logo.png
First season 1894
Athletic director Bill Bradshaw (athletic director)
Head coach Steve Addazio
Home stadium Lincoln Financial Field
Stadium capacity 68,532
Stadium surface Desso GrassMaster
Location Philadelphia, PA
Conference Big East Conference
All-time record 416–544–53
Postseason bowl record 2–2
Claimed national titles 0
Conference titles 1 (Middle Atlantic)
Division titles 1 (2009 MAC East)
Heisman winners 0
Consensus All-Americans 1
Colors Cherry and White            
Fight song "T For Temple U"
Mascot Hooter T. Owl
Rivals Penn State
Villanova
Website Temple Athletics

The Temple Owls football team represents Temple University in the sport of American football. The Temple Owls compete in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) of the National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA) as a member of the Big East Conference. They play their home games at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and are currently led by head coach Steve Addazio.

The Owls were a football-only member of the Big East Conference from 1991 until 2004. Temple was forced out of the league due to poor attendance averages, non-competitiveness, and a lack of commitment to the football program from university officials. Temple played the 2005 and 2006 seasons as an independent before joining the MAC in 2007 where they resided until the end of the 2011. On March 7, 2012, the Temple Owls rejoined the Big East Conference with football membership beginning in the 2012 season and all other sports beginning conference play in 2013.

History[]

Although Temple began playing organized football in 1894, the Owls' modern era began in 1925. That was the year that Henry J. "Heinie" Miller was hired as head coach, and for a time, the Owls were a regional power. To start the 1928 season, the Owls moved to Temple Stadium. Miller coached eight seasons and compiled a 50-15-8 record.

Pop Warner era (1934-1938)[]

Following Miller's departure in 1933, the Owls made a national splash with the hiring of their next coach, the legendary Glenn "Pop" Warner. Warner had spent the previous 19 years at Pittsburgh and Stanford, winning three national championships. He ended his career at Temple, going 31-18-2 in six seasons. In 1934, the Owls went 7-0-2 in the regular season and were invited to play in the inaugural Sugar Bowl on New Year's Day, 1935, where they lost to Tulane, 20-14.

George Makris era (1960-1969)[]

From the time Warner retired at the end of the 1938 season until 1963, the Owls experienced only 4 winning seasons. The team reached a nadir in the late 1950s, enduring a school record 21-game losing streak from the last four games of the 1957 season and through the entire 1958 and 1959 seasons. George Makris arrived as head coach to start the 1960 season and won his first game. Makris restored competitiveness to the Owl program, compiling a 10-year record of 45-44-4. Makris' tenure coincided with Temple's 10 years in the University Division of the Middle Atlantic Conference, during which they won the 1967 conference championship.

Wayne Hardin era (1970-1982)[]

After the 1969 season, the Owls became an independent again to upgrade their schedule and compete against the top teams in the East. Under new coach Wayne Hardin, who coached six years at Navy, Temple was up to the challenge. Hardin led the Owls to an 80-52-3 record over 12 years.

Temple went 9-1 in 1973 and 8-2 in 1974 and won 14 straight games at one point. Temple played regular season games in Japan's Mirage Bowl twice, losing 35-32 to Grambling in 1977 and beating Boston College 28-24 in 1978.

In 1979, the Owls had a 10-2 record and the most wins in school history. The Owls opened the season with a 38-16 win at West Virginia and later beat Rutgers (41-20) and Syracuse (49-17). Temple's only losses during the regular season were to nationally ranked Pittsburgh (10-9) and Penn State (22-7). In the game at Penn State, before a record-setting crowd, the Owls led 7-6 at the half. Following the 1979 season, the Owls defeated California 28-17 in the second Garden State Bowl. The crowd who witnessed Temple beat California (55,952) was the largest in the short history of that Bowl.

Under Hardin, the Owls were one of the more stable Eastern football powers and often defeated local rivals West Virginia, Rutgers and Syracuse. In the 1970s, Temple went 4-4 against West Virginia, 2-1 against Rutgers, 1-1 against Syracuse, 4-1-1 against Cincinnati and 2-0 against Connecticut.

Bruce Arians era (1983-1988)[]

When Hardin retired in 1982, the Owls hired Bruce Arians - then 30 years old - to succeed him. Arians had some success, beating Pitt three times in his six years on the job. Arians had two winning seasons, going 6-5 in 1984 when the defense was ranked 21st in the nation beating East Carolina, Pitt, and West Virginia and 6-5 1986. Unfortunately, Temple's six wins in 1986 were later forfeited because the Owls' roster included an ineligible player.

Decline[]

Jerry Berndt, who took over for Arians in 1989, led Temple to their last winning season for almost twenty years in 1990, when the Owls went 7-4. Temple joined the Big East Conference in 1991, but had difficulty competing against teams with better facilities and bigger budgets. The Owls would not win a conference game until 1995, and would only win 16 conference games during their 14-year run in the league. Temple won as many as three league games only once (1997: 3-8, 3-4 Big East) and went winless in league play six times. Overall, they had a 14-80 record against Big East foes.

Berndt (11-33), Ron Dickerson (1993-97: 8-47) and Bobby Wallace (1998-2005: 19-71) were unable to halt the decline. Temple went 0-11 in Wallace's final year. In part due to the Owls' noncompetitiveness, poor fan support, and lack of institutional support, the Big East voted to expel the Owls at the end of the 2004 season.

Al Golden era (2006-2010)[]

On December 6, 2005, Al Golden, then the defensive coordinator for the University of Virginia under Al Groh, was named the new head coach. The Owls lost their first 8 games under Golden before beating Bowling Green during their Homecoming game on October 28, 2006. The win snapped a 20-game losing streak, one game short of the school record. The Owls finished 1-11 in Golden's first year.

The Owls won 4 games in 2007, including three straight wins at one point in mid-season. During Golden's second season, Temple's defense was ranked 49th in the nation, as opposed to 118th in 2006.[1] The offense also improved from 118th to 113th, but it was clear that Temple's defense, despite their incredible youth, was the heart of their team. The Owls won 5 games in 2008, their most since 1990. After his fourth season, Golden's record stood at 19-29.

In 2009, the Owls went 9-4, their best record since 1979 with three of four losses being competitive including a last second loss to VIllanova. The lone exception being a lopsided 31-6 loss to a Penn State team that finished 11-2 and ranked #8. Temple accepted a bid to play in the EagleBank Bowl, where they faced the UCLA Bruins. In the Owls' first post-season appearance since the 1979 Garden State Bowl, the Owls lost 30-21 to the Bruins.

In 2010, the Owls lost a crucial game to Ohio University which would have given them a potential MAC championship. The week after, Temple added another loss to Miami-Ohio, and coupled with losses to Penn State and Northern Illinois, the Owls finished at 8-4 for the season but did not receive a Bowl bid.

On December 12, 2010, Al Golden was hired as the head coach of the University of Miami.

Steve Addazio era (2011 to present)[]

On December 23, 2010, a press conference was held on campus to formally introduce Steve Addazio, former two-year offensive coordinator at the University of Florida, to the Temple community. Addazio's first season continued to build on Golden's success. The team went 9-4 going to its 4th bowl game ever, the Gildan New Mexico Bowl. They dominated the University of Wyoming winning their 2nd bowl game ever, the first since the 1979 Garden State Bowl. They showed signs of promise during the year, almost beating Penn State, losing in the last minutes and winning their last 4 games. Beginning in 2012, Addazio will lead Temple in its return to the Big East Conference.

Awards[]

Consensus All-Americans[]

  • Paul Palmer - 1986

Owls in pro football[]

Home Stadium[]

From 1927 until 1977, the Owls played at Temple Stadium. In 1978, they moved to Veterans Stadium. During the 1986 season, the Owls averaged an all-time high of 34,543 fans to their games at Veterans Stadium and their games, regularly televised, did well in the local Nielsen ratings. Veterans Stadium remained their home field through the 2002 season. Lincoln Financial Field has been Temple's home field since 2003, with the first home game being the inaugural college game at Lincoln Financial Field between Temple and Villanova, which drew over 30,000 fans.

The most attended Temple game, with 105,950 attendees, occurred November 11, 2006 at Beaver Stadium, home of Penn State. Temple lost that game 47-0. Nine out of the ten most attended Temple games occurred at Penn State.[2]

File:Temple Vs. Penn State.JPG

Temple in action vs. Penn State
November 10, 2007

The largest attended home game was November 10, 2007, at Lincoln Financial Field, when the Owls played host to the Penn State Nittany Lions, which had an attendance of 69,029.[2] Temple lost the game 31-0.

Media coverage[]

Eight Temple games were broadcast over Philadelphia television in 2005, the most in school history. The Temple radio network, which once included 12 stations from as far north as Sayre, PA to as far south as Baltimore, MD, is now down to one flagship station, WPHT 1210 (AM), in Philadelphia. Harry Donahue handles the play-by-play with former Temple Owl Steve Joachim doing the color. WHAT 1340 AM also carries the games. Past play-by-play broadcasters have included Dave Sims, who currently covers college football and basketball for ESPN; Ron Menchine, the former Navy play-by-play announcer and Howie Herman, currently a sports columnist in Massachusetts.

Bowl Games[]

Season Date Bowl W/L Opponent PF PA Coach Notes
1934 January 1, 1935 Sugar Bowl L Tulane 14 20 Pop Warner notes
1979 December 15, 1979 Garden State Bowl W California 28 17 Wayne Hardin notes
2009 December 29, 2009 EagleBank Bowl L UCLA 21 30 Al Golden notes
2011 December 17, 2011 New Mexico Bowl W Wyoming 37 15 Steve Addazio notes
Total 4 bowl games 2–2 100 82

In the Polls[]

In the 1979 season, Temple finished 10-2 and ranked #17 in both the coaches and AP poll, their only post-season ranking ever.

College Football Hall of Fame[]

Future Non-Conference Opponents[3][]

2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
vs Villanova at Notre Dame at Penn State vs Penn State vs Army at Rutgers* vs Rutgers* vs Army
vs Maryland at Maryland vs Navy at Rutgers* at Penn State at Army
at Penn State at Connecticut* vs Maryland at Navy* vs Rutgers* vs Navy*
at Army vs Army vs Notre Dame at Notre Dame vs Navy*
  • These non-conference games were scheduled before Temple agreed to rejoin the Big East.

References[]

External links[]



This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Temple Owls football.
The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with American Football Database, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License.

Advertisement