Temple Football Preview 2025: KC Keeler Will Break the Owls' 3-9 Cycle
It's possible to win at Temple. The program enjoyed five straight winning seasons from 2015 to 2019, going 43-24 with five different head coaches.It's also possible to lose big at Temple. The Owls went 13-42 over the last five years with four straight 3-9 seasons.But Keeler doesn't lose. He has just four losing seasons in 32 years.It might take all of 2025 to get up to speed, but this year's team has decent experience, and it shouldn't take too many massive tweaks to make a big improvement in a blah AAC. The improvement starts with …
Temple Owls Preview 2025: Offense
X CFN, Fiu | CFN Facebook | Bluesky Fiu, CFN- Offensive coordinator Tyler Walker was fantastic for the Montana State offense last year. He cranked up a high-octane passing attack that was among the best in the FCS, but this is a full rebuild for a Temple offense that averaged just 309 yards and fewer than 20 points per game.- The offensive line isn't necessarily a positive - it couldn't keep anyone out of the backfield - but it's relatively experienced with plenty of veterans to move around Kevin Terry at tackle and Chris Smith at center.
- Leading running back Terrez Worthy is back after averaging over five yards per carry on his 425 yards and four scores, but former Sam Houston starter Jay Ducker will be the main man.- The passing game will be a work in progress. Evan Simon led the team with 2,032 yards and 15 scores with nine interceptions, but Anthony Chiccitt from Robert Morris is just good enough to prove a push.The receiving corps loses 61-catch man Dante Wright, but there's just enough experience to be okay. Antonio Jones was a decent short-range target last year on the inside, and John Adams should do more deep on the outside.
Temple Owls Preview 2025: Defense
- There wasn't any pass rush, and the run defense was the third-worst in America, but the Owls were stunningly good on third downs, and the secondary wasn't awful. Javier Morton is the best safety in the bunch - the former Nebraska Cornhusker made 48 tackles last season - and Youngstown State's Jalen Castleberry is coming off a 50-tackle season to work on the other side of veteran Ben Osueke.
- Top tackler Tyquan King left for the UConn linebacking corps, but UMass transfer Jalen Stewart should be a statistical star coming off a 77-tackle season with the Minutemen. Outside option Ty Davis might be the pass rusher needed coming in from Delaware.- Will the pass rush show up from the line? Khalil Poteat and Cam'Ron Stewart have the look and a little experience, but the production has to come from the ends. There's a little bit of size on the inside with 300-pound Demerick Morris and 270-pound Sekou Kormah, but they don't get in the backfield.
Temple Owls Key to the Season
The turnovers have to stop.Temple has a big enough uphill climb as is. It can't make it steeper with all the mistakes. Last year's Owl offense gave it up a whopping 25 times, and with three or more turnovers in five games. The O turned it over just once in the three wins,
Temple Owls Key Player
Evan Simon, QB Sr.There's enough experience, size, and moxie to be the leader in the new era. He'll have a better running game to take the pressure off, but the line is still iffy, and the stars have to emerge at receiver. Being a game-manager, spreading it around, and keeping the mistakes to a minimum might be good enough for a big turnaround.
Temple Owls Top Transfer, Biggest Transfer Loss
Top Transfer In: Jay Ducker, RB Sr. He came over with KC Keeler to be the star of the running game. He ran for 1,184 yards as a freshman at Northern Illinois, ran for seven scores in two years at Memphis, and last year ran for 745 yards and seven touchdowns for the Bearkats.Top Transfer Out: Tyquan King, LB Sr.The Owls need players who can do a little of everything, especially get into the backfield. King tied for the team lead with six tackles for loss and led the way with 112 tackles. Now he'll be a star on the UConn D.
Temple Owls Key Game
UTSA, Oct. 4It's a measuring-stick game. The Owls should beat UMass and Howard to start, will almost certainly lose to Oklahoma and Georgia Tech to follow, and then there's a week off before starting AAC play. There are winnable games on the slate, so beat UTSA at home, and this might be a stunningly good first year under the new regime.- 2025 Temple Owls Schedule Breakdown
Temple Owls Top 10 Players
1. Jay Ducker, RB Sr.2. Jalen Stewart, LB Sr.3. Evan Simon, QB Sr.4. Jalen Castleberry, CB Sr.5. Javier Morton, S Sr. 6. Ty Davis, LB Sr.7. Antonio Jones, WR Sr.8. Chris Smith, C Sr.9. Demerick Morris, DT Sr. 10. Terez Worthy, RB Sr.
Temple Owls 2024 Fun Stats
- 1st Quarter Scoring: Temple 94, Opponents 29- Sacks: Opponents 37 for 234 yards, Temple 14 for 83 yards- Touchdowns Scored: Opponents 55, Temple 27
Temple Owls 2025 Season Prediction, Win Total, What Will Happen
The 3-9 season was hardly great, but there were chances to get closer to six wins.The turnovers and inefficiency were the issue, but the coaching staff is good, there's a nice base of players to work around, and it's the American Athletic Conference. The schedule isn't bad.
The road games are the issue. Charlotte and Tulsa are winnable games, but they're on the road, and so is the opener against UMass. Even so, this is the year the Owls break the three-win doldrums.Set The Temple Owls Win Total At … 4Likely Wins: Howard50/50 Games: at Charlotte, East Carolina, Navy, at UMass, at Tulsa, UTSALikely Losses: at Army, at Georgia Tech, at North Texas, Oklahoma, Tulane
© 2025 The Arena Group Holdings, Inc. All rights reserved.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
a day ago
- USA Today
Buccaneers LB among the best draft values of the millenium
Bucs fans know how special Lavonte David has been for the team ever since he was selected by the team in 2012. The second-round pick out of Nebraska came in without much expectation and immediately made an impact on a Bucs defense that is known over the course of time for its defensive play. NFL Media's Eric Edholm has been recapping recent NFL Draft values, and when it came to discussing linebackers, the discussion, of course, had to get to the Bucs legend. Edholm discussed how David and draft classmate Bobby Wagner being drafted so close is both fun and adds to the legend that is the former Cornhusker. He writes, "Incredibly, David's name was called 11 picks after Wagner's in the same draft. The fact that two players who would become two of the all-time greats -- and still be doing it today at such a high level -- were chosen so close to each other in that range of selections remains a draft oddity. And while both clearly landed in systems that were tailored to their skill sets, it seems clear that each could have thrived in almost any type of defensive system." David will enter his 14th season in the NFL in 2025 at the age of 35, still playing at a high level, which is uncommon for the linebacker position. He has shown no signs of slowing down, but there are rumblings that it could be his last rodeo as the team looks to finally put together another deep playoff run on the way to a Super Bowl. David already has the makings of a Hall of Fame career with All-Pro and Pro Bowl selections to his credit. We shall see what he can accomplish in 2025.


Hamilton Spectator
3 days ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Why the Raptors aren't major players in NBA free agency
The Raptors will add a nine-year veteran former all-star who has averaged more than 20 points a game in each of the last six seasons, and is a 36-per-cent three-point shooter with a 56-per-cent true shooting percentage. The fact that they did it nearly four months ago — rather than when the NBA's free agency period fully opens on Monday at 6 p.m. — just means they were early shoppers. By adding Brandon Ingram in a February trade with the New Orleans Pelicans and then locking him up with a three-year, $120-million (U.S.) deal as he faced unrestricted free agency, the Raptors made an early foray that takes them pretty much out of the mix now. They will tinker on the periphery — Garrett Temple is committed to returning for another season — and there's always a chance that some 'too good to pass up' trade offer will come their way, but right now they're expected to sit out free agency. The Raptors don't have a ton of money (their salary commitments are above the NBA tax level, but below the first apron that would cut slightly into the moves they can make) and they're just about out of roster spots. With Temple back on a one-year deal that will pay him about $3.6 million (U.S.), Toronto has 12 players on fully guaranteed contracts (including Wednesday's No. 9 draft pick Collin Murray-Boyles) and has to decide what to do with second-round pick Alijah Martin. They have non-guaranteed contracts in place with Jamison Battle, A.J. Lawson and Colin Castleton, plus two-way deals with Ulrich Chomche, Jared Rhoden and Chucky Hepburn, an undrafted guard signed after the draft ended Thursday night. The dozen guarantees: Immanuel Quickley, RJ Barrett, Scottie Barnes, Jakob Poeltl, Jamal Shead, Ochai Agbaji, Gradey Dick, Jonathan Mogbo, Ja'Kobe Walter, Ingram, Murray-Boyles and Temple. That's 19 players under consideration already. Teams can have 15 full roster spots and three players on two-way deals. There is one need remaining: The Raptors have not yet settled on a backup to Poeltl at centre. But it's not a huge issue right now, and the front office could very well wait until after next month's Summer League season to see which low-salary players look enticing. Of course, the chance of a major trade disrupting the status quo exists, but NBA sources said Sunday that nothing seems imminent. What it also means is that the Raptors are almost certain to cut ties with Chris Boucher, the team's longest serving player and the only holdover from the 2019 NBA championship team. The 32-year-old Saint Lucia-born Montrealer, who joined the Raptors before the 2018-19 season, is an unrestricted free agent and there's not much interest in bringing him back. The big splash was getting the 27-year-old Ingram from New Orleans for Kelly Olynyk and Bruce Brown, and then signing him. And since he has yet to appear in a game for the Raptors as he recovered from an ankle injury, seeing him as the equivalent of a big off-season acquisition isn't a reach. The front office certainly saw it that way. The move was made with next season in mind and gave them months to work him into the system. Whether he fits is still unknown. It'll be up to coach Darko Rajakovic to work him in, but that's a coaching issue, not a rotation-building issue. The decision to bring back Temple was a no-brainer. The 39-year-old who will be entering his 16th NBA season has shown that not only can he play when called upon, but that his leadership in the locker room has been invaluable in two seasons as a Raptor. And it resonates far more as a player than if he'd become an assistant coach because the dynamic is just different.
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Yahoo
'Overlooked' Rookie Poised As Next Late-Round Gem in Eagles Roster Pipeline
'Overlooked' Rookie Poised As Next Late-Round Gem in Eagles Roster Pipeline originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The Philadelphia Eagles have quietly mastered finding defensive talent in the draft's later stages, and fourth-round selection Ty Robinson appears destined to extend that impressive lineage. Advertisement From Josh Sweat's transformation from raw fourth-round gamble into a consistent pass rusher to Avonte Maddox evolving from cornerback to versatile defensive chess piece, the Eagles repeatedly succeed with late-round picks who possess both athletic tools and football intelligence. Robinson embodies this proven template within Vic Fangio's defensive philosophy. Standing 6-foot-4 and weighing 290 pounds, the former Cornhusker demonstrates the size-speed combination that thrives in Fangio's adaptable system. Rather than fitting the typical fourth-round profile of a limited specialist, Robinson's Nebraska film showcases a defender who generates interior pressure while maintaining disciplined run fits. His final collegiate campaign yielded seven sacks and 13 tackles for loss, illustrating the kind of backfield disruption that Fangio has consistently enhanced throughout his coaching tenure. The established presence of Jalen Carter and Jordan Davis actually amplifies Robinson's opportunity for emergence. Much like Sweat capitalized on attention drawn by veteran pass rushers, Robinson should encounter favorable matchups as offensive lines prioritize blocking proven threats. Carter's recent endorsement carries substantial weight, praising Robinson's movement skills and predicting substantial contributions this season. This early recognition hasn't gone unnoticed. ESPN's Tim McManus highlighted Robinson's selection as Philadelphia's most overlooked offseason acquisition, noting that despite limited evaluation opportunities during spring practices, the rookie has already earned praise from multiple teammates. Davis echoed Carter's sentiments, suggesting Robinson has adapted to the professional environment with remarkable ease. Advertisement Robinson's route to substantial playing time appears direct. Milton Williams' departure created an obvious vacancy that Robinson seems naturally suited to address. His capability to align across multiple interior positions grants Fangio tactical flexibility to deploy him in various packages, from third-down rush situations to early-down run defense. This adaptability proved crucial for players like Maddox in establishing significant roles despite late-round selection. The timing couldn't be better for Robinson's emergence. Philadelphia's defense maintains its foundational pieces while incorporating calculated additions, fostering the organizational continuity that has historically supported late-round development. The defensive line room provides an optimal learning environment where Robinson can absorb knowledge from accomplished veterans while competing for meaningful snaps. If his early momentum carries into training camp, Robinson could quickly ascend from Day 3 pick to Day 1 contributor, continuing the Eagles' long-standing tradition of turning overlooked talent into difference-makers on Sundays. Related: Eagles' Hated Rival Gives Shocking Love To 'Aggressive' Fanbase Related: Eagles Fans All Wondering Why Saquon Barkley Fantasy is 'Doomed' This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 29, 2025, where it first appeared.